Book Details
Orange Code:91911
Paperback:311 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Electronic Constitution:A Braudelian Perspective2. Old and New Rights:E-Citizenship in Historical Perspective3. International Organizations, E-Government and Development4. American Electronic Constitution: Reinventing Government and Neo-Liberal Corporatism5. The European Administrative Space and E-Government Policies: Between Integration and Competition6. The EU and the Information Society: From E-Knowledge to E-Inclusion, In Search of Global Leadership7. World Wide Weber: Formalise, Normalise, Rationalise: E-Government for Welfare State -Perspectives from South Africa8. ICT Challenges and Opportunities for Institutionalizing Democracy in Ghana: An Integrative Review of the Literature9. The Politics of the Governing the Information and CommunicationsTechnologies in East Asian Authoritarian States: Case Study of China10. Information Networks, Internet Governance and Innovation in World Politics11. Who Governs Cyberspace? Internet Governance and Power Structures in Digital Networks12. Measuring ICT: Political and Methodological Aspects13. The Fabrication of Networked Socialities14. Virtual Nations15. A Research Agenda for the Future16. Compilation of References
Description:
Advances in information technology are producing deep transformations in numerous fields in such a way that they constitute an important chapter of reinventing government.
Electronic Constitution: Social, Cultural, and Political Implications provides main political problems about digital information technology in world politics, relating them to the processes of transformation of the current historical system. Addressed to researchers, scholars, and students of advanced courses in political disciplines, this book highlights technological innovation as a strategy of reorganization in political-institutional systems.
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