ABSTRACT

This book addresses the social and political landscape of Internet usage in Israel, and studies the formation of a networked information society in the "hi-tech nation". As Israel is considered a highly technologically developed country, it could serve as a model to assess and compare the performance and prospects of the Internet in other countries as well.

Chapters address a range of issues, including the diffusion of the Internet to Israel, religion and the Internet in the Israeli Jewish context, Internet-based planned encounters between Israeli-Jews and Palestinians and between Jews and Arabs in Israel, online journalism and user-generated content, Israeli public relations online, Internet usage by Israeli parliamentarians, parties and candidates, as well as audiences, and the facilitation of personalized politics through personal sites of politicians.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Israel Affairs.

chapter 1|14 pages

High-tech nation

The future of the Israeli polity

chapter 2|14 pages

The diffusion of the Internet to Israel

The first 10 years

chapter 3|23 pages

A revised look at online journalism in Israel

Entrenching the old hegemony 1

chapter 5|17 pages

Internet, conflict and dialogue

The Israeli case

chapter 9|19 pages

Online Israeli politics

The current state of the art