Change of State: Information, Policy, and Power

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MIT Press, 2009 M08 28 - 576 páginas
How control over information creation, processing, flows, and use has become the most effective form of power: theoretical foundations and empirical examples of information policy in the U.S., an innovator informational state.

As the informational state replaces the bureaucratic welfare state, control over information creation, processing, flows, and use has become the most effective form of power. In Change of State Sandra Braman examines the theoretical and practical ramifications of this "change of state." She looks at the ways in which governments are deliberate, explicit, and consistent in their use of information policy to exercise power, exploring not only such familiar topics as intellectual property rights and privacy but also areas in which policy is highly effective but little understood. Such lesser-known issues include hybrid citizenship, the use of "functionally equivalent borders" internally to allow exceptions to U.S. law, research funding, census methods, and network interconnection. Trends in information policy, argues Braman, both manifest and trigger change in the nature of governance itself.After laying the theoretical, conceptual, and historical foundations for understanding the informational state, Braman examines 20 information policy principles found in the U.S Constitution. She then explores the effects of U.S. information policy on the identity, structure, borders, and change processes of the state itself and on the individuals, communities, and organizations that make up the state. Looking across the breadth of the legal system, she presents current law as well as trends in and consequences of several information policy issues in each category affected.

Change of State introduces information policy on two levels, coupling discussions of specific contemporary problems with more abstract analysis drawing on social theory and empirical research as well as law. Most important, the book provides a way of understanding how information policy brings about the fundamental social changes that come with the transformation to the informational state.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

The Bias of the Informational State
9
Information Policy for the TwentyFirst
39
Translate Recommendations into the Terms of Legacy
77
Constitutional Principles and the Information Spaces They
79
Information Policy and Identity
117
Information Policy and Identity
123
Mediating the Identities of the Individual and the Informational
155
Mutually Constituted Identities of the Individual and
166
Information Policy and Change
259
Information Policy and Change in Information Systems
293
Information Policy and Power in the Informational State
313
Bibliographic Essays
329
The Bias of the Informational
335
Information Policy for the Twentyfirst
346
Information Policy and Identity
352
Information Policy and Structure
369

Information Policy and Structure
167
Information Policy and Technological Structure
193
Information Policy and Informational Structure
205
Information Policy and Borders
221
Borders of the Technological System
239
Informational Borders
248
Information Policy and Borders
394
Information Policy and Change
405
References
419
Index
525
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Acerca del autor (2009)

Sandra Braman is Professor in the Department of Communication, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the editor of Communication Researchers and Policy-Making (MIT Press, 2003).

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