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Global Internet Governance -

Global Internet Governance

Laura DeNardis (Herausgeber)

Media-Kombination
1516 Seiten
2018
Routledge
978-1-138-88991-0 (ISBN)
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Academic and policy work about ‘Internet Governance’ dates back decades, and now there is a critical mass of scholarship. This new four-volume collection meets the need for a reference work to make sense of the subject’s vast and dispersed literature.
The editor of this new Routledge title argues that our economic and social lives are now utterly dependent upon the successful coordination of the Internet. Moreover, as the Internet expands from its current form to an ‘Internet of things’, she suggests that its stability and security will soon be recognized as important as other global concerns, like battling terrorism and fighting climate change.

Who controls the Internet? The question has profound implications for our access to knowledge, the pace of economic growth, and the protection of human rights, not least freedom of expression and the right to privacy. And the question’s importance has been underscored in recent times by landmark events, including revelations about the actual and potential power of social-media companies, and the breathtaking extent of surveillance by intelligence and security organizations, such as the NSA in the United States and Britain’s GCHQ.

It is perhaps only in the last several years that issues about and around the governance of the Internet have entered the public consciousness, but serious academic and policy work dates back decades. And now there is a critical mass of scholarship that can usefully be collected under the rubric of ‘Internet Governance’. Like the Internet itself, leading theorists and researchers in the field are distributed globally, and work in disciplines across the social sciences and humanities. Indeed, much of the relevant literature remains inaccessible or is highly specialized and compartmentalized, so that it is difficult for many of those who are interested in the subject to obtain an informed, balanced, and comprehensive overview. This new four-volume collection, published as part of Routledge’s acclaimed series, Critical Concepts in Sociology, meets the need for a reference work to make sense of the subject’s vast and dispersed literature and the continuing explosion in research output.

Dr. Laura DeNardis is Professor in the School of Communication at American University in Washington, DC, USA.

VOLUME I THE INTERNET GOVERNANCE ECOSYSTEM: SCOPE, THEORY, HISTORY

Acknowledgements

Chronological table of reprinted articles and chapters

Introduction

PART 1 Examining the scope of global Internet governance

1 The emerging Internet governance mosaic: connecting the pieces

WILLIAM. H. DUTTON AND MALCOLM PELTU

2 The emerging field of Internet governance

LAURA DENARDIS

3 What is the Internet and what is governance?

JOHN MATHIASON

4 Where is the governance in Internet governance?

MICHAEL JG VAN EETEN AND MILTON MUELLER

5 Regulatory issues

ROLF H. WEBER

6 On the nature of the Internet

LESLIE DAIGLE

7 Reframing Internet governance discourse: fifteen baseline propositions

WILLIAM DRAKE

PART 2 Theories of global Internet governance

8 The digital disruption: connectivity and the diffusion of power

ERIC SCHMIDT AND JARED COHEN

9 Communication, power and counter-power in the network society

MANUEL CASTELLS

10 Do artifacts have politics?

LANGDON WINNER

11 Hidden levers of Internet control: an infrastructure-based theory of Internet governance

LAURA DENARDIS

12 The law of the horse: what cyberlaw might teach

LAWRENCE LESSIG

13 The generative pattern

JONATHAN ZITTRAIN

14 Rethinking the design of the Internet: the end-to-end arguments vs. the brave new world

MARJORY S. BLUMENTHAL AND DAVID D. CLARK

15 Why Interop matters

JOHN PALFREY AND URS GASSER

PART 3 Internet governance history

16 A prehistory of internet governance

MALTE ZIEWITZ AND IAN BROWN

17 Report of the Working Group on Internet Governance

UNITED NATIONS WORKING GROUP ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE

18 The framing years: policy fundamentals in the Internet design process, 1969–1979

SANDRA BRAMAN

19 Use [and abuse] of multistakeholderism in the Internet

AVRI DORIA

20 Internet governance: a regulative idea in flux

JEANETTE HOFMANN



VOLUME II INFRASTRUCTURES AND INSTITUTIONS OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE

Acknowledgements

PART 4 Coordinating Internet names and numbers: from Jon Postel to ICANN

21 ICANN and Internet governance: leveraging technical coordination to realize global public policy

HANS KLEIN

22 ICANN between technical mandate and political challenges

WOLFGANG KLEINWÄCHTER

23 The Internet address space

LAURA DENARDIS

24 Development of the domain name system

PAUL V. MOCKAPETRIS AND KEVIN J. DUNLAP

25 Trademarks and freedom of expression in ICANN’s new gTLD process

JACQUELINE LIPTON AND MARY WONG

PART 5 Establishing Internet technical standards

26 Clio and the economics of QWERTY

PAUL A. DAVID

27 Development of core Internet standards: the work of IETF and W3C

HARALD ALVESTRAND AND HÅKON WIUM LIE

28 Injecting the public interest into Internet standards

JOHN B. MORRIS JR.

29 ‘Rough consensus and running code’ and the Internet-OSI standards war

ANDREW L. RUSSELL

PART 6 International organizations and nation states

30 How governments rule the net

JACK GOLDSMITH AND TIM WU

31 Extract from ‘Reform of Internet governance’

JEREMY MALCOLM

32 The Internet Governance Forum

MILTON MUELLER

33 Internet organizations and global Internet governance: interorganizational architecture

NANETTE S. LEVINSON AND MERYEM MARZOUKI

PART 7 The privatization of governance

34 The relevance of algorithms

TARLETON GILLESPIE

35 The public policy role of private information intermediaries

LAURA DENARDIS

36 Knowledge and dignity in the era of "Big Data"

SIVA VAIDHYANATHAN AND CHRIS BULOCK

37 Facebookistan and Googledom

REBECCA MACKINNON

PART 8 Civil society participation in Internet governance

38 Enabling effective multi-stakeholder participation in global internet governance through accessible cyber-infrastructure

DERRICK L. COGBURN

39 Digital divide in global Internet governance: the "access" issue area

SLAVKA ANTONOVA



VOLUME III GOVERNANCE BY THE INTERNET

Acknowledgements

PART 9 Network neutrality and Internet access governance

40 Network neutrality, broadband discrimination

TIM WU

41 Network neutrality and the need for a technological turn in Internet scholarship

CHRISTOPHER S. YOO

42 Network neutrality on the Internet: a two-sided market analysis

NICHOLAS ECONOMIDES AND JOACIM TÅG

PART 10 Content control

43 Filters and chokepoints

RONALD J. DEIBERT

44 Internet filtering: the politics and mechanisms of control

JONATHAN ZITTRAIN AND JOHN PALFREY

45 Internet architecture and intellectual property

LAURA DENARDIS

46 The future of free expression in a digital age

JACK M. BALKIN

PART 11 Individual privacy and reputation in the age of surveillance

47 A contextual approach to privacy online

HELEN NISSENBAUM

48 How the free flow of information liberates and constrains us

DANIEL J. SOLOVE

49 "But the data is already public": on the ethics of research in Facebook

MICHAEL ZIMMER

50 What privacy is for

JULIE E. COHEN



VOLUME IV THE HIGH POLITICS OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE

Acknowledgements

PART 12 Principles and norms for Internet governance

51 The Internet and global governance: principles and norms for a new regime

MILTON MUELLER, JOHN MATHIASON AND HANS KLEIN

52 Principles for trade 2.0

ANUPAM CHANDER

53 NETmundial Multistakeholder Statement

GLOBAL MULTISTAKEHOLDER MEETING ON THE FUTURE OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE

54 The Internet bill of rights: a way to reconcile natural freedoms and regulatory needs?

FRANCESCA MUSIANI

PART 13 Cybersecurity governance and the surveillance state

55 Stuxnet: what has changed?

DOROTHY E. DENNING

56 Cyber security and international agreements

ABRAHAM D. SOFAER, DAVID CLARK AND WHITFIELD DIFFIE

57 After Snowden: rethinking the impact of surveillance

ZYGMUNT BAUMAN, ET AL.

58 Keys under doormats: mandating insecurity by requiring government access to all data and communications

HAROLD ABELSON ET AL.

59 Anonymous and the politics of leaking

GABRIELLA COLEMAN

PART 14 Multistakeholder governance and contested futures

60 The global governance of the internet: bringing the state back in

DANIEL W. DREZNER

61 Tussle in cyberspace: defining tomorrow's Internet

DAVID D. CLARK, JOHN WROCLAWSKI, KAREN R. SOLLINS AND ROBERT BRADEN

62 Alternative technologies as alternative institutions: the case of the domain name system

FRANCESCA MUSIANI

63 Multistakeholderism: anatomy of an inchoate global institution

MARK RAYMOND AND LAURA DENARDIS

64 The regime complex for managing global cyber activities

JOSEPH S. NYE, JR.

Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 1.8.2018
Reihe/Serie Critical Concepts in Sociology
Zusatzinfo 30 Tables, black and white; 28 Halftones, black and white
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 453 g
Themenwelt Mathematik / Informatik Informatik Web / Internet
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Allgemeine Soziologie
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Wirtschaftsinformatik
ISBN-10 1-138-88991-1 / 1138889911
ISBN-13 978-1-138-88991-0 / 9781138889910
Zustand Neuware
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