Internet Research Annual, Nide 2

Etukansi
Mia Consalvo, Matthew Allen
Peter Lang, 2005 - 205 sivua
This collection brings together the most interesting and outstanding papers from the Internet Research Conference held in Toronto in 2003. Taken individually, each paper makes an important contribution to the emerging field of Internet research, but the collection as a whole presents key perspectives on the most significant directions in the field. In particular, the papers discuss how we must now consider the relationship of Internet-based activities to those «offline», rather than concentrating exclusively on the virtual. Papers advance important ideas and present research findings in relation to information theory, the Internet at home, theorizing time and the Internet, online activism, the digital divide, and more. This annual, the second in the series, demonstrates the vibrant and diverse nature of Internet scholarship fostered by the Association of Internet Researchers.
 

Sisältö

Theorizing the Internet and Its Study
1
SocioSpatial Coordination Online
15
Doubling the Self in the Digital
31
Revealing What
51
Beyond the Mainstream Trust
73
Is Social Capital a Precondition for Democratic Activity Online?
85
Initial Trust Formation in
95
Spatial
124
The Information Society Online
149
A Proposed Theoretical Framework
163
Digital Divides among Hispanic Immigrants and Implications
175
Viewing HaveNots
189
Contributors
201
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