ABSTRACT

The Politics of Cyberspace provides an overview of the impact of the world wide web on the political process. Chris Toulouse organizes the articles according to their theoretical approach--those who take up Habermas's concern with civil society and those who take up the postmodern critique of popular culture. The book covers key issues such as the potential for electronic democracy, the use of the web by mainstream political parties, challenges to the First Amendment, inequalities of access, and new understanding of gender. It also calls for progressive intellectuals to embrace the Internet in their political struggles.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|102 pages

Habermas & Cyberspace

chapter |30 pages

Pulling the Plug on Electronic Town Meetings

Participatory Democracy and the Reality of the Usenet

chapter |21 pages

Politics on the Internet

The Normalization of Cyberspace

chapter |15 pages

New Zealand Political Parties Online

The World Wide Web as a tool for democratization or for political marketing?

chapter |35 pages

Hard Travelin'

Free Speech in the Age of the Information Super Highway 1

part II|68 pages

Postmodernism & Cyberspace

chapter |24 pages

The Politics of Digital Inequality

Access, Capability and Distribution in Cyberspace

chapter |23 pages

‘To Boldly Go (Where No Man Has Gone Before)'

Women and Politics in Cyberspace