This paper examines the initial ‘moral panic’ surrounding children's access to the Internet at the end of the last century by analysing more than 900 media articles and key government documents from 1997 to 2001. It explores the ambiguous settlements that this produced in adult–child relations and children's access to the Internet. The paper then revisits the policy and media debate a decade later by examining the Byron Review, Digital Britain Report and media coverage of these, in order to explore how these settlements have been negotiated, resisted and transformed over the subsequent period. In so doing, the paper asks whether it is time to reframe the debate about children's occupation of online public space, less in terms of ‘care’ for ...
Children’s use of the internet has in the first decade of the twenty-first century become a matter o...
Overview. This the third in a series of papers produced collaboratively by Citizens Online and IPPR ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
How children use the Internet is a key issue for social research. But as this chapter makes clear, i...
The present research identifies June, 1995 to July, 1996 as the period marking the Cyberporn Panic i...
The introduction of widespread school Internet access in industrialised countries has been accompani...
Concern about children and the Internet is the latest in a ritu-al cycle of moral panics surrounding...
Edited by B rian O ’N eill, Elisabeth S taksrud & S haron M cLaughlin Keeping children safe onl...
In this article, we reflect critically on the research agenda on children\u2019s Internet use, frami...
This paper discusses moral panics over contemporary technology, or “technopanics.” I use the cyberp...
Keeping children safe online has been the subject of intensive policy debate ever since the mid-1990...
Popular and academic discourse contains numerous claims regarding the role of the changing media env...
While we today take a largely free and unregulated Internet for granted, our present regulatory envi...
As domestic access to the internet reaches the mass market in industrialized countries, this article...
The theoretical framework of this chapter starts from the tension which typifies the public discours...
Children’s use of the internet has in the first decade of the twenty-first century become a matter o...
Overview. This the third in a series of papers produced collaboratively by Citizens Online and IPPR ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
How children use the Internet is a key issue for social research. But as this chapter makes clear, i...
The present research identifies June, 1995 to July, 1996 as the period marking the Cyberporn Panic i...
The introduction of widespread school Internet access in industrialised countries has been accompani...
Concern about children and the Internet is the latest in a ritu-al cycle of moral panics surrounding...
Edited by B rian O ’N eill, Elisabeth S taksrud & S haron M cLaughlin Keeping children safe onl...
In this article, we reflect critically on the research agenda on children\u2019s Internet use, frami...
This paper discusses moral panics over contemporary technology, or “technopanics.” I use the cyberp...
Keeping children safe online has been the subject of intensive policy debate ever since the mid-1990...
Popular and academic discourse contains numerous claims regarding the role of the changing media env...
While we today take a largely free and unregulated Internet for granted, our present regulatory envi...
As domestic access to the internet reaches the mass market in industrialized countries, this article...
The theoretical framework of this chapter starts from the tension which typifies the public discours...
Children’s use of the internet has in the first decade of the twenty-first century become a matter o...
Overview. This the third in a series of papers produced collaboratively by Citizens Online and IPPR ...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...