Contents
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction: New directions in internet politics research
Andrew Chadwick and Philip N. Howard
Part I: Institutions
2. The internet in U.S. election campaigns
Richard Davis, Jody C Baumgartner, Peter L. Francia, and
Jonathan S. Morris
3. European political organizations and the internet: mobilization, participation, and change
Stephen Ward and Rachel Gibson
4. Electoral web production practices in cross-national perspective: the relative influence of national development, political culture, and web genre
Kirsten A. Foot, Michael Xenos, Steven M. Schneider, Randolph Kluver, and Nicholas W. Jankowski
5. Parties, election campaigning, and the internet: toward a comparative institutional approach
Nick Anstead and Andrew Chadwick
6. Technological change and the shifting nature of political organization
Bruce Bimber, Cynthia Stohl, and Andrew J. Flanagin
7. Making parliamentary democracy visible: speaking to, with, and for the public in the age of interactive technology
Stephen Coleman
8. Bureaucratic reform and e-government in the United States: an institutional perspective
Jane E. Fountain
9. Public management change and e-government: the emergence of digital-era governance
Helen Margetts
Part 2: Behavior
10. Wired to fact: the role of the internet in identifying deception during
the 2004 U.S. presidential campaign
Bruce W. Hardy, Kathleen Hall Jamieson, and Kenneth Winneg
11. Political engagement online: do the information rich get richer and the
like-minded more similar?
Jennifer Brundidge and Ronald E. Rice
12. Information, the internet and direct democracy
Justin Reedy and Chris Wells
13. Toward digital citizenship: addressing inequality in the information age
Karen Mossberger
14. Online news creation and consumption: implications for modern democracies
David Tewksbury and Jason Rittenberg
15. Web 2.0 and the transformation of news and journalism
James Stanyer
Part 3: Identities
16. The internet and the changing global media environment
Brian McNair
17. The virtual sphere 2.0: the internet, the public sphere, and beyond
Zizi Papacharissi
18. Identity, technology, and narratives: transnational activism and social networks
W. Lance Bennett and Amoshaun Toft
19. Theorizing gender and the internet: past, present, and future
Niels van Doorn and Liesbet van Zoonen
20. New immigrants, the internet, and civic society
Yong-Chan Kim and Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach
21. One Europe, digitally divided
Jan A. G. M. van Dijk
22. Working around the state: internet use and political identity in the Arab world
Deborah L. Wheeler
Part 4: Law and policy
23. The geopolitics of internet control: censorship, sovereignty, and cyberspace
Ronald J. Deibert
24. Locational surveillance: embracing the patterns of our lives
David J. Phillips
25. Metaphoric reinforcement of the virtual fence: factors shaping the political economy of property in cyberspace
Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. and Kenneth Neil Farrall
26. Globalizing the logic of openness: open source software and the global
governance of intellectual property
Christopher May
27. Exclusionary rules? The politics of protocols
Greg Elmer
28. The new politics of the internet: multi-stakeholder policy-making
and the internet technocracy
William H. Dutton and Malcolm Peltu
29. Enabling effective multi-stakeholder participation in global internet
governance through accessible cyber-infrastructure
Derrick L. Cogburn
30. Internet diffusion and the digital divide: the role of policy-making and
political institutions
Kenneth S. Rogerson and Daniel Milton
31. Conclusion: political omnivores and wired states
Philip N. Howard and Andrew Chadwick