This comparative article investigates the different views of the internet—what it could do and what it was for—as they emerged in news media, popular culture, and policy in the United State and Europe before the year 2000. In the United States, the internet was imagined as an inevitability, as the domain of private corporations, and as a new frontier that would usher the United States into an era of global economic dominance. In Europe, the internet was imagined as a technological choice, as a technology subordinate to national institutions, and as a public utility that the state should provide citizens through national telecommunications corporations. Despite these differences, this article shows how, as the century concluded, the politica...
How has the Internet come about in Europe? How did the "network of networks" and ICTs become politic...
The CfP suggests reflecting on electronic media and their potential constitution of "new spaces of i...
We examine the origins of the recent shift towards “e-government” in three cases: the United States,...
This comparative article investigates the different views of the internet—what it could do and what ...
The evolution of the Internet challenges traditional approaches of industrial and technology policy ...
Over the past two decades, the Internet has revolutionized the spread of information across the worl...
Within the technology-values debate, this thesis demonstrates how conscious decisions and choices co...
The governance of economic organization and exchange across the Internet is widely recognized as bei...
Given its transnational character the Internet is often perceived as a technology that will challeng...
More than anything else, the Internet has become a symbol of global-ization. Emerging from military ...
There is a tendency to forget how young the Internet is. Modern computing and data trafficking are n...
The “Internet,” as a global self-regulated and interconnected network of institutions driven by educ...
Master's thesis at the Department of Political Science, University of CopenhagenThe thesis analyses ...
AbstractThe purpose of this investigation is to define the historic roots of the Internet and its im...
peer reviewedHow has the Internet come about in Europe? How did the “network of networks” and ICTs b...
How has the Internet come about in Europe? How did the "network of networks" and ICTs become politic...
The CfP suggests reflecting on electronic media and their potential constitution of "new spaces of i...
We examine the origins of the recent shift towards “e-government” in three cases: the United States,...
This comparative article investigates the different views of the internet—what it could do and what ...
The evolution of the Internet challenges traditional approaches of industrial and technology policy ...
Over the past two decades, the Internet has revolutionized the spread of information across the worl...
Within the technology-values debate, this thesis demonstrates how conscious decisions and choices co...
The governance of economic organization and exchange across the Internet is widely recognized as bei...
Given its transnational character the Internet is often perceived as a technology that will challeng...
More than anything else, the Internet has become a symbol of global-ization. Emerging from military ...
There is a tendency to forget how young the Internet is. Modern computing and data trafficking are n...
The “Internet,” as a global self-regulated and interconnected network of institutions driven by educ...
Master's thesis at the Department of Political Science, University of CopenhagenThe thesis analyses ...
AbstractThe purpose of this investigation is to define the historic roots of the Internet and its im...
peer reviewedHow has the Internet come about in Europe? How did the “network of networks” and ICTs b...
How has the Internet come about in Europe? How did the "network of networks" and ICTs become politic...
The CfP suggests reflecting on electronic media and their potential constitution of "new spaces of i...
We examine the origins of the recent shift towards “e-government” in three cases: the United States,...