"Selten hinterlässt ein Buch einen solch zwiespältigen Eindruck. Auf der einen Seite steht eine in der Art eines Lehrbuches konzipierte Monographie, die durch Detailkenntnis und informationswissenschaftliche Sachkompetenz ausgezeichnet ist, auf der anderen Seite ein Buch, das enorm an begriffliche
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n Schwächen leidet." (Klaus Wiegerling in: Publizistik, 50 (2005), 1, Seite 142-143)
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"The proliferation of new information technologies throughout the world has raised some important questions for policymakers as to how developing countries can benefit from their diffusion. This important volume compares the advantages and disadvantages of the IT revolution through detailed studies
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of a variety of developed and developing nations and regions: Argentina, Estonia, the EU, India, Japan, Korea, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand and the USA." (Publisher description)
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"This research of Orbicom entitled Monitoring the Digital Divide… and beyond is a contribution to the international community in the context of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), Geneva, December 2003.It sets high standards in international benchmarking and places particular empha
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sis on developing countries. Its unique features are: a cohesive conceptual Framework, which goes beyond connectivity measures and logically incorporates skills, as well as offers rich analytical linkages; explicit measurements both across countries at a given point in time and within countries over-time in such a way that comparisons are not reduced to changing rankings from year to year; policy relevant results on a component-by-component basis; immediate benchmarking against the average of all countries (Hypothetica) and the planet as a whole (Planetia); use of existing and reliable data sets with a sound and transparent statistical methodology. The empirical application of the model covers a great number of countries. Measurements of networks are offered for 192 countries, covering 99% of the population of the planet; of skills and overall Infodensity for 153 countries representing 98% of the population; of Info-use 143 countries and overall Infostate 139 countries, both accounting for 95% of the global population. The results are based on 21 variables, reliable, tested and available to all and extends over the 1996-2001 period." (Publisher description)
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"In this book, Cees J Hamelink proposes an answer to - how should democratic societies organize cyberspace? - that puts human-rights, rather than profit, at the top of the agenda. He argues that conventional ethical approaches are all seriously flawed. There is a growing volume of moral rules, netiq
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uettes and codes of conduct, but they are of little help in solving the moral dilemmas raised by the new technologies. In this book the author analyzes the inadeqacies of current global governance policies and structures that underpin them, and argues for standards which put justice, human security and freedom first." (Publisher description)
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