Cyberimperialism?

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-11-30
Publisher(s): Praeger Pub Text
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Summary

This collection of essays addresses whether all nations will actively participate in building the information superhighway or whether the Internet will reflect global technological inequalities. The writings are grouped in four major sections, which examine theoretical issues on cyberglobalization, politics in the electronic global village, global economic issues in cyberspace, and national identities and grassroots movements in cyberspace. Contributing scholars represent a wide spectrum of disciplines from political science, economics, and communications to sociology, anthropology, and philosophy. A number of methodological and theoretical perspectives direct the writings. Collectively, the essays point toward an emerging technology that exhibits innate qualities characteristic of the classic notion of cultural imperialism. This edited collection, with its timely approach to the implications of the Internet for global relations, will appeal to communication, sociology, and political science scholars. The interdisciplinary approach will also attract students and educators from such fields as anthropology, philosophy and economics. To aid in further research, select bibliographies follow each essay.

Author Biography

BOSAH EBO is Professor in the Department of Communication at Rider University where he teaches International Communication, Communication Ethics, and Media and Popular Culture.

Table of Contents

Preface xi
Cyberglobalization: Superhighway or Superhypeway?
1(8)
Bosah Ebo
Part I Theoretical Issues on Cyberglobalization
The Three Faces of Cyberimperialism
9(18)
Frank Louis Rusciano
From Imperialism to Glocalization: A Theoretical Framework for the Information Age
27(16)
Marwan M. Kraidy
The Internet and the Problem of Legitimacy: A Tocquevillian Perspective
43(22)
Jonathan Mendilow
Cybercolonialism: Speeding Along the Superhighway or Stalling on a Beaten Track?
65(18)
Deborah Tong
Part II Politics in the Electronic Global Village
The Empire Strikes Back Again: The Cultural Politics of the Internet
83(10)
David J. Gunkel
Creating New Relations: The Internet in Central and Eastern Europe
93(18)
Margot Emery
Benjamin J. Bates
A People's Electronic Democracy and an Establishment System of Government: The United Kingdom
111(12)
Glen Segell
Part III Global Economic Issues in Cyberspace
Prospects of Small Countries in the Age of the Internet
123(16)
Vasja Vehovar
Counterhegemonic Media: Can Cyberspace Resist Corporate Colonization?
139(14)
Jeffrey Layne Blevins
The Information Revolution, Transnational Relations, and Sustainable Development in the Global South
153(16)
Rodger A. Payne
Global Information Infrastructure in the Eastern and Southeastern Asian Countries: Emerging Regulatory Implications and Models
169(18)
Chung-Chuand Yang
Part IV National Identities and Grassroots Movements in Cyberspace
Cultural Identity and Cyberimperialism: Computer-Mediated Explorations of Ethnicity, Nation, and Citizenship
187(18)
Laura B. Lengel
Patrick D. Murphy
Between Grassroots and Netizens: Empowering Nongovernmental Organizations
205(18)
Ellen S. Kole
Implications of the Information Revolution for Africa: Cyberimperialism, Cyberhype, or Cyberhope
223(10)
Robert G. White
Negotiating National Identity and Social Movement in Cyberspace: Natives and Invaders on the Panama-L Listserv
233(20)
Leda Cooks
Index 253(4)
About the Editor and Contributors 257

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