[Air-l] Internet & Politics: book launch event in London, 14 May
Jankowski
nickjan at xs4all.nl
Sun May 6 22:09:28 PDT 2007
All:
Those of you in the London area may be interested
in attending the panel described below, related
to recent Internet and politics publications,
particularly The Internet and National Elections:
A Comparative Study of Web Campaigning
(Routledge: May 2007; editors: Randy Kluver,
Nicholas Jankowski, Kirsten Foot, Steven
Schneider). Details on the book are available at:
http://international.tamu.edu/ipotest/book/index.asp
Those of you unable to attend the live event may
be interested in the webcast; see the site of the
Stanhope Centre for Communication Policy Research:
<http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/>http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/
Nick Jankowski
THE INTERNET & POLITICS:
ASSESSING THE CLAIMS AND REVIEWING THE EVIDENCE
Panel Discussion
Monday, May 14, 2007, 5.30 7.30 p.m.
City University
Northampton Square, London EC1V 0HB
Convocation Suite
Travel instructions:
<http://www.city.ac.uk/maps/northamptonsquare/index.html>http://www.city.ac.uk/maps/northamptonsquare/index.html
Open to the Public
One of the long-standing claims of the Internet
is that politics is becoming an open playing
field, allowing persons previously excluded from
the political process to become engaged. This and
related claims have concerned a legion of
activists and scholars during the past decade,
but only recently have empirically-grounded
studies been conducted that examine and in some cases contest these ideas.
As a contribution to this continuing debate, the
Stanhope Centre for Communication Policy Research
(<http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/>http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/)
is organizing a panel involving scholars active
in this area. The editors and authors of three
recent or about-to-be published books will be
taking part, together with staff members from the
Department of Sociology at City University. The
most immediate publication in this genre is
entitled The Internet and National Elections: A
Comparative Study of Web Campaigning, to be
released by Routledge in May 2007. This volume
provides a comparative analysis of the use of the
Web in countries around the world during
political campaigns. Drawing upon a common
conceptual framework, the book examines how the
Internet is employed by a variety of political
actors. Details of this publication are available
at:
<http://international.tamu.edu/ipotest/book/index.asp>http://international.tamu.edu/ipotest/book/index.asp
At the conclusion of the discussion a reception
will be held celebrating publication of The Internet and National Elections.
Scholars participating in the panel are:
· Jean Chalaby, Professor, City
University, author of American Cultural Primacy
in a New Media Order: A European Perspective (Gazette, 2006)
· Endre Dányi, Research student,
University of Lancaster, author of chapter in The
Internet and National Elections
· Kirsten Foot, Associate Professor,
University of Washington; co-editor of The
Internet and National Elections and co-author of
Web Campaigning (MIT Press, 2006)
· Nicholas Jankowski, Visiting Fellow,
Virtual Knowledge Studio, Amsterdam, co-editor of
The Internet and National Elections
· Randy Kluver, Director, Institute for
Pacific Asia, Texas A&M University, co-editor of
The Internet and National Elections
· Wainer Lusoli, Assistant Professor,
Chester University, author of Voice and
E-Quality: The State of Electronic Democracy in
Britain (Hampton Press, forthcoming)
· Steven Schneider, Professor, State
University New York, co-editor of The Internet
and National Elections and co-author of Web Campaigning (MIT Press, 2006)
· Frank Webster, Professor, City
University, author of Theories of the Information Society (Routledge, 2002)
The panel discussion will be webcast; details
available at:
<http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/>http://www.stanhopecentre.org/2007/
For further information, contact:
Stanhope Centre for Communication Policy Research
Northampton Square, City University, London
Tel. +44 (0) 20 7040 4566
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