All Stories

  1. Inequality and Digitally Mediated Communication: Divides, Contradictions and Consequences
  2. Recognizing ‘ourselves’ in media and communications research
  3. Wilbur Schramm and Noam Chomsky Meet Harold Innis: Media, Power and Democracy
  4. Social value of high bandwidth networks: creative performance and education
  5. Power, Hierarchy, and the Internet
  6. The public’s interest in intermediaries
  7. The International Encyclopedia of Digital Communication and Society
  8. Open Collaboration for Social Problem Solving: Converging or Diverging Norms of Governance Authority? │ Colaboração aberta para a solução de problemas sociais: normas de autoridade de governança convergentes ou divergentes?
  9. Open Collaboration for Social Problem Solving: Converging or Diverging Norms of Governance Authority? │ Colaboração aberta para a solução de problemas sociais: normas de autoridade de governança convergentes ou divergentes?
  10. Futures of knowledge societies – destabilization in whose interest?
  11. Empowerment and/or Disempowerment: The Politics of Digital Media
  12. The governance of communication networks: Reconsidering the research agenda
  13. Global Media and Communication Policy
  14. Here Comes the Revolution — the European Digital Agenda
  15. Part III / Teil III Media Markets, Policy and the Public Interest / Medienmärkte, Politik und das öffentliche Interesse - Policy Bias and the European Audiovisual Media Industry
  16. Copyright infringement online: The case of the Digital Economy Act judicial review in the United Kingdom
  17. Employing digital crowdsourced information resources: Managing the emerging information commons
  18. Employing digital crowdsourced information resources: Managing the emerging information commons
  19. Digital Infrastructures, Economies, and Public Policies:
  20. Critical thinking: Kahneman and policy making
  21. Power, Media Culture and New Media
  22. POWER AND INTERESTS IN INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION AND DEVELOPMENT: EXOGENOUS AND ENDOGENOUS DISCOURSES IN CONTENTION
  23. Introduction: Foundations of the Theory and Practice of Global Media and Communication Policy
  24. The Handbook of Global Media and Communication Policy
  25. The (Im)possibility of Interdisciplinarity: Lessons from Constructing a Theoretical Framework for Digital Ecosystems
  26. New visions, old practices: Policy and regulation in the Internet era
  27. Introduction to Part Two
  28. e‐Governance for Development: A Focus on Rural India20101Shirin Madon. e‐Governance for Development: A Focus on Rural India. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan 2009. , ISBN: 978‐0‐230‐20157 178 pp.
  29. Editor's Introduction
  30. The life and times of the Information Society
  31. The information society and ICT policy
  32. Technology, Innovation, Power, and Social Consequence
  33. Commentary Mediating the Public Sphere Democratic Deliberation, Communication Gaps and the Personalization of Politics
  34. The challenges of ICTs
  35. The Oxford Handbook of Information and Communication Technologies
  36. Political Economy, the Internet and FL/OSS Development
  37. Crossing Boundaries: New Media and Networked Journalism
  38. Communication, information, and ICT policy: Enabling research frameworks
  39. Beyond interoperability to digital ecosystems: regional innovation and socio-economic development led by SMEs
  40. The problem of internationalizing media and communication research
  41. Great Media and Communication Debates: WSIS and the MacBride Report
  42. Book Review: The European Challenge: Innovation, Policy Learning and Social Cohesion in the New Knowledge Economy
  43. Collective Action, Institutionalism, and the Internet
  44. Ambiguous connections: entitlements and responsibilities of global networking
  45. Social informatics and the political economy of communications
  46. Political Economy, Power and New Media
  47. E-commerce for Developing Countries: Expectations and Reality
  48. Electronic commerce: conceptual pitfalls and practical realities
  49. The Internet Galaxy: Reflections on the Internet, Business and Society
  50. Constructing the knowledge base for knowledge‐driven development
  51. From Digital Divides to Digital Entitlements in Knowledge Societies
  52. Inside the Communication Revolution
  53. Introduction
  54. Conclusion: Social Relations, Mediating Power, and Technologies
  55. New Media Competition and Access
  56. Toward Digital Intermediation in the Information Society
  57. Opportunities for knowledge-based development: capabilities, infrastructure, investment and policy
  58. Information and communication technologies for development: assessing the potential and the risks
  59. Capability Building, ICT Strategies, and the Science and Technology Perspective
  60. Roche, E. M. and Blaine, M. J. (eds), "Information Technology, Development and Policy" (Book Review)
  61. Strategies for Maintaining Market Power in the Face of Rapidly Changing Technologies
  62. Advanced communication technologies and services: Design configuration and stakeholder interests in Europe
  63. Communication and the transformation of economics. Essays in information, public policy and political economy
  64. The new telecommunications in the Netherlands: Strategy, policy and regulation
  65. Telecommunications in the UK: Controlling the information society gateways
  66. Les nouveaux marchés de la communication et la réglementation
  67. Book Reviews : The New Telecommunications: A Political Economy of Network Evolution Robin Mansell Publisher: Sage, London Year of Publication: 1993 Price: $65.00 hardback; $24.95 paperback
  68. New Communication Markets: Regulating in the “Commodity” Supply Environment
  69. A networked economy: Unmasking the “globalisation” thesis
  70. Strategic issues in telecommunications
  71. International Telecommunication Standards Organisations
  72. European Telecommunication, Multinational Enterprises, and the Implication of “Globalization”
  73. The earth observation market: industrial dynamics and their impact on data policy
  74. Legal aspects of implementing international telecommunication links: institutions, regulations and instruments
  75. Mobilizing the Information Society
  76. Prologue
  77. Controlling Electronic Commerce Transactions
  78. Locating the Consequences of Information Society Developments
  79. Recapitulating the Themes and Facing the Future
  80. Competing Interests and Strategies in the Information Society
  81. Social Communities: Access and Users’ Capabilities
  82. Transforming the Infrastructure Supporting the Information Society
  83. Chaos in Service Innovations and Applications
  84. Liberalization and the Process and Implications of Standardization
  85. Building Trust for Virtual Communities
  86. Electronic Intellectual Property and Creative Knowledge Production
  87. The European R&D Initiative in Communications and IT: an opportunity not to be missed?
  88. Telecommunications in transition
  89. Networks, industrial restructuring and policy: The Singapore example
  90. Information technology: Impacts, policies and future perspectives
  91. The west looks east: Reformulating telecommunication strategies
  92. Utilities in the EC
  93. Telecommunications in Canada: Technology, Industry and Governmentby Robert E. Babe(University of Toronto Press, Toronto, Ontario, 1990), pp. xv + 363, $CAN24.95, ISBN 0-8020-6738-7 (Pbk)
  94. The Market and Beyond: Cooperation and Competition ln Information Technology in the Japanese System
  95. Book review
  96. Collaboration, competition and the EC
  97. Rethinking the telecommunication infrastructure: The new “black box”
  98. EUROPEAN INTEGRATION AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS: RESTRUCTURING MARKETS AND INSTITUTIONS
  99. Restructuring Telecommunication Tariffs: Policy Issues, Trends and Implications
  100. Technology and Competition in the International Telecommunications Industryby David Charles, Peter Monk and Ed Sciberras(Pinter Publishers, London, 1989) pp. 178, hardback £27.50, ISBN 0-86187-9937
  101. Telecommunication network-based services
  102. On the line
  103. The Telecommunication Bypass Threat: Real or Imagined?
  104. Contradictions in national communication/information policies: the Canadian experience
  105. Is Policy Research an Irrelevant Exercise?: The Case of Canadian DBS Planning
  106. The Debate over Critical vs. Administrative Research: Circularity or Challenge
  107. Innovation in Telecommunication: Bridging the Supplier-User Interface
  108. Technological Innovation, Paradox and Icts
  109. Here Comes the Revolution – the European Digital Agenda