Document details

Society and the Internet: How Networks of Information and Communication Are Changing Our Lives

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2nd ed. (2019), xxx, 438 pp.

Contains index

Table of contents: http://digitale-objekte.hbz-nrw.de/storage2/2020/01/22/file_8/8807420.pdf

ISBN 978-0-19-884350-4 (pbk)

Other editions: 1st ed. 2014

Signature commbox: 70-General-E 2019

"How is society being reshaped by the continued diffusion and increasing centrality of the Internet in everyday life and work? Society and the Internet provides key readings for students, scholars, and anyone with a serious interest in understanding the interactions of the Internet and society. Spawned from a series of lectures at the University of Oxford, this multidisciplinary set of theoretically and empirically anchored chapters address the big questions about perhaps the most significant technological transformation of the 21st century. The authors employ a diversity of data, methods, and approaches to address these questions in creative ways. Internet research needs to keep learning from the past, ground itself in a diversity of disciplinary perspectives, and continue to look to the future. In doing so, Internet Studies can address core questions about equality, voice, knowledge, participation, and power; and provide a better understanding of what the ever-changing configurations of technology and society mean not only for everyday life, but also for major developments in the politics, economic, and cultural development of societies across the world. Understanding the role of the Internet in society is critical to addressing the major issues of policy and practice, from the nature of democracy and freedom of expression to how we learn, work and play in everyday life." (Publisher description)
I. The Internet and Everyday Life
II. Digital Rights, Human Rights
III. Networked Ideas, Politics, and Governance
IV. Networked Businesses, Industries, and Economics
V. Technological and Regulatory Histories and Futures