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- 1 participants
- 32901 discussions
22 Sep '01
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:27 >>>
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #124 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
--__--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:25:28 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #124 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:25 >>>
=20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #123 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
-- __--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:22:44 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #123 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:22 >>>
=3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:20:44 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:20 >>>
=3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. Science magazine article (Barry Wellman)
3. Question about research on migrant networks (C. Courtright)
4. RE: Question about research on migrant networks (Ellis Godard)
5. Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication technology at
UConn (Steve Jones)
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 09:01:43 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
=3D3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 09:01 >>>
=3D3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. civil defense origins of the internet (Barry Wellman)
3. Jobs at UCSD (Frederick Turner)
4. FW: [Ethics] public mailing list (Charles Ess)
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 09:01:13 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/21/01 09:01 >>>
=3D3D3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Music and the internet (neice(a)kw.igs.net)
2. some notes about 09.11 and the Internet (aurelija dagilyte)
3. Self-description and platform for Open Seat (Barry Wellman)
4. International Nominations (Charlie Breindahl)
5. Re: Self-description and platforms (jeremy hunsinger)
6. Web Archiving (w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk)
7. Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free Utopia =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
(D. Silver)
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 1
From: neice(a)kw.igs.net
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 12:50:55 -0400
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Music and the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hi Jens,
A useful discussion of music and digital technology is found in=3D3D3D3D20
Chapter 2 (Music: Intellectual Property's Canary in the Digital Coal=3D3D3D=
3D=3D
20=3D3D
Mine) of the citation noted below. This book most assuredly does=3D3D3D3D20=
not use ANT, but it still offers a solid analysis.=3D3D3D3D20
National Research Council (2000), The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual=3D3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
Property in the Information Age, Washington DC: National=3D3D3D3D20
Academy Press.
Please write me off-line about your work as I have done some work=3D3D3D3D2=
0
on file sharing that may be relevant.=3D3D3D3D20
Cheers,
david neice=3D3D3D3D20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
David C. Neice =3D3D3D3D20
digital-literacy.com :-) =3D3D3D3D20
Website at http://www.kw.igs.net/~neice/
Address: 47 Combermere, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 5B2
Tel: 519-885-2951 Fax: 519-885-5263
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 2
From: "aurelija dagilyte" <naunetka(a)takas.lt>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 21:20:08 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] some notes about 09.11 and the Internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hello,
I wanted to share some impressions about the well-known events and some
tendencies I've noticed in Russian and other post-soviet countries =
=3D3D3D3D
Internet.
As an anthropologist I was interested what do the ordinary people of these
countries really think about what happened, while their governments speak
nice phrases supporting the US and the war against the terrorism. The =
=3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
result
was interesting - while all TV channels, radio stations were speaking how
that was terrible and bad, on the Internet I've found very wide scale of
opinions and emotions. It seems so, that in post-soviet countries is a
difference between the Internet and other media. I had an impression that =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
TV
channels and radio programs presented more or less censored view and on =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
the
Internet almost all expressed opposite position to the official. These
tendencies had even more increased when US started to talk about the war =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
in
the
Afghanistan. I think a lot of people still remember the Russian war in =
=3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
that
country and it's useless. Another interesting thing is the fact that =3D
=3D3D3D3D
politic
discussions still dominates in the chat rooms and web pages which usually
are
not interested in the politics. I'm not sure if the opinions presented on
the net had some influence on the other media, but after some time
more skeptic view started to appear on the Russian TV too. I'm very curios
what will be next.
Regards,
Aurelija Dagilyte
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 16:36:41 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>, Keith Hampton <knh(a)MIT.EDU>,
Nancy Baym <nbaym(a)ukans.edu>, Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Self-description and platform for Open Seat
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
As the norm in the AOIR governance process seems to be evolving towards
public statements by/about candidates, here's mine.
I was nominated by Caroline Haythornthwaite and Keith Hampton for an open
council seat on AOIR. I was asked by AOIR (via Jeremy Hunsigner) to
prepare a 250-word self-description and platform. I present it below.=3D3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
For more details, see my website.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 18:30:52 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir office nominations <nominate(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Subject: Self-description and platform for Open Seat
As a keynote speaker at our founding conference, I want to keep the
momentum going.
Research: I believe in systematic, quality research. I've been studying
the Internet and its precursors since the 1970s. I've (co)-authored more
than 160 scholarly articles and (co)-edited three books, including The
Internet in Everyday Life and Networks in the Global Village.
Organization: Let's pioneer new ways to keep connected. In 1976, I founded
the International Network for Social Network Analysis, quite similar to
AOIR. I've served on the Sociology and Computing section Council of the
American Sociological Association, and the International Sociologists'
Community Council. I just co-founded a new journal as head of the ASA's
Community section.
Breadth: At AOIR, I will work to foster skill-expanding workshops. My
research encompasses a wide range of interests: how people find community
online, how people work together online, knowledge management, and the
rise of the networked society. I've collaborated in the design of new
communication systems.
Interdisciplinary: I've collaborated with computer scientists, educators,
engineers, historians, information scientists, lawyers, psychiatrists,
psychologists, and sociologists, and I'm an ICA member. I've been a board
member of Toronto's Knowledge Media Design Institute, McLuhan Program, and
Structural Analysis Program.
International: A Canadian, I've lived and worked in Europe and Asia. I've
collaborated with scholars in 8 countries in Europe, Asia and America. My
work has been translated into 8 languages. I've lectured and given
workshops in 16 countries in South and North America; Eastern and Western
Europe; Western, Southern and Eastern Asia.=3D3D3D3D20
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 4
From: "Charlie Breindahl" <hitch(a)hum.ku.dk>
To: "Air-L" <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:44:38 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] International Nominations
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I think many good names have come up already and I support those, =
=3D3D3D3D
especially
Steve and Nancy for a second term. My motivation is primarily to make room
for non-americans in the executive committee. In my opinion, this is
important to ensure that AoIR has credibility as an _international_
organisation. (I think it is self-explaining why AoIR in particular should
have such credibility.)
To achieve this is harder than you might think. More than half our members
are American. And most of us would like to vote for someone we know. If =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
all
Americans vote for Americans, well... So when voting, please consider
international candidates as well. And for you guys from .il, .nz, .jp, =
=3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
etc.:
Please come forward with your nominations :)
My nominees are:
Jenny Sund=3D3D3D3DC8n (Sweden) jensu(a)tema.liu.se
Frank Schaap (The Netherlands) architext(a)fragment.nl
Stine Gotved (Denmark) gotved(a)hum.ku.dk
Lisbeth Klastrup (Denmark) klastrup(a)it-c.dk
Kate O'Riordan (UK) k.s.o-riordan(a)sussex.ac.uk
Ken Friedman (Norway) ken.friedman(a)bi.no
Nicholas Jankowski (The Netherlands) nickjan(a)pop.xs4all.nl
Nils Zurawski (Germany) zurawsk(a)uni-muenster.de
(I will not run for an open seat myself, but will be happy to serve a =
=3D3D
=3D3D3D3D
second
term as Information Officer, if the new executive committee decides it.)
Charlie
--
Charlie Breindahl
Ph.D. Student, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of
Copenhagen
Web: http://computer.media.ku.dk/breindahl/
E-mail: hitch(a)hum.ku.dk
PGP: ldap://certserver.pgp.com
Phone: +45 35 32 81 19
Mobile: +45 51 92 15 98
"For the modern Don Quixote, the windmills have been preprogrammed to turn
into knights"
- Janet H. Murray
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 08:52:42 -0400
From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Organization: Virginia Tech
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Self-description and platforms
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
fyi
I will be posting the descriptions and platforms in the members area =
=3D3D3D
of=3D3D3D3D20
the website on sunday afternoon.
>
--=3D3D3D3D20
Jeremy hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
CDDC/political science http://www.cddc.vt.edu
526 major williams hall 0130
virginia tech
blacksburg, va 24061
540-231-7614
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 6
From: w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
To: Air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 14:17:48 +0100
Subject: [Air-l] Web Archiving
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Dear all,=3D3D3D3D20
I have learnt with interest of the archive project related to the=3D3D3D3D2=
0
September 11 terrorist attack (http://webarchivist.org) and=3D3D3D3D20
downloaded their link. Applied networking, I would say, of the best=3D3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
quality: technical, scholarly and moral.
On a much smaller scale, we are about to dowload and archive the=3D3D3D3D20=
sites of a number of UK political organisations (for info see=3D3D3D3D20
http://www.ipop.org.uk) Does anybody on the list have knowledge /=3D3D3D3D=
20=3D
experience of web archiving, and reliable web archiving software?=3D3D3D3D2=
0
Our N is small, and we would be able to monitor each download for=3D3D3D3D2=
0
faulty dynamic links. Yet, the jungle of jargon looks impenetrable:=3D3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
web archiving, harvesting software, offline browsers, crawlers etc.
We've have tried to address a couple of 'specialist' librarian lists,=3D3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
but no joy.
Can anybody help?
Many thanks
Wainer
Wainer Lusoli
Research Officer
Internet, political organisations and participation project
ESRI - University of Salford
United Kingdom
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Research Officer
Internet, Political Organisations and Participation Project
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Tel: 0161 295 5654=3D3D3D3D20
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 07:57:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: "D. Silver" <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a =
=3D3D3D3D
Race-Free Utopia
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
In my mind, Jeff Young, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education,
is by far one of the best journalists covering our beat. I'm including
the first few paragraphs and URL of an article on race and cyberspace he
wrote for the Chronicle. Lots of AIR'ers mentioned!
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Friday, September 21, 2001
Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free
Utopia
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
The Internet has often been touted as a utopia where racial
differences are erased and people are judged by their ideas
rather than their skin color. But rather than curbing racism,
cyberspace may be perpetuating racial stereotypes for some
users, a growing number of scholars say.
And until recently, they say, few researchers have studied
issues of racial identity online -- even though so much
attention has been paid to economic studies of the "digital
divide."
A recent batch of conferences and books are helping to fill
the research gap, however.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001092101t.htm
-- __--__-- =3D3D3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:04:42 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] civil defense origins of the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.=3D3D3D20
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 18:06:30 -0400
To: air-l(a)aoir.org, CYBERCULTURE(a)LISTSERV.TEMPLE.EDU,
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: Frederick Turner <fturner(a)MIT.EDU>
Subject: [Air-l] Jobs at UCSD
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication =3D
=3D3D3D
is=3D3D3D20
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the =3D3D3D
Assistant=3D3D3D20
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. =3D3D
or=3D3D3D20
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative=3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
are=3D3D3D20
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction=3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other=3D3D=
3D=3D
20=3D3D
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS =
=3D3D3D
tape)=3D3D3D20
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the =3D3D3D
attention=3D3D3D20
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. =3D3D3D
Special=3D3D3D20
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D20
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including=3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection=3D3D3D=
20=3D
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or=3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary=3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race =3D3D
and=3D3D3D20
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests =
=3D3D3D
that=3D3D3D20
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations=3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular=3D3D3D2=
0
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing=3D3=
D3=3D
D2=3D3D
0
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D20
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
of=3D3D3D20
>access to and use of information technology; communication and=3D3D3D20
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and =3D3D3D
patterns=3D3D3D20
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity=3D3D3D=
20=3D
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. =3D
=3D3D3D
Send=3D3D3D20
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,=3D3D=
3D=3D
20=3D3D
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative =
=3D3D3D
action=3D3D3D20
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are =
=3D3D3D
invited=3D3D3D20
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus =3D3D3D
website=3D3D3D20
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment=3D3D3D20
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website =3D
=3D3D3D
for=3D3D3D20
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
=3D3D3D20
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education =3D
=3D3D3D
and=3D3D3D20
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,=3D3D3D=
20=3D
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references=3D3D3D2=
0
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, =
=3D3D3D
2001,=3D3D3D20
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 23:56:50 -0500
From: Charles Ess <cmess(a)lib.drury.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] FW: [Ethics] public mailing list
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participant=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
s
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be =3D3D3D
subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:24:22 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Science magazine article
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,=3D3D20
I'm delighted to alert folks to a review article I wrote in Science,
reviewing work about computer networks as social networks. In addition to
arguing that computer networks are social networks, it substantively
focuses on how the Internet fits into everyday (nonwork) life and
computer-mediated tools for knowledge acquisition and management in
networked organizations.
You can access this article via my website. The URL is below, just click
on Publications.
While you're there, feel free to sightsee some of my other recent,
relevant stuff.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 3
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 14:54:13 -0500
From: "C. Courtright" <ccourtri(a)indiana.edu>
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Greetings,
Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work =3D3D
regarding
Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among expatriates/emigrants, =
=3D
=3D3D
or
2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
future empirical research on this topic.
Thank you for your help,
Christina Courtright
SLIS-Indiana University
ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 4
From: "Ellis Godard" <ellisgodard(a)starband.net>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: RE: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:26:18 -0700
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Semi-related, is anyone aware of applications of immigration/migraiton
literature to patterns of interaction on the Internet?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: air-l-admin(a)aoir.org [mailto:air-l-admin@aoir.org]On Behalf Of C.
> Courtright
> Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2001 12:54 PM
> To: air-l
> Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
>
>
>
> Greetings,
>
> Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work
> regarding
> Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among
> expatriates/emigrants, or
> 2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
> knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
> Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I =3D3D
haven't
> found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
> Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
> future empirical research on this topic.
>
> Thank you for your help,
>
> Christina Courtright
> SLIS-Indiana University
> ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
> http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
>
> _______________________________________________
> Air-l mailing list
> Air-l(a)aoir.org
> http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 5
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 18:17:17 -0500
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
From: Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication =3D3D
technology at
UConn
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>NOTICE OF VACANCY
>
>Department of Communication Sciences, Communication Processes Section
>
>Storrs Campus
>
>Rank: Open Salary: Open, depending=3D3D20
>upon qualifications and experience
>
>Dates Duties begin: 8/23/02
>
> Consideration of applications begins 11/14/01.
>
> Search closes when suitable candidates are identified
>
>Description of Duties
>
>Conduct research and teach undergraduate and graduate courses in =
New=3D3D20
>Communication Technologies. The candidate should have an additional=3D3D2=
0
>expertise in one or more of the following areas: marketing,=3D3D20
>advertising, organizational communication, computer graphics,=3D3D20
>e-commerce, media effects, interpersonal, or Internet research. =
The=3D3D20
>job also includes service to the department and university,=3D3D20
>including advising in the undergraduate, M.A., and Ph.D. programs.
>
>Lab space and substantial startup funds will be available to=3D3D20
>facilitate a qualified candidate's research program.
>
>Qualifications: Ph.D. completed; expertise in advanced research=3D3D20
>methodology and relevant teaching experience.
>
>Program and Campus Information
>
>The Communication Processes Section of the Department of=3D3D20
>Communication Sciences serves approximately 300 undergraduate=3D3D20
>majors, 15 M.A. and 25 Ph.D. students. There are 10 full-time=3D3D20
>faculty positions at the Storrs (main) campus. The department is=3D3D20
>well equipped with laboratory space and modern computing and=3D3D20
>research equipment including high-speed Internet connections and a=3D3D20
>facility designed for human computer interaction research. The=3D3D20
>university also houses the Booth Center for computing research.
>
>The Storrs campus is located in rural Connecticut, 40 minutes from=3D3D20
>Hartford and 60 minutes from Providence, RI, between Boston (90=3D3D20
>minutes away) and New York City (3 hours away). For more information=3D3D2=
0
>see <http://www.coms.uconn.edu/>www.coms.uconn.edu or=3D3D20
><http://www.uconn.edu/>www.uconn.edu.
>
>Application Procedure
>
>Send letter of application, with a curriculum vita, three letters =
of=3D3D20
>reference, and copies of relevant publications and papers as email=3D3D20
>attachments to:
>
>Mark Hamilton, Chair,
>
>COMS-NCT Search Committee
>
>comsci2(a)uconnvm.uconn.edu
>
>Department of Communication Sciences
>
>Box U-1085
>
>University of Connecticut
>
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>The University of Connecticut encourages minorities, women, and=3D3D20
>people with disabilities to apply for this position.
>
>Mark Hamilton
>Department of Communication Sciences
>University of Connecticut
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>Phone: 860-486-4569
>Fax: 860-486-5422
>
>
-- __--__-- =3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
--__--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
1
0
22 Sep '01
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:25 >>>
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #123 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
--__--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:22:44 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #123 - 2 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:22 >>>
=20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
-- __--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:20:44 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:20 >>>
=3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. Science magazine article (Barry Wellman)
3. Question about research on migrant networks (C. Courtright)
4. RE: Question about research on migrant networks (Ellis Godard)
5. Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication technology at
UConn (Steve Jones)
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 09:01:43 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 09:01 >>>
=3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. civil defense origins of the internet (Barry Wellman)
3. Jobs at UCSD (Frederick Turner)
4. FW: [Ethics] public mailing list (Charles Ess)
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 09:01:13 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
=3D3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/21/01 09:01 >>>
=3D3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Music and the internet (neice(a)kw.igs.net)
2. some notes about 09.11 and the Internet (aurelija dagilyte)
3. Self-description and platform for Open Seat (Barry Wellman)
4. International Nominations (Charlie Breindahl)
5. Re: Self-description and platforms (jeremy hunsinger)
6. Web Archiving (w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk)
7. Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free Utopia =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
(D. Silver)
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 1
From: neice(a)kw.igs.net
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 12:50:55 -0400
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Music and the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hi Jens,
A useful discussion of music and digital technology is found in=3D3D3D20
Chapter 2 (Music: Intellectual Property's Canary in the Digital Coal=3D3D3D=
20=3D
Mine) of the citation noted below. This book most assuredly does=3D3D3D20
not use ANT, but it still offers a solid analysis.=3D3D3D20
National Research Council (2000), The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual=3D3D3D2=
0
Property in the Information Age, Washington DC: National=3D3D3D20
Academy Press.
Please write me off-line about your work as I have done some work=3D3D3D20
on file sharing that may be relevant.=3D3D3D20
Cheers,
david neice=3D3D3D20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
David C. Neice =3D3D3D20
digital-literacy.com :-) =3D3D3D20
Website at http://www.kw.igs.net/~neice/
Address: 47 Combermere, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 5B2
Tel: 519-885-2951 Fax: 519-885-5263
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 2
From: "aurelija dagilyte" <naunetka(a)takas.lt>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 21:20:08 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] some notes about 09.11 and the Internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hello,
I wanted to share some impressions about the well-known events and some
tendencies I've noticed in Russian and other post-soviet countries =3D3D3D
Internet.
As an anthropologist I was interested what do the ordinary people of these
countries really think about what happened, while their governments speak
nice phrases supporting the US and the war against the terrorism. The =3D
=3D3D3D
result
was interesting - while all TV channels, radio stations were speaking how
that was terrible and bad, on the Internet I've found very wide scale of
opinions and emotions. It seems so, that in post-soviet countries is a
difference between the Internet and other media. I had an impression that =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
TV
channels and radio programs presented more or less censored view and on =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
the
Internet almost all expressed opposite position to the official. These
tendencies had even more increased when US started to talk about the war =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
in
the
Afghanistan. I think a lot of people still remember the Russian war in =3D
=3D3D3D
that
country and it's useless. Another interesting thing is the fact that =
=3D3D3D
politic
discussions still dominates in the chat rooms and web pages which usually
are
not interested in the politics. I'm not sure if the opinions presented on
the net had some influence on the other media, but after some time
more skeptic view started to appear on the Russian TV too. I'm very curios
what will be next.
Regards,
Aurelija Dagilyte
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 16:36:41 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>, Keith Hampton <knh(a)MIT.EDU>,
Nancy Baym <nbaym(a)ukans.edu>, Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Self-description and platform for Open Seat
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
As the norm in the AOIR governance process seems to be evolving towards
public statements by/about candidates, here's mine.
I was nominated by Caroline Haythornthwaite and Keith Hampton for an open
council seat on AOIR. I was asked by AOIR (via Jeremy Hunsigner) to
prepare a 250-word self-description and platform. I present it below.=3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
For more details, see my website.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 18:30:52 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir office nominations <nominate(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Subject: Self-description and platform for Open Seat
As a keynote speaker at our founding conference, I want to keep the
momentum going.
Research: I believe in systematic, quality research. I've been studying
the Internet and its precursors since the 1970s. I've (co)-authored more
than 160 scholarly articles and (co)-edited three books, including The
Internet in Everyday Life and Networks in the Global Village.
Organization: Let's pioneer new ways to keep connected. In 1976, I founded
the International Network for Social Network Analysis, quite similar to
AOIR. I've served on the Sociology and Computing section Council of the
American Sociological Association, and the International Sociologists'
Community Council. I just co-founded a new journal as head of the ASA's
Community section.
Breadth: At AOIR, I will work to foster skill-expanding workshops. My
research encompasses a wide range of interests: how people find community
online, how people work together online, knowledge management, and the
rise of the networked society. I've collaborated in the design of new
communication systems.
Interdisciplinary: I've collaborated with computer scientists, educators,
engineers, historians, information scientists, lawyers, psychiatrists,
psychologists, and sociologists, and I'm an ICA member. I've been a board
member of Toronto's Knowledge Media Design Institute, McLuhan Program, and
Structural Analysis Program.
International: A Canadian, I've lived and worked in Europe and Asia. I've
collaborated with scholars in 8 countries in Europe, Asia and America. My
work has been translated into 8 languages. I've lectured and given
workshops in 16 countries in South and North America; Eastern and Western
Europe; Western, Southern and Eastern Asia.=3D3D3D20
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 4
From: "Charlie Breindahl" <hitch(a)hum.ku.dk>
To: "Air-L" <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:44:38 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] International Nominations
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I think many good names have come up already and I support those, =3D3D3D
especially
Steve and Nancy for a second term. My motivation is primarily to make room
for non-americans in the executive committee. In my opinion, this is
important to ensure that AoIR has credibility as an _international_
organisation. (I think it is self-explaining why AoIR in particular should
have such credibility.)
To achieve this is harder than you might think. More than half our members
are American. And most of us would like to vote for someone we know. If =
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D3D
all
Americans vote for Americans, well... So when voting, please consider
international candidates as well. And for you guys from .il, .nz, .jp, =3D
=3D3D3D
etc.:
Please come forward with your nominations :)
My nominees are:
Jenny Sund=3D3D3DC8n (Sweden) jensu(a)tema.liu.se
Frank Schaap (The Netherlands) architext(a)fragment.nl
Stine Gotved (Denmark) gotved(a)hum.ku.dk
Lisbeth Klastrup (Denmark) klastrup(a)it-c.dk
Kate O'Riordan (UK) k.s.o-riordan(a)sussex.ac.uk
Ken Friedman (Norway) ken.friedman(a)bi.no
Nicholas Jankowski (The Netherlands) nickjan(a)pop.xs4all.nl
Nils Zurawski (Germany) zurawsk(a)uni-muenster.de
(I will not run for an open seat myself, but will be happy to serve a =3D
=3D3D3D
second
term as Information Officer, if the new executive committee decides it.)
Charlie
--
Charlie Breindahl
Ph.D. Student, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of
Copenhagen
Web: http://computer.media.ku.dk/breindahl/
E-mail: hitch(a)hum.ku.dk
PGP: ldap://certserver.pgp.com
Phone: +45 35 32 81 19
Mobile: +45 51 92 15 98
"For the modern Don Quixote, the windmills have been preprogrammed to turn
into knights"
- Janet H. Murray
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 08:52:42 -0400
From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Organization: Virginia Tech
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Self-description and platforms
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
fyi
I will be posting the descriptions and platforms in the members area =3D3D
of=3D3D3D20
the website on sunday afternoon.
>
--=3D3D3D20
Jeremy hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
CDDC/political science http://www.cddc.vt.edu
526 major williams hall 0130
virginia tech
blacksburg, va 24061
540-231-7614
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 6
From: w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
To: Air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 14:17:48 +0100
Subject: [Air-l] Web Archiving
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Dear all,=3D3D3D20
I have learnt with interest of the archive project related to the=3D3D3D20
September 11 terrorist attack (http://webarchivist.org) and=3D3D3D20
downloaded their link. Applied networking, I would say, of the best=3D3D3D2=
0
quality: technical, scholarly and moral.
On a much smaller scale, we are about to dowload and archive the=3D3D3D20
sites of a number of UK political organisations (for info see=3D3D3D20
http://www.ipop.org.uk) Does anybody on the list have knowledge /=3D3D3D20=
experience of web archiving, and reliable web archiving software?=3D3D3D20
Our N is small, and we would be able to monitor each download for=3D3D3D20
faulty dynamic links. Yet, the jungle of jargon looks impenetrable:=3D3D3D2=
0
web archiving, harvesting software, offline browsers, crawlers etc.
We've have tried to address a couple of 'specialist' librarian lists,=3D3D3=
D2=3D
0
but no joy.
Can anybody help?
Many thanks
Wainer
Wainer Lusoli
Research Officer
Internet, political organisations and participation project
ESRI - University of Salford
United Kingdom
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Research Officer
Internet, Political Organisations and Participation Project
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Tel: 0161 295 5654=3D3D3D20
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 07:57:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: "D. Silver" <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a =3D3D3D
Race-Free Utopia
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
In my mind, Jeff Young, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education,
is by far one of the best journalists covering our beat. I'm including
the first few paragraphs and URL of an article on race and cyberspace he
wrote for the Chronicle. Lots of AIR'ers mentioned!
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Friday, September 21, 2001
Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free
Utopia
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
The Internet has often been touted as a utopia where racial
differences are erased and people are judged by their ideas
rather than their skin color. But rather than curbing racism,
cyberspace may be perpetuating racial stereotypes for some
users, a growing number of scholars say.
And until recently, they say, few researchers have studied
issues of racial identity online -- even though so much
attention has been paid to economic studies of the "digital
divide."
A recent batch of conferences and books are helping to fill
the research gap, however.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001092101t.htm
-- __--__-- =3D3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:04:42 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] civil defense origins of the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.=3D3D20
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 18:06:30 -0400
To: air-l(a)aoir.org, CYBERCULTURE(a)LISTSERV.TEMPLE.EDU,
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: Frederick Turner <fturner(a)MIT.EDU>
Subject: [Air-l] Jobs at UCSD
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication =
=3D3D
is=3D3D20
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the =3D3D
Assistant=3D3D20
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. =3D
or=3D3D20
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative=3D3=
D2=3D
0
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs =
=3D
=3D3D
are=3D3D20
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction=3D3=
D2=3D
0
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other=3D3D=
20=3D
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS =3D3D
tape)=3D3D20
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the =3D3D
attention=3D3D20
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. =3D3D
Special=3D3D20
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D20
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including=3D3=
D2=3D
0
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection=3D3D20=
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or=3D3=
D2=3D
0
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary=3D3D2=
0
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race =3D
and=3D3D20
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests =3D3D
that=3D3D20
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations=3D3D2=
0
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular=3D3D20
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing=3D3=
D2=3D
0
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D20
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns =
=3D
=3D3D
of=3D3D20
>access to and use of information technology; communication and=3D3D20
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and =3D3D
patterns=3D3D20
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity=3D3D20=
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. =
=3D3D
Send=3D3D20
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,=3D3D=
20=3D
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative =3D3D
action=3D3D20
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are =3D3D
invited=3D3D20
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus =3D3D
website=3D3D20
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment=3D3D20
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website =
=3D3D
for=3D3D20
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity=
=3D
=3D3D
=3D3D20
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education =
=3D3D
and=3D3D20
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,=3D3D20=
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references=3D3D20
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, =3D3D
2001,=3D3D20
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 23:56:50 -0500
From: Charles Ess <cmess(a)lib.drury.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] FW: [Ethics] public mailing list
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which =
=3D
=3D3D
the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participant=
=3D
=3D3D
s
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be =3D3D
subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
-- __--__-- =3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:24:22 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Science magazine article
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,=3D20
I'm delighted to alert folks to a review article I wrote in Science,
reviewing work about computer networks as social networks. In addition to
arguing that computer networks are social networks, it substantively
focuses on how the Internet fits into everyday (nonwork) life and
computer-mediated tools for knowledge acquisition and management in
networked organizations.
You can access this article via my website. The URL is below, just click
on Publications.
While you're there, feel free to sightsee some of my other recent,
relevant stuff.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 3
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 14:54:13 -0500
From: "C. Courtright" <ccourtri(a)indiana.edu>
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Greetings,
Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work =3D
regarding
Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among expatriates/emigrants, =
=3D
or
2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
future empirical research on this topic.
Thank you for your help,
Christina Courtright
SLIS-Indiana University
ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 4
From: "Ellis Godard" <ellisgodard(a)starband.net>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: RE: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:26:18 -0700
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Semi-related, is anyone aware of applications of immigration/migraiton
literature to patterns of interaction on the Internet?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: air-l-admin(a)aoir.org [mailto:air-l-admin@aoir.org]On Behalf Of C.
> Courtright
> Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2001 12:54 PM
> To: air-l
> Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
>
>
>
> Greetings,
>
> Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work
> regarding
> Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among
> expatriates/emigrants, or
> 2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
> knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
> Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I =3D
haven't
> found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
> Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
> future empirical research on this topic.
>
> Thank you for your help,
>
> Christina Courtright
> SLIS-Indiana University
> ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
> http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
>
> _______________________________________________
> Air-l mailing list
> Air-l(a)aoir.org
> http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 5
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 18:17:17 -0500
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
From: Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication =3D
technology at
UConn
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>NOTICE OF VACANCY
>
>Department of Communication Sciences, Communication Processes Section
>
>Storrs Campus
>
>Rank: Open Salary: Open, depending=3D20
>upon qualifications and experience
>
>Dates Duties begin: 8/23/02
>
> Consideration of applications begins 11/14/01.
>
> Search closes when suitable candidates are identified
>
>Description of Duties
>
>Conduct research and teach undergraduate and graduate courses in New=3D20
>Communication Technologies. The candidate should have an additional=3D20
>expertise in one or more of the following areas: marketing,=3D20
>advertising, organizational communication, computer graphics,=3D20
>e-commerce, media effects, interpersonal, or Internet research. The=3D20
>job also includes service to the department and university,=3D20
>including advising in the undergraduate, M.A., and Ph.D. programs.
>
>Lab space and substantial startup funds will be available to=3D20
>facilitate a qualified candidate's research program.
>
>Qualifications: Ph.D. completed; expertise in advanced research=3D20
>methodology and relevant teaching experience.
>
>Program and Campus Information
>
>The Communication Processes Section of the Department of=3D20
>Communication Sciences serves approximately 300 undergraduate=3D20
>majors, 15 M.A. and 25 Ph.D. students. There are 10 full-time=3D20
>faculty positions at the Storrs (main) campus. The department is=3D20
>well equipped with laboratory space and modern computing and=3D20
>research equipment including high-speed Internet connections and a=3D20
>facility designed for human computer interaction research. The=3D20
>university also houses the Booth Center for computing research.
>
>The Storrs campus is located in rural Connecticut, 40 minutes from=3D20
>Hartford and 60 minutes from Providence, RI, between Boston (90=3D20
>minutes away) and New York City (3 hours away). For more information=3D20
>see <http://www.coms.uconn.edu/>www.coms.uconn.edu or=3D20
><http://www.uconn.edu/>www.uconn.edu.
>
>Application Procedure
>
>Send letter of application, with a curriculum vita, three letters of=3D20
>reference, and copies of relevant publications and papers as email=3D20
>attachments to:
>
>Mark Hamilton, Chair,
>
>COMS-NCT Search Committee
>
>comsci2(a)uconnvm.uconn.edu
>
>Department of Communication Sciences
>
>Box U-1085
>
>University of Connecticut
>
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>The University of Connecticut encourages minorities, women, and=3D20
>people with disabilities to apply for this position.
>
>Mark Hamilton
>Department of Communication Sciences
>University of Connecticut
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>Phone: 860-486-4569
>Fax: 860-486-5422
>
>
-- __--__-- =20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
--__--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
1
0
22 Sep '01
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:22 >>>
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
--__--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 16:20:44 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #122 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:20 >>>
=20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. Science magazine article (Barry Wellman)
3. Question about research on migrant networks (C. Courtright)
4. RE: Question about research on migrant networks (Ellis Godard)
5. Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication technology at
UConn (Steve Jones)
-- __--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 09:01:43 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 09:01 >>>
=3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. civil defense origins of the internet (Barry Wellman)
3. Jobs at UCSD (Frederick Turner)
4. FW: [Ethics] public mailing list (Charles Ess)
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 09:01:13 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
=3D
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
=3D3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/21/01 09:01 >>>
=3D3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Music and the internet (neice(a)kw.igs.net)
2. some notes about 09.11 and the Internet (aurelija dagilyte)
3. Self-description and platform for Open Seat (Barry Wellman)
4. International Nominations (Charlie Breindahl)
5. Re: Self-description and platforms (jeremy hunsinger)
6. Web Archiving (w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk)
7. Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free Utopia =
=3D
=3D3D
(D. Silver)
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 1
From: neice(a)kw.igs.net
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 12:50:55 -0400
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Music and the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hi Jens,
A useful discussion of music and digital technology is found in=3D3D20
Chapter 2 (Music: Intellectual Property's Canary in the Digital Coal=3D3D20=
Mine) of the citation noted below. This book most assuredly does=3D3D20
not use ANT, but it still offers a solid analysis.=3D3D20
National Research Council (2000), The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual=3D3D20
Property in the Information Age, Washington DC: National=3D3D20
Academy Press.
Please write me off-line about your work as I have done some work=3D3D20
on file sharing that may be relevant.=3D3D20
Cheers,
david neice=3D3D20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
David C. Neice =3D3D20
digital-literacy.com :-) =3D3D20
Website at http://www.kw.igs.net/~neice/
Address: 47 Combermere, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 5B2
Tel: 519-885-2951 Fax: 519-885-5263
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 2
From: "aurelija dagilyte" <naunetka(a)takas.lt>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 21:20:08 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] some notes about 09.11 and the Internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hello,
I wanted to share some impressions about the well-known events and some
tendencies I've noticed in Russian and other post-soviet countries =3D3D
Internet.
As an anthropologist I was interested what do the ordinary people of these
countries really think about what happened, while their governments speak
nice phrases supporting the US and the war against the terrorism. The =
=3D3D
result
was interesting - while all TV channels, radio stations were speaking how
that was terrible and bad, on the Internet I've found very wide scale of
opinions and emotions. It seems so, that in post-soviet countries is a
difference between the Internet and other media. I had an impression that =
=3D
=3D3D
TV
channels and radio programs presented more or less censored view and on =
=3D
=3D3D
the
Internet almost all expressed opposite position to the official. These
tendencies had even more increased when US started to talk about the war =
=3D
=3D3D
in
the
Afghanistan. I think a lot of people still remember the Russian war in =
=3D3D
that
country and it's useless. Another interesting thing is the fact that =3D3D
politic
discussions still dominates in the chat rooms and web pages which usually
are
not interested in the politics. I'm not sure if the opinions presented on
the net had some influence on the other media, but after some time
more skeptic view started to appear on the Russian TV too. I'm very curios
what will be next.
Regards,
Aurelija Dagilyte
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 16:36:41 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>, Keith Hampton <knh(a)MIT.EDU>,
Nancy Baym <nbaym(a)ukans.edu>, Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Self-description and platform for Open Seat
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
As the norm in the AOIR governance process seems to be evolving towards
public statements by/about candidates, here's mine.
I was nominated by Caroline Haythornthwaite and Keith Hampton for an open
council seat on AOIR. I was asked by AOIR (via Jeremy Hunsigner) to
prepare a 250-word self-description and platform. I present it below.=3D3D2=
0
For more details, see my website.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 18:30:52 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir office nominations <nominate(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Subject: Self-description and platform for Open Seat
As a keynote speaker at our founding conference, I want to keep the
momentum going.
Research: I believe in systematic, quality research. I've been studying
the Internet and its precursors since the 1970s. I've (co)-authored more
than 160 scholarly articles and (co)-edited three books, including The
Internet in Everyday Life and Networks in the Global Village.
Organization: Let's pioneer new ways to keep connected. In 1976, I founded
the International Network for Social Network Analysis, quite similar to
AOIR. I've served on the Sociology and Computing section Council of the
American Sociological Association, and the International Sociologists'
Community Council. I just co-founded a new journal as head of the ASA's
Community section.
Breadth: At AOIR, I will work to foster skill-expanding workshops. My
research encompasses a wide range of interests: how people find community
online, how people work together online, knowledge management, and the
rise of the networked society. I've collaborated in the design of new
communication systems.
Interdisciplinary: I've collaborated with computer scientists, educators,
engineers, historians, information scientists, lawyers, psychiatrists,
psychologists, and sociologists, and I'm an ICA member. I've been a board
member of Toronto's Knowledge Media Design Institute, McLuhan Program, and
Structural Analysis Program.
International: A Canadian, I've lived and worked in Europe and Asia. I've
collaborated with scholars in 8 countries in Europe, Asia and America. My
work has been translated into 8 languages. I've lectured and given
workshops in 16 countries in South and North America; Eastern and Western
Europe; Western, Southern and Eastern Asia.=3D3D20
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 4
From: "Charlie Breindahl" <hitch(a)hum.ku.dk>
To: "Air-L" <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:44:38 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] International Nominations
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I think many good names have come up already and I support those, =3D3D
especially
Steve and Nancy for a second term. My motivation is primarily to make room
for non-americans in the executive committee. In my opinion, this is
important to ensure that AoIR has credibility as an _international_
organisation. (I think it is self-explaining why AoIR in particular should
have such credibility.)
To achieve this is harder than you might think. More than half our members
are American. And most of us would like to vote for someone we know. If =
=3D
=3D3D
all
Americans vote for Americans, well... So when voting, please consider
international candidates as well. And for you guys from .il, .nz, .jp, =
=3D3D
etc.:
Please come forward with your nominations :)
My nominees are:
Jenny Sund=3D3DC8n (Sweden) jensu(a)tema.liu.se
Frank Schaap (The Netherlands) architext(a)fragment.nl
Stine Gotved (Denmark) gotved(a)hum.ku.dk
Lisbeth Klastrup (Denmark) klastrup(a)it-c.dk
Kate O'Riordan (UK) k.s.o-riordan(a)sussex.ac.uk
Ken Friedman (Norway) ken.friedman(a)bi.no
Nicholas Jankowski (The Netherlands) nickjan(a)pop.xs4all.nl
Nils Zurawski (Germany) zurawsk(a)uni-muenster.de
(I will not run for an open seat myself, but will be happy to serve a =
=3D3D
second
term as Information Officer, if the new executive committee decides it.)
Charlie
--
Charlie Breindahl
Ph.D. Student, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of
Copenhagen
Web: http://computer.media.ku.dk/breindahl/
E-mail: hitch(a)hum.ku.dk
PGP: ldap://certserver.pgp.com
Phone: +45 35 32 81 19
Mobile: +45 51 92 15 98
"For the modern Don Quixote, the windmills have been preprogrammed to turn
into knights"
- Janet H. Murray
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 08:52:42 -0400
From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Organization: Virginia Tech
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Self-description and platforms
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
fyi
I will be posting the descriptions and platforms in the members area =3D
of=3D3D20
the website on sunday afternoon.
>
--=3D3D20
Jeremy hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
CDDC/political science http://www.cddc.vt.edu
526 major williams hall 0130
virginia tech
blacksburg, va 24061
540-231-7614
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 6
From: w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
To: Air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 14:17:48 +0100
Subject: [Air-l] Web Archiving
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Dear all,=3D3D20
I have learnt with interest of the archive project related to the=3D3D20
September 11 terrorist attack (http://webarchivist.org) and=3D3D20
downloaded their link. Applied networking, I would say, of the best=3D3D20
quality: technical, scholarly and moral.
On a much smaller scale, we are about to dowload and archive the=3D3D20
sites of a number of UK political organisations (for info see=3D3D20
http://www.ipop.org.uk) Does anybody on the list have knowledge /=3D3D20
experience of web archiving, and reliable web archiving software?=3D3D20
Our N is small, and we would be able to monitor each download for=3D3D20
faulty dynamic links. Yet, the jungle of jargon looks impenetrable:=3D3D20
web archiving, harvesting software, offline browsers, crawlers etc.
We've have tried to address a couple of 'specialist' librarian lists,=3D3D2=
0
but no joy.
Can anybody help?
Many thanks
Wainer
Wainer Lusoli
Research Officer
Internet, political organisations and participation project
ESRI - University of Salford
United Kingdom
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Research Officer
Internet, Political Organisations and Participation Project
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Tel: 0161 295 5654=3D3D20
-- __--__-- =3D20
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 07:57:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: "D. Silver" <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a =3D3D
Race-Free Utopia
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
In my mind, Jeff Young, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education,
is by far one of the best journalists covering our beat. I'm including
the first few paragraphs and URL of an article on race and cyberspace he
wrote for the Chronicle. Lots of AIR'ers mentioned!
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Friday, September 21, 2001
Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free
Utopia
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
The Internet has often been touted as a utopia where racial
differences are erased and people are judged by their ideas
rather than their skin color. But rather than curbing racism,
cyberspace may be perpetuating racial stereotypes for some
users, a growing number of scholars say.
And until recently, they say, few researchers have studied
issues of racial identity online -- even though so much
attention has been paid to economic studies of the "digital
divide."
A recent batch of conferences and books are helping to fill
the research gap, however.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001092101t.htm
-- __--__-- =3D20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:04:42 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] civil defense origins of the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.=3D20
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 18:06:30 -0400
To: air-l(a)aoir.org, CYBERCULTURE(a)LISTSERV.TEMPLE.EDU,
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: Frederick Turner <fturner(a)MIT.EDU>
Subject: [Air-l] Jobs at UCSD
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication =3D
is=3D20
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the =3D
Assistant=3D20
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. =
or=3D20
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative=3D2=
0
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs =
=3D
are=3D20
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction=3D2=
0
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other=3D20=
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS =3D
tape)=3D20
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the =3D
attention=3D20
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. =3D
Special=3D20
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative=
=3D
=3D20
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including=3D2=
0
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection=3D20
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or=3D2=
0
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary=3D20
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race =
and=3D20
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests =3D
that=3D20
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations=3D20
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular=3D20
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing=3D2=
0
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication=
=3D
=3D20
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns =
=3D
of=3D20
>access to and use of information technology; communication and=3D20
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and =3D
patterns=3D20
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity=3D20
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. =3D
Send=3D20
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,=3D20=
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative =3D
action=3D20
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are =3D
invited=3D20
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus =3D
website=3D20
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment=3D20
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website =3D
for=3D20
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity=
=3D
=3D20
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education =3D
and=3D20
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,=3D20
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references=3D20
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, =3D
2001,=3D20
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 23:56:50 -0500
From: Charles Ess <cmess(a)lib.drury.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] FW: [Ethics] public mailing list
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which =
=3D
the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participant=
=3D
s
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be =3D
subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
-- __--__-- =20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__--
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:24:22 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Science magazine article
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,=20
I'm delighted to alert folks to a review article I wrote in Science,
reviewing work about computer networks as social networks. In addition to
arguing that computer networks are social networks, it substantively
focuses on how the Internet fits into everyday (nonwork) life and
computer-mediated tools for knowledge acquisition and management in
networked organizations.
You can access this article via my website. The URL is below, just click
on Publications.
While you're there, feel free to sightsee some of my other recent,
relevant stuff.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__--
Message: 3
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 14:54:13 -0500
From: "C. Courtright" <ccourtri(a)indiana.edu>
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Greetings,
Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work =
regarding
Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among expatriates/emigrants, =
or
2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
future empirical research on this topic.
Thank you for your help,
Christina Courtright
SLIS-Indiana University
ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
-- __--__--
Message: 4
From: "Ellis Godard" <ellisgodard(a)starband.net>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: RE: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:26:18 -0700
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Semi-related, is anyone aware of applications of immigration/migraiton
literature to patterns of interaction on the Internet?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: air-l-admin(a)aoir.org [mailto:air-l-admin@aoir.org]On Behalf Of C.
> Courtright
> Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2001 12:54 PM
> To: air-l
> Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
>
>
>
> Greetings,
>
> Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work
> regarding
> Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among
> expatriates/emigrants, or
> 2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
> knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
> Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I =
haven't
> found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
> Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
> future empirical research on this topic.
>
> Thank you for your help,
>
> Christina Courtright
> SLIS-Indiana University
> ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
> http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
>
> _______________________________________________
> Air-l mailing list
> Air-l(a)aoir.org
> http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
-- __--__--
Message: 5
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 18:17:17 -0500
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
From: Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication =
technology at
UConn
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>NOTICE OF VACANCY
>
>Department of Communication Sciences, Communication Processes Section
>
>Storrs Campus
>
>Rank: Open Salary: Open, depending=20
>upon qualifications and experience
>
>Dates Duties begin: 8/23/02
>
> Consideration of applications begins 11/14/01.
>
> Search closes when suitable candidates are identified
>
>Description of Duties
>
>Conduct research and teach undergraduate and graduate courses in New=20
>Communication Technologies. The candidate should have an additional=20
>expertise in one or more of the following areas: marketing,=20
>advertising, organizational communication, computer graphics,=20
>e-commerce, media effects, interpersonal, or Internet research. The=20
>job also includes service to the department and university,=20
>including advising in the undergraduate, M.A., and Ph.D. programs.
>
>Lab space and substantial startup funds will be available to=20
>facilitate a qualified candidate's research program.
>
>Qualifications: Ph.D. completed; expertise in advanced research=20
>methodology and relevant teaching experience.
>
>Program and Campus Information
>
>The Communication Processes Section of the Department of=20
>Communication Sciences serves approximately 300 undergraduate=20
>majors, 15 M.A. and 25 Ph.D. students. There are 10 full-time=20
>faculty positions at the Storrs (main) campus. The department is=20
>well equipped with laboratory space and modern computing and=20
>research equipment including high-speed Internet connections and a=20
>facility designed for human computer interaction research. The=20
>university also houses the Booth Center for computing research.
>
>The Storrs campus is located in rural Connecticut, 40 minutes from=20
>Hartford and 60 minutes from Providence, RI, between Boston (90=20
>minutes away) and New York City (3 hours away). For more information=20
>see <http://www.coms.uconn.edu/>www.coms.uconn.edu or=20
><http://www.uconn.edu/>www.uconn.edu.
>
>Application Procedure
>
>Send letter of application, with a curriculum vita, three letters of=20
>reference, and copies of relevant publications and papers as email=20
>attachments to:
>
>Mark Hamilton, Chair,
>
>COMS-NCT Search Committee
>
>comsci2(a)uconnvm.uconn.edu
>
>Department of Communication Sciences
>
>Box U-1085
>
>University of Connecticut
>
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>The University of Connecticut encourages minorities, women, and=20
>people with disabilities to apply for this position.
>
>Mark Hamilton
>Department of Communication Sciences
>University of Connecticut
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>Phone: 860-486-4569
>Fax: 860-486-5422
>
>
-- __--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
--__--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
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End of Air-l Digest
1
0
22 Sep '01
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 16:20 >>>
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. Science magazine article (Barry Wellman)
3. Question about research on migrant networks (C. Courtright)
4. RE: Question about research on migrant networks (Ellis Godard)
5. Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication technology at
UConn (Steve Jones)
--__--__--
Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 09:01:43 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #121 - 5 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 09:01 >>>
=20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. civil defense origins of the internet (Barry Wellman)
3. Jobs at UCSD (Frederick Turner)
4. FW: [Ethics] public mailing list (Charles Ess)
-- __--__--
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 09:01:13 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of =
the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
=3D
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/21/01 09:01 >>>
=3D20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Music and the internet (neice(a)kw.igs.net)
2. some notes about 09.11 and the Internet (aurelija dagilyte)
3. Self-description and platform for Open Seat (Barry Wellman)
4. International Nominations (Charlie Breindahl)
5. Re: Self-description and platforms (jeremy hunsinger)
6. Web Archiving (w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk)
7. Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free Utopia =
=3D
(D. Silver)
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 1
From: neice(a)kw.igs.net
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 12:50:55 -0400
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Music and the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hi Jens,
A useful discussion of music and digital technology is found in=3D20
Chapter 2 (Music: Intellectual Property's Canary in the Digital Coal=3D20
Mine) of the citation noted below. This book most assuredly does=3D20
not use ANT, but it still offers a solid analysis.=3D20
National Research Council (2000), The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual=3D20
Property in the Information Age, Washington DC: National=3D20
Academy Press.
Please write me off-line about your work as I have done some work=3D20
on file sharing that may be relevant.=3D20
Cheers,
david neice=3D20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
David C. Neice =3D20
digital-literacy.com :-) =3D20
Website at http://www.kw.igs.net/~neice/
Address: 47 Combermere, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 5B2
Tel: 519-885-2951 Fax: 519-885-5263
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 2
From: "aurelija dagilyte" <naunetka(a)takas.lt>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 21:20:08 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] some notes about 09.11 and the Internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hello,
I wanted to share some impressions about the well-known events and some
tendencies I've noticed in Russian and other post-soviet countries =3D
Internet.
As an anthropologist I was interested what do the ordinary people of these
countries really think about what happened, while their governments speak
nice phrases supporting the US and the war against the terrorism. The =3D
result
was interesting - while all TV channels, radio stations were speaking how
that was terrible and bad, on the Internet I've found very wide scale of
opinions and emotions. It seems so, that in post-soviet countries is a
difference between the Internet and other media. I had an impression that =
=3D
TV
channels and radio programs presented more or less censored view and on =
=3D
the
Internet almost all expressed opposite position to the official. These
tendencies had even more increased when US started to talk about the war =
=3D
in
the
Afghanistan. I think a lot of people still remember the Russian war in =3D
that
country and it's useless. Another interesting thing is the fact that =3D
politic
discussions still dominates in the chat rooms and web pages which usually
are
not interested in the politics. I'm not sure if the opinions presented on
the net had some influence on the other media, but after some time
more skeptic view started to appear on the Russian TV too. I'm very curios
what will be next.
Regards,
Aurelija Dagilyte
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 16:36:41 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>, Keith Hampton <knh(a)MIT.EDU>,
Nancy Baym <nbaym(a)ukans.edu>, Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Self-description and platform for Open Seat
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
As the norm in the AOIR governance process seems to be evolving towards
public statements by/about candidates, here's mine.
I was nominated by Caroline Haythornthwaite and Keith Hampton for an open
council seat on AOIR. I was asked by AOIR (via Jeremy Hunsigner) to
prepare a 250-word self-description and platform. I present it below.=3D20
For more details, see my website.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 18:30:52 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir office nominations <nominate(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Subject: Self-description and platform for Open Seat
As a keynote speaker at our founding conference, I want to keep the
momentum going.
Research: I believe in systematic, quality research. I've been studying
the Internet and its precursors since the 1970s. I've (co)-authored more
than 160 scholarly articles and (co)-edited three books, including The
Internet in Everyday Life and Networks in the Global Village.
Organization: Let's pioneer new ways to keep connected. In 1976, I founded
the International Network for Social Network Analysis, quite similar to
AOIR. I've served on the Sociology and Computing section Council of the
American Sociological Association, and the International Sociologists'
Community Council. I just co-founded a new journal as head of the ASA's
Community section.
Breadth: At AOIR, I will work to foster skill-expanding workshops. My
research encompasses a wide range of interests: how people find community
online, how people work together online, knowledge management, and the
rise of the networked society. I've collaborated in the design of new
communication systems.
Interdisciplinary: I've collaborated with computer scientists, educators,
engineers, historians, information scientists, lawyers, psychiatrists,
psychologists, and sociologists, and I'm an ICA member. I've been a board
member of Toronto's Knowledge Media Design Institute, McLuhan Program, and
Structural Analysis Program.
International: A Canadian, I've lived and worked in Europe and Asia. I've
collaborated with scholars in 8 countries in Europe, Asia and America. My
work has been translated into 8 languages. I've lectured and given
workshops in 16 countries in South and North America; Eastern and Western
Europe; Western, Southern and Eastern Asia.=3D20
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=3D20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 4
From: "Charlie Breindahl" <hitch(a)hum.ku.dk>
To: "Air-L" <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:44:38 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] International Nominations
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I think many good names have come up already and I support those, =3D
especially
Steve and Nancy for a second term. My motivation is primarily to make room
for non-americans in the executive committee. In my opinion, this is
important to ensure that AoIR has credibility as an _international_
organisation. (I think it is self-explaining why AoIR in particular should
have such credibility.)
To achieve this is harder than you might think. More than half our members
are American. And most of us would like to vote for someone we know. If =
=3D
all
Americans vote for Americans, well... So when voting, please consider
international candidates as well. And for you guys from .il, .nz, .jp, =3D
etc.:
Please come forward with your nominations :)
My nominees are:
Jenny Sund=3DC8n (Sweden) jensu(a)tema.liu.se
Frank Schaap (The Netherlands) architext(a)fragment.nl
Stine Gotved (Denmark) gotved(a)hum.ku.dk
Lisbeth Klastrup (Denmark) klastrup(a)it-c.dk
Kate O'Riordan (UK) k.s.o-riordan(a)sussex.ac.uk
Ken Friedman (Norway) ken.friedman(a)bi.no
Nicholas Jankowski (The Netherlands) nickjan(a)pop.xs4all.nl
Nils Zurawski (Germany) zurawsk(a)uni-muenster.de
(I will not run for an open seat myself, but will be happy to serve a =3D
second
term as Information Officer, if the new executive committee decides it.)
Charlie
--
Charlie Breindahl
Ph.D. Student, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of
Copenhagen
Web: http://computer.media.ku.dk/breindahl/
E-mail: hitch(a)hum.ku.dk
PGP: ldap://certserver.pgp.com
Phone: +45 35 32 81 19
Mobile: +45 51 92 15 98
"For the modern Don Quixote, the windmills have been preprogrammed to turn
into knights"
- Janet H. Murray
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 08:52:42 -0400
From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Organization: Virginia Tech
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Self-description and platforms
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
fyi
I will be posting the descriptions and platforms in the members area =
of=3D20
the website on sunday afternoon.
>
--=3D20
Jeremy hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
CDDC/political science http://www.cddc.vt.edu
526 major williams hall 0130
virginia tech
blacksburg, va 24061
540-231-7614
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 6
From: w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
To: Air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 14:17:48 +0100
Subject: [Air-l] Web Archiving
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Dear all,=3D20
I have learnt with interest of the archive project related to the=3D20
September 11 terrorist attack (http://webarchivist.org) and=3D20
downloaded their link. Applied networking, I would say, of the best=3D20
quality: technical, scholarly and moral.
On a much smaller scale, we are about to dowload and archive the=3D20
sites of a number of UK political organisations (for info see=3D20
http://www.ipop.org.uk) Does anybody on the list have knowledge /=3D20
experience of web archiving, and reliable web archiving software?=3D20
Our N is small, and we would be able to monitor each download for=3D20
faulty dynamic links. Yet, the jungle of jargon looks impenetrable:=3D20
web archiving, harvesting software, offline browsers, crawlers etc.
We've have tried to address a couple of 'specialist' librarian lists,=3D20
but no joy.
Can anybody help?
Many thanks
Wainer
Wainer Lusoli
Research Officer
Internet, political organisations and participation project
ESRI - University of Salford
United Kingdom
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Research Officer
Internet, Political Organisations and Participation Project
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Tel: 0161 295 5654=3D20
-- __--__-- =20
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 07:57:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: "D. Silver" <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a =3D
Race-Free Utopia
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
In my mind, Jeff Young, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education,
is by far one of the best journalists covering our beat. I'm including
the first few paragraphs and URL of an article on race and cyberspace he
wrote for the Chronicle. Lots of AIR'ers mentioned!
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Friday, September 21, 2001
Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free
Utopia
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
The Internet has often been touted as a utopia where racial
differences are erased and people are judged by their ideas
rather than their skin color. But rather than curbing racism,
cyberspace may be perpetuating racial stereotypes for some
users, a growing number of scholars say.
And until recently, they say, few researchers have studied
issues of racial identity online -- even though so much
attention has been paid to economic studies of the "digital
divide."
A recent batch of conferences and books are helping to fill
the research gap, however.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001092101t.htm
-- __--__-- =20
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
-- __--__--
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:04:42 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] civil defense origins of the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.=20
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__--
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 18:06:30 -0400
To: air-l(a)aoir.org, CYBERCULTURE(a)LISTSERV.TEMPLE.EDU,
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: Frederick Turner <fturner(a)MIT.EDU>
Subject: [Air-l] Jobs at UCSD
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication =
is=20
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the =
Assistant=20
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. or=20
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative=20
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs =
are=20
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction=20
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other=20
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS =
tape)=20
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the =
attention=20
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. =
Special=20
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative=
=20
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including=20
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection=20
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or=20
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary=20
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race and=20
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests =
that=20
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations=20
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular=20
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing=20
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication=
=20
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns =
of=20
>access to and use of information technology; communication and=20
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and =
patterns=20
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity=20
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. =
Send=20
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,=20
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative =
action=20
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are =
invited=20
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus =
website=20
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment=20
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website =
for=20
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity=
=20
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education =
and=20
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,=20
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references=20
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, =
2001,=20
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
-- __--__--
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 23:56:50 -0500
From: Charles Ess <cmess(a)lib.drury.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] FW: [Ethics] public mailing list
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which =
the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participant=
s
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be =
subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
-- __--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
--__--__--
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:24:22 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Science magazine article
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
I'm delighted to alert folks to a review article I wrote in Science,
reviewing work about computer networks as social networks. In addition to
arguing that computer networks are social networks, it substantively
focuses on how the Internet fits into everyday (nonwork) life and
computer-mediated tools for knowledge acquisition and management in
networked organizations.
You can access this article via my website. The URL is below, just click
on Publications.
While you're there, feel free to sightsee some of my other recent,
relevant stuff.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
--__--__--
Message: 3
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 14:54:13 -0500
From: "C. Courtright" <ccourtri(a)indiana.edu>
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Greetings,
Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work regarding
Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among expatriates/emigrants, or
2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
future empirical research on this topic.
Thank you for your help,
Christina Courtright
SLIS-Indiana University
ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
--__--__--
Message: 4
From: "Ellis Godard" <ellisgodard(a)starband.net>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: RE: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:26:18 -0700
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Semi-related, is anyone aware of applications of immigration/migraiton
literature to patterns of interaction on the Internet?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: air-l-admin(a)aoir.org [mailto:air-l-admin@aoir.org]On Behalf Of C.
> Courtright
> Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2001 12:54 PM
> To: air-l
> Subject: [Air-l] Question about research on migrant networks
>
>
>
> Greetings,
>
> Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work
> regarding
> Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among
> expatriates/emigrants, or
> 2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
> knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
> Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
> found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
> Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
> future empirical research on this topic.
>
> Thank you for your help,
>
> Christina Courtright
> SLIS-Indiana University
> ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
> http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
>
> _______________________________________________
> Air-l mailing list
> Air-l(a)aoir.org
> http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
--__--__--
Message: 5
Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 18:17:17 -0500
To: air-l <air-l(a)aoir.org>
From: Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Fwd: Seeking senior scholar in new communication technology at
UConn
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>NOTICE OF VACANCY
>
>Department of Communication Sciences, Communication Processes Section
>
>Storrs Campus
>
>Rank: Open Salary: Open, depending
>upon qualifications and experience
>
>Dates Duties begin: 8/23/02
>
> Consideration of applications begins 11/14/01.
>
> Search closes when suitable candidates are identified
>
>Description of Duties
>
>Conduct research and teach undergraduate and graduate courses in New
>Communication Technologies. The candidate should have an additional
>expertise in one or more of the following areas: marketing,
>advertising, organizational communication, computer graphics,
>e-commerce, media effects, interpersonal, or Internet research. The
>job also includes service to the department and university,
>including advising in the undergraduate, M.A., and Ph.D. programs.
>
>Lab space and substantial startup funds will be available to
>facilitate a qualified candidate's research program.
>
>Qualifications: Ph.D. completed; expertise in advanced research
>methodology and relevant teaching experience.
>
>Program and Campus Information
>
>The Communication Processes Section of the Department of
>Communication Sciences serves approximately 300 undergraduate
>majors, 15 M.A. and 25 Ph.D. students. There are 10 full-time
>faculty positions at the Storrs (main) campus. The department is
>well equipped with laboratory space and modern computing and
>research equipment including high-speed Internet connections and a
>facility designed for human computer interaction research. The
>university also houses the Booth Center for computing research.
>
>The Storrs campus is located in rural Connecticut, 40 minutes from
>Hartford and 60 minutes from Providence, RI, between Boston (90
>minutes away) and New York City (3 hours away). For more information
>see <http://www.coms.uconn.edu/>www.coms.uconn.edu or
><http://www.uconn.edu/>www.uconn.edu.
>
>Application Procedure
>
>Send letter of application, with a curriculum vita, three letters of
>reference, and copies of relevant publications and papers as email
>attachments to:
>
>Mark Hamilton, Chair,
>
>COMS-NCT Search Committee
>
>comsci2(a)uconnvm.uconn.edu
>
>Department of Communication Sciences
>
>Box U-1085
>
>University of Connecticut
>
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>The University of Connecticut encourages minorities, women, and
>people with disabilities to apply for this position.
>
>Mark Hamilton
>Department of Communication Sciences
>University of Connecticut
>Storrs, CT 06269-1085
>
>Phone: 860-486-4569
>Fax: 860-486-5422
>
>
--__--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
1
0
Greetings,
Does anyone have knowledge of ongoing or published scholarly work regarding
Internet use by migrant networks, either 1) among expatriates/emigrants, or
2) between expatriates/emigrants and home country? I have personal
knowledge of many such networks, and the topic was discussed in Miller &
Slater (2000) _The Internet: An ethnographic approach_. However, I haven't
found anything else in the literature beyond the occasional reference to
Internet use as part of transnational networking. I am thinking about
future empirical research on this topic.
Thank you for your help,
Christina Courtright
SLIS-Indiana University
ccourtri(a)indiana.edu
http://php.indiana.edu/~ccourtri/home.html
2
1
22 Sep '01
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/22/01 09:01 >>>
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office) (Maryrose Larkin)
2. civil defense origins of the internet (Barry Wellman)
3. Jobs at UCSD (Frederick Turner)
4. FW: [Ethics] public mailing list (Charles Ess)
--__--__--
Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 09:01:13 -0700
From: "Maryrose Larkin" <Larkin(a)mail.pdx.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Re: Air-l digest, Vol 1 #120 - 7 msgs (Maryrose is Out of the
Office)
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I am out of the office until Tuesday, October 2nd. If you need assistance, =
please contact Zach Kronser X55225
>>> air-l 09/21/01 09:01 >>>
=20
Today's Topics:
1. Re: Music and the internet (neice(a)kw.igs.net)
2. some notes about 09.11 and the Internet (aurelija dagilyte)
3. Self-description and platform for Open Seat (Barry Wellman)
4. International Nominations (Charlie Breindahl)
5. Re: Self-description and platforms (jeremy hunsinger)
6. Web Archiving (w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk)
7. Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free Utopia =
(D. Silver)
-- __--__--
Message: 1
From: neice(a)kw.igs.net
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 12:50:55 -0400
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Music and the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hi Jens,
A useful discussion of music and digital technology is found in=20
Chapter 2 (Music: Intellectual Property's Canary in the Digital Coal=20
Mine) of the citation noted below. This book most assuredly does=20
not use ANT, but it still offers a solid analysis.=20
National Research Council (2000), The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual=20
Property in the Information Age, Washington DC: National=20
Academy Press.
Please write me off-line about your work as I have done some work=20
on file sharing that may be relevant.=20
Cheers,
david neice=20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
David C. Neice =20
digital-literacy.com :-) =20
Website at http://www.kw.igs.net/~neice/
Address: 47 Combermere, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 5B2
Tel: 519-885-2951 Fax: 519-885-5263
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-- __--__--
Message: 2
From: "aurelija dagilyte" <naunetka(a)takas.lt>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 21:20:08 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] some notes about 09.11 and the Internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Hello,
I wanted to share some impressions about the well-known events and some
tendencies I've noticed in Russian and other post-soviet countries =
Internet.
As an anthropologist I was interested what do the ordinary people of these
countries really think about what happened, while their governments speak
nice phrases supporting the US and the war against the terrorism. The =
result
was interesting - while all TV channels, radio stations were speaking how
that was terrible and bad, on the Internet I've found very wide scale of
opinions and emotions. It seems so, that in post-soviet countries is a
difference between the Internet and other media. I had an impression that =
TV
channels and radio programs presented more or less censored view and on =
the
Internet almost all expressed opposite position to the official. These
tendencies had even more increased when US started to talk about the war =
in
the
Afghanistan. I think a lot of people still remember the Russian war in =
that
country and it's useless. Another interesting thing is the fact that =
politic
discussions still dominates in the chat rooms and web pages which usually
are
not interested in the politics. I'm not sure if the opinions presented on
the net had some influence on the other media, but after some time
more skeptic view started to appear on the Russian TV too. I'm very curios
what will be next.
Regards,
Aurelija Dagilyte
-- __--__--
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 16:36:41 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>, Keith Hampton <knh(a)MIT.EDU>,
Nancy Baym <nbaym(a)ukans.edu>, Steve Jones <sjones(a)uic.edu>
Subject: [Air-l] Self-description and platform for Open Seat
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
As the norm in the AOIR governance process seems to be evolving towards
public statements by/about candidates, here's mine.
I was nominated by Caroline Haythornthwaite and Keith Hampton for an open
council seat on AOIR. I was asked by AOIR (via Jeremy Hunsigner) to
prepare a 250-word self-description and platform. I present it below.=20
For more details, see my website.
Cheers, Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2001 18:30:52 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir office nominations <nominate(a)aoir.org>
Cc: Caroline Haythornthwaite <haythorn(a)alexia.lis.uiuc.edu>,
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Subject: Self-description and platform for Open Seat
As a keynote speaker at our founding conference, I want to keep the
momentum going.
Research: I believe in systematic, quality research. I've been studying
the Internet and its precursors since the 1970s. I've (co)-authored more
than 160 scholarly articles and (co)-edited three books, including The
Internet in Everyday Life and Networks in the Global Village.
Organization: Let's pioneer new ways to keep connected. In 1976, I founded
the International Network for Social Network Analysis, quite similar to
AOIR. I've served on the Sociology and Computing section Council of the
American Sociological Association, and the International Sociologists'
Community Council. I just co-founded a new journal as head of the ASA's
Community section.
Breadth: At AOIR, I will work to foster skill-expanding workshops. My
research encompasses a wide range of interests: how people find community
online, how people work together online, knowledge management, and the
rise of the networked society. I've collaborated in the design of new
communication systems.
Interdisciplinary: I've collaborated with computer scientists, educators,
engineers, historians, information scientists, lawyers, psychiatrists,
psychologists, and sociologists, and I'm an ICA member. I've been a board
member of Toronto's Knowledge Media Design Institute, McLuhan Program, and
Structural Analysis Program.
International: A Canadian, I've lived and worked in Europe and Asia. I've
collaborated with scholars in 8 countries in Europe, Asia and America. My
work has been translated into 8 languages. I've lectured and given
workshops in 16 countries in South and North America; Eastern and Western
Europe; Western, Southern and Eastern Asia.=20
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
=20
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
-- __--__--
Message: 4
From: "Charlie Breindahl" <hitch(a)hum.ku.dk>
To: "Air-L" <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:44:38 +0200
Subject: [Air-l] International Nominations
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I think many good names have come up already and I support those, =
especially
Steve and Nancy for a second term. My motivation is primarily to make room
for non-americans in the executive committee. In my opinion, this is
important to ensure that AoIR has credibility as an _international_
organisation. (I think it is self-explaining why AoIR in particular should
have such credibility.)
To achieve this is harder than you might think. More than half our members
are American. And most of us would like to vote for someone we know. If =
all
Americans vote for Americans, well... So when voting, please consider
international candidates as well. And for you guys from .il, .nz, .jp, =
etc.:
Please come forward with your nominations :)
My nominees are:
Jenny Sund=C8n (Sweden) jensu(a)tema.liu.se
Frank Schaap (The Netherlands) architext(a)fragment.nl
Stine Gotved (Denmark) gotved(a)hum.ku.dk
Lisbeth Klastrup (Denmark) klastrup(a)it-c.dk
Kate O'Riordan (UK) k.s.o-riordan(a)sussex.ac.uk
Ken Friedman (Norway) ken.friedman(a)bi.no
Nicholas Jankowski (The Netherlands) nickjan(a)pop.xs4all.nl
Nils Zurawski (Germany) zurawsk(a)uni-muenster.de
(I will not run for an open seat myself, but will be happy to serve a =
second
term as Information Officer, if the new executive committee decides it.)
Charlie
--
Charlie Breindahl
Ph.D. Student, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of
Copenhagen
Web: http://computer.media.ku.dk/breindahl/
E-mail: hitch(a)hum.ku.dk
PGP: ldap://certserver.pgp.com
Phone: +45 35 32 81 19
Mobile: +45 51 92 15 98
"For the modern Don Quixote, the windmills have been preprogrammed to turn
into knights"
- Janet H. Murray
-- __--__--
Message: 5
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 08:52:42 -0400
From: jeremy hunsinger <jhuns(a)vt.edu>
Organization: Virginia Tech
To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Self-description and platforms
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
fyi
I will be posting the descriptions and platforms in the members area of=20
the website on sunday afternoon.
>
--=20
Jeremy hunsinger http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
CDDC/political science http://www.cddc.vt.edu
526 major williams hall 0130
virginia tech
blacksburg, va 24061
540-231-7614
-- __--__--
Message: 6
From: w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
To: Air-l(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 14:17:48 +0100
Subject: [Air-l] Web Archiving
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Dear all,=20
I have learnt with interest of the archive project related to the=20
September 11 terrorist attack (http://webarchivist.org) and=20
downloaded their link. Applied networking, I would say, of the best=20
quality: technical, scholarly and moral.
On a much smaller scale, we are about to dowload and archive the=20
sites of a number of UK political organisations (for info see=20
http://www.ipop.org.uk) Does anybody on the list have knowledge /=20
experience of web archiving, and reliable web archiving software?=20
Our N is small, and we would be able to monitor each download for=20
faulty dynamic links. Yet, the jungle of jargon looks impenetrable:=20
web archiving, harvesting software, offline browsers, crawlers etc.
We've have tried to address a couple of 'specialist' librarian lists,=20
but no joy.
Can anybody help?
Many thanks
Wainer
Wainer Lusoli
Research Officer
Internet, political organisations and participation project
ESRI - University of Salford
United Kingdom
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Research Officer
Internet, Political Organisations and Participation Project
http://www.ipop.org.uk
w.lusoli(a)salford.ac.uk
Tel: 0161 295 5654=20
-- __--__--
Message: 7
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 07:57:32 -0700 (PDT)
From: "D. Silver" <dsilver(a)u.washington.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a =
Race-Free Utopia
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
Folks,
In my mind, Jeff Young, a writer for the Chronicle for Higher Education,
is by far one of the best journalists covering our beat. I'm including
the first few paragraphs and URL of an article on race and cyberspace he
wrote for the Chronicle. Lots of AIR'ers mentioned!
david silver
http://faculty.washington.edu/dsilver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Friday, September 21, 2001
Scholars Question the Image of the Internet as a Race-Free
Utopia
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG
The Internet has often been touted as a utopia where racial
differences are erased and people are judged by their ideas
rather than their skin color. But rather than curbing racism,
cyberspace may be perpetuating racial stereotypes for some
users, a growing number of scholars say.
And until recently, they say, few researchers have studied
issues of racial identity online -- even though so much
attention has been paid to economic studies of the "digital
divide."
A recent batch of conferences and books are helping to fill
the research gap, however.
http://chronicle.com/free/2001/09/2001092101t.htm
-- __--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
--__--__--
Message: 2
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:04:42 -0400
From: Barry Wellman <wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca>
To: aoir list <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] civil defense origins of the internet
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
--__--__--
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 18:06:30 -0400
To: air-l(a)aoir.org, CYBERCULTURE(a)LISTSERV.TEMPLE.EDU,
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: Frederick Turner <fturner(a)MIT.EDU>
Subject: [Air-l] Jobs at UCSD
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication is
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the Assistant
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. or
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs are
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS tape)
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the attention
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. Special
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race and
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests that
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns of
>access to and use of information technology; communication and
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and patterns
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. Send
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative action
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are invited
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus website
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website for
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education and
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, 2001,
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
--__--__--
Message: 4
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 23:56:50 -0500
From: Charles Ess <cmess(a)lib.drury.edu>
To: <air-l(a)aoir.org>
Subject: [Air-l] FW: [Ethics] public mailing list
Reply-To: air-l(a)aoir.org
I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participants
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
--__--__--
_______________________________________________
Air-l mailing list
Air-l(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/air-l
End of Air-l Digest
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Colleagues:
Nancy kindly mentioned my name in her nominations, and I would be
happy to serve in an open seat on the AOIR board. A few words on
what you might get:
INTERDISCIPLINARY BACKGROUND
I trained in English language and literature, but soon turned toward
media and communication studies, spending time as a graduate student
and postdoc at US research institutions, including the Annenberg
School of Communications in Los Angeles. In the Nordic and European
context, I have been an advocate of integrating humanistic and
social-scientific approaches to communication and culture, initially
in audience and reception studies, more recently in computer media
studies.
NETWORKS
- International Association of Media and Communication Research:
President of Audience and Reception Studies Section
- 'Changing Media, Changing Europe': Participant in 5-year project
with 60+ researchers from around Europe on the social and cultural
implications of media developments
- Editorial Board member for a number of media journals, including in
the past the Journal of Communication, and currently the Journal of
Broadcasting and Electronic Media; Journalism - Theory, Practice,
Critism; Social Semiotics.
PLATFORM
Since participating in (one of) the first meeting(s) of AOIR at the
International Communication Association conference in San Francisco
1999, I have attended AOIR 1, and have served on its Ethics
Committee. On the board, I would like to work with colleagues from
around the world on consolidating the association. Three areas of
activity, in particular, come to mind:
- ensuring a worldwide representation of AOIR, including conferences
outside North America
- enhancing the web resources of AOIR as an arena for information
exchange and research collaboration
- exploring the interfaces of AOIR with related professional
organizations, perhaps through joint seminars and other formats.
--
____________________________________
Klaus Bruhn Jensen
Associate Professor, dr.phil.
Department of Film and Media Studies
University of Copenhagen
Njalsgade 80
DK-2300 Copenhagen S
Denmark
kbj(a)hum.ku.dk
http://www.ifm.ku.dk
____________________________________
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I happily pass this on from Amy Bruckman...
Charles Ess
Director, Interdisciplinary Studies Center
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave. Voice: 417-873-7230
Springfield, MO 65802 USA FAX: 417-873-7435
Home page: http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC 2002: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
"...to be non-violent, we must not wish for anything on this earth which the
meanest and lowest of human beings cannot have." -- Gandhi
----------
From: "Amy S. Bruckman" <asb(a)cc.gatech.edu>
Reply-To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:32:21 -0400
To: ethics(a)aoir.org
Subject: [Ethics] public mailing list
If anyone's interested, I've set up a new public mailing list for
discussion of these issues. (If someone could please forward this to
the AoIR public lists, I'd appreciate it--I'm not on any of those lists.)
-- Amy
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 10:20:15 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New mailing list: online-research-ethics
If you're interested in joining the new online-research-ethics mailing
list:
mail: majordomo(a)cc.gatech.edu
place in the message body: subscribe online-research-ethics
A quick intro to the issue:
I've been doing some work on trying to development guidelines for ethical
research online. I'm part of working groups from APA and AoIR to develop
formal policies. There are lots of thorny issues. Here's an example of
a controversial situation: studying discourse in chatrooms.
View 1: "A chat room is like a public square"
Linguists reserve the right to record dialog in public places and
study its formal properties. They can take notes or even tape record
conversations say in a park. They don't need consent for this.
Identity of subjects is disguised. Many linguists argue that open
Internet chatrooms are an analogous situation, and they can record
whatever they like and analyze it without acknowledging their
presence.
View 2: "A chat room is like my living room"
Others argue that because chat rooms are normally not recorded, participants
have a reasonable expectation that discourse there is ephemeral. You
can't record it without permission. You can't make individuals be subjects
in an experimental study without their freely-given informed consent.
Messy, no? Join the mailing list for more. The list is open to anyone.
Especially welcome are:
* Individuals seeking advice on their own research
* Members or IRBs struggling to handle research proposals
The list is "off the record"--you may not quote postings from it without
written permission of the author. I hope this will help foster free
discussion.
Please feel free to forward this message to interested people, and post
it to appropriate lists.
- -- Amy
------- End of Forwarded Message
_______________________________________________
Ethics mailing list
Ethics(a)aoir.org
http://www.aoir.org/mailman/listinfo/ethics
1
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>
>The University of California, San Diego, Department of Communication is
>seeking to fill several full-time, tenure-track positions at the Assistant
>Professor level, beginning Fall 2002:
>
>Production
>The practice and theory of production. The department seeks Ph.D. or
>M.F.A. degree holders who can provide an imaginative blend of creative
>work and research in new or traditional media. The department's needs are
>weighted toward documentary video, non-linear editing, and non-fiction
>multimedia design, but innovative work in radio, web design, or other
>media will be considered. Send sample(s) of creative work (on VHS tape)
>and evidence of research and/or critical writing skills to the attention
>of Professor Ellen Seiter.
>
>Communication as a Social Force
>The political economy or institutional analysis of communication. Special
>areas of interest include cultural industries, globalization, comparative
>media systems, law and policy, new information technologies (including
>digital divide and access issues), and research on the intersection
>between the political economy of communication and race, gender and/or
>nationalism. Send materials to the attention of Professor Dan Hallin.
>
>California Cultures
>Race, ethnicity and communication. Part of a new, interdisciplinary
>cluster hire in the social sciences and humanities addressing race and
>ethnicity in California. Applicants should have research interests that
>speak to communication and questions of racial and ethnic formations
>primarily, but not exclusively, in California. Areas of particular
>interest are open. Possibilities could include: immigration, changing
>media markets, and new forms of representation; the role of communication
>media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; patterns of
>access to and use of information technology; communication and
>California's multicultural classrooms; communication networks and patterns
>of migration and settlement; the articulation of race and ethnicity
>through music, television, film, video, or other media productions. Send
>materials to the attention of Professor Vicente Rafael.
>
>Salaries are in strict accordance with UC pay scales. If non-citizen,
>state immigration status. UCSD is an equal opportunity/affirmative action
>employer committed to excellence through diversity. Applicants are invited
>to preview campus diversity resources and programs at the campus website
>for Diversity (http://diversity.ucsd.edu/)
>
>To assist applicants who may have concerns regarding employment
>opportunities for spouses/partners, please consider the UCSD website for
>the Academic Job Opportunities Bulletin, the Staff Employment Opportunity
>Bulletin or our links to employment opportunities at other education and
>research institutions in San Diego.
>
>
>Send vita, statement of research and teaching interests, and names,
>addresses, e-mail addresses, and phone numbers of three references
>supporting the applicant's teaching qualifications by November 16, 2001,
>however, we will review applications until the positions are filled.
>
>http://communication.ucsd.edu/
>
>Please send materials to:
>
> Recruitment Committee
> Department of Communication (0503),
> Univ. Calif. San Diego
> 9500 Gilman Drive,
> La Jolla CA 92093-0503.
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At this time of civil defense crisis in the US, it is interesting to
recall that an important precursor of the Internet was the computerized
conferencing system that Murray Turoff and others developed in the early
1970s (and perhaps earlier) for the US civil defense system. The idea was
to foster coordination among dispersed people and groups. This
path-breaking system allowed for both email-like messages and easy setup
of computerized conferences.
The system became civilianized as EIES in the 1970s as Murray became a
prof at New Jersey Institute of Technology (and still is). I remember
being an early, delighted user of it in the mid-1970s, and was a member of
a National Science Foundation funded field trial of using EIES to foster
scholarly community. One fun feature: It was easy to use pseudonyms
whenever you wanted. I was "Alvey Singer" as an _Annie Hall_ fan.
Of course, the technology wasn't the same then. Everything ran off a
single server in New Jersey, and we used an 800 number to dial-in. Speed
was 110 bits per second (which is a lot different than 110K). It came over
a printing modem. Whenever I got a message, I knew I had time to go get a
cup of coffee, sometimes two. Text only of course. But EIES ran, it was
fun, and it was useful. [See Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff's _The
Network Nation_ for a fuller account: I'm proud that they named their book
after my even-earlier "Network City" article.]
Now things have come full circle. I assume US Civil Defense folks are
using similar systems today, and certainly we all have relied on the
Internet to convey thoughts, argue positions, and obtain information.
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman(a)chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
___________________________________________________________________
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