ABSTRACT

The politics of the internet has entered the social science mainstream. From debates about its impact on parties and election campaigns following momentous presidential contests in the United States, to concerns over international security, privacy and surveillance in the post-9/11, post-7/7 environment; from the rise of blogging as a threat to the traditional model of journalism, to controversies at the international level over how and if the internet should be governed by an entity such as the United Nations; from the new repertoires of collective action open to citizens, to the massive programs of public management reform taking place in the name of e-government, internet politics and policy are continually in the headlines.

The Routledge Handbook of Internet Politics is a collection of over thirty chapters dealing with the most significant scholarly debates in this rapidly growing field of study. Organized in four broad sections: Institutions, Behavior, Identities, and Law and Policy, the Handbook summarizes and criticizes contemporary debates while pointing out new departures. A comprehensive set of resources, it provides linkages to established theories of media and politics, political communication, governance, deliberative democracy and social movements, all within an interdisciplinary context. The contributors form a strong international cast of established and junior scholars.

This is the first publication of its kind in this field; a helpful companion to students and scholars of politics, international relations, communication studies and sociology.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

New directions in internet politics research

part |117 pages

Institutions

chapter |15 pages

European political organizations and the internet

Mobilization, participation, and change

chapter |16 pages

Electoral web production practices in cross-national perspective

The relative influence of national development, political culture, and web genre

chapter |16 pages

Parties, election campaigning, and the internet

Toward a comparative institutional approach

chapter |13 pages

Making parliamentary democracy visible

Speaking to, with, and for the public in the age of interactive technology

chapter |14 pages

Public management change and e-government

The emergence of digital-era governance

part |85 pages

Behavior

chapter |13 pages

Wired to fact

The role of the internet in identifying deception during the 2004 U.S. presidential campaign

chapter |13 pages

Political engagement online

Do the information rich get richer and the like-minded more similar?

chapter |13 pages

Toward digital citizenship

Addressing inequality in the information age

chapter |15 pages

Online news creation and consumption

Implications for modern democracies

part |106 pages

Identities

chapter |16 pages

The virtual sphere 2.0

The internet, the public sphere, and beyond

chapter |15 pages

Identity, technology, and narratives

Transnational activism and social networks

chapter |14 pages

Theorizing gender and the internet

Past, present, and future

chapter |16 pages

Working around the state

Internet use and political identity in the Arab world

part |114 pages

Law and policy

chapter |14 pages

The geopolitics of internet control

Censorship, sovereignty, and cyberspace

chapter |12 pages

Locational surveillance

Embracing the patterns of our lives

chapter |15 pages

Metaphoric reinforcement of the virtual fence

Factors shaping the political economy of property in cyberspace

chapter |12 pages

Globalizing the logic of openness

Open source software and the global governance of intellectual property

chapter |8 pages

Exclusionary rules?

The politics of protocols

chapter |17 pages

The new politics of the internet

Multi-stakeholder policy-making and the internet technocracy

chapter |9 pages

Internet diffusion and the digital divide

The role of policy-making and political institutions

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Political omnivores and wired states