Michael X. Delli Carpini is Professor of Communication at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Michael X. Delli Carpini is Professor of Communication at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: Digital Media and the Future(s) of Democracy —Michael X. Delli Carpini PART I. DESIGNING DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 1. Programming the Rules of Engagement: Social Media Design and the Nonprofit System —Rena Bivens 2. Digital Opportunity Structures: Explaining Variation in Digital Mobilization During the 2016 Democratic Primaries —Daniel Kreiss 3. Kids These Days: Supply and Demand for Youth Online Political Engagement —Thomas Elliott and Jennifer Earl PART II. RETHINKING EXPERTISE IN DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 4. Why Dewey Was Wrong —Beth Simone Noveck 5. Counting the Uncounted: What the Absence of Data on Police Killings Reveals —Kelly Gates 6. Digital Peripheries and the Politics of Expertise in Nairobi, Kenya —Lisa Poggiali PART III. DIGITAL MEDIA AND PUBLIC VOICES 7. Authoritarian Deliberation 2.0: Lurking and Discussing Politics in Chinese Social Media —Daniela Stockmann and Ting Luo 8. How the Market for Social Media Shapes Strategies of Internet Censorship —Jennifer Pan 9. The Measure of a Movement: Quantifying Black Lives Matter's Social Media Power —Deen Freelon PART IV. REGULATING DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 10. Must Privacy Give Way to Use Regulation? —Helen Nissenbaum 11. Democratic Futures and the Internet of Things: How Information Infrastructure Will Become a Political Constitution —Philip N. Howard Contributors Index Acknowledgments
Introduction: Digital Media and the Future(s) of Democracy —Michael X. Delli Carpini PART I. DESIGNING DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 1. Programming the Rules of Engagement: Social Media Design and the Nonprofit System —Rena Bivens 2. Digital Opportunity Structures: Explaining Variation in Digital Mobilization During the 2016 Democratic Primaries —Daniel Kreiss 3. Kids These Days: Supply and Demand for Youth Online Political Engagement —Thomas Elliott and Jennifer Earl PART II. RETHINKING EXPERTISE IN DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 4. Why Dewey Was Wrong —Beth Simone Noveck 5. Counting the Uncounted: What the Absence of Data on Police Killings Reveals —Kelly Gates 6. Digital Peripheries and the Politics of Expertise in Nairobi, Kenya —Lisa Poggiali PART III. DIGITAL MEDIA AND PUBLIC VOICES 7. Authoritarian Deliberation 2.0: Lurking and Discussing Politics in Chinese Social Media —Daniela Stockmann and Ting Luo 8. How the Market for Social Media Shapes Strategies of Internet Censorship —Jennifer Pan 9. The Measure of a Movement: Quantifying Black Lives Matter's Social Media Power —Deen Freelon PART IV. REGULATING DIGITAL DEMOCRACIES 10. Must Privacy Give Way to Use Regulation? —Helen Nissenbaum 11. Democratic Futures and the Internet of Things: How Information Infrastructure Will Become a Political Constitution —Philip N. Howard Contributors Index Acknowledgments
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