New book: Handbook of Digital Politics
List members might be interested in the following new publication: Handbook of Digital Politics Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US Published by Edward Elgar Contents: 1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren 3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry 4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois 5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen 7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall 8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss 9. e-Petitions Scott Wright 10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg 12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode 13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham 15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman 16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang 17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield 19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos 20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss 22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry 24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon 25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon ‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy ‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio... Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co... Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
Hi Stephen- Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work? I’d love to buy it, but not at that price. -Nat PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio... Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co... Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
I couldn't agree with you more, Nathaniel. We're hoping that the publisher will produce a paperback edition. It's certainly a good collection of chapters. Regards, Stephen Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio... Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co... Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497 ________________________________________ From: Nathaniel Poor <natpoor@gmail.com> Sent: 16 October 2015 17:11 To: Stephen Coleman Cc: air-l@listserv.aoir.org Subject: Re: [Air-L] New book: Handbook of Digital Politics Hi Stephen- Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work? I’d love to buy it, but not at that price. -Nat PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio... Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co... Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40: http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f... On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio... Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co... Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Deen Freelon, Ph.D. Assistant Professor American University School of Communication Office: McKinley 325 http://dfreelon.org/ @dfreelon
Hello I contributed to the volume and think it is a very good book. But I also think that it is too expensive - both the paper edition and the ebook (also €40 for an ebook is a lot). Handbooks and companions seem at the moment to be a very popular capital accumulation strategy among conventional publishers... We nowadays all too often end up with books that have great contents and that nobody can read/afford... Open access book publishing is an alternative, but many of its models just want to put the costs for it on the author-side with high book publishing fees, which is also not acceptable... And non-profit OA book publishers have a good potential - but tend to face a lack of funding and support and are often based on lots of voluntary labour and have to be very selective... There is no good book publishing model at the moment that guarantees fair/open access, fair prices for the printed editions, and fair payment of workers in the publishing industry... The money that goes into expensive library journal subscription should go into funds for non-profit open access book and journal publishing, advertising be taxed and redistributed to non-profit OA and other non-profit media, etc... Christian On 16/10/2015 20:28, Deen Freelon wrote:
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40: http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f...
On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk> wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel: http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio...
Can The Media Serve Democracy? http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co...
Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Prof. Christian Fuchs University of Westminster, http://fuchs.uti.at, http://www.triple-c.at @fuchschristian
I encourage everyone to use the preprint option to post their piece on ssrn.com and academia.edu, perhaps others have other open access suggestions (e.g. Institutional Repositories of individual universities) On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 3:47 PM, Christian Fuchs <christian.fuchs@uti.at> wrote:
Hello
I contributed to the volume and think it is a very good book.
But I also think that it is too expensive - both the paper edition and the ebook (also €40 for an ebook is a lot).
Handbooks and companions seem at the moment to be a very popular capital accumulation strategy among conventional publishers...
We nowadays all too often end up with books that have great contents and that nobody can read/afford...
Open access book publishing is an alternative, but many of its models just want to put the costs for it on the author-side with high book publishing fees, which is also not acceptable... And non-profit OA book publishers have a good potential - but tend to face a lack of funding and support and are often based on lots of voluntary labour and have to be very selective...
There is no good book publishing model at the moment that guarantees fair/open access, fair prices for the printed editions, and fair payment of workers in the publishing industry... The money that goes into expensive library journal subscription should go into funds for non-profit open access book and journal publishing, advertising be taxed and redistributed to non-profit OA and other non-profit media, etc...
Christian
On 16/10/2015 20:28, Deen Freelon wrote:
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40:
http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f...
On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk>
wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel:
http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio...
Can The Media Serve Democracy?
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co...
Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Prof. Christian Fuchs University of Westminster, http://fuchs.uti.at, http://www.triple-c.at @fuchschristian
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Patricia Aufderheide, University Professor and Senior Research Fellow Center for Media & Social Impact School of Communication 4400 Massachusetts Av., NW American University, Washington, DC 20016-8017 McKinley Hall 323 @paufder @cmsimpact www.cmsimpact.org <http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org> paufder@american.edu 202-643-5356 Sample *Reclaiming Fair Use! * <http://cmsimpact.org/reclaiming> Order Reclaiming Fair Use: How to Put Balance Back in Copyright, University of Chicago Press, 2011. <http://www.amazon.com/Reclaiming-Fair-Use-Balance-Copyright/dp/0226032280/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1321544105&sr=8-2>
I can´t agree mor with Christian Fuchs. And an expensive book in developed countries is a forbidden one in developing countries. Best, Alejandro Tortolini University of San Andres Argentina 2015-10-16 16:47 GMT-03:00 Christian Fuchs <christian.fuchs@uti.at>:
Hello
I contributed to the volume and think it is a very good book.
But I also think that it is too expensive - both the paper edition and the ebook (also €40 for an ebook is a lot).
Handbooks and companions seem at the moment to be a very popular capital accumulation strategy among conventional publishers...
We nowadays all too often end up with books that have great contents and that nobody can read/afford...
Open access book publishing is an alternative, but many of its models just want to put the costs for it on the author-side with high book publishing fees, which is also not acceptable... And non-profit OA book publishers have a good potential - but tend to face a lack of funding and support and are often based on lots of voluntary labour and have to be very selective...
There is no good book publishing model at the moment that guarantees fair/open access, fair prices for the printed editions, and fair payment of workers in the publishing industry... The money that goes into expensive library journal subscription should go into funds for non-profit open access book and journal publishing, advertising be taxed and redistributed to non-profit OA and other non-profit media, etc...
Christian
On 16/10/2015 20:28, Deen Freelon wrote:
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40:
http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f...
On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk>
wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel:
http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio...
Can The Media Serve Democracy?
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co...
Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Prof. Christian Fuchs University of Westminster, http://fuchs.uti.at, http://www.triple-c.at @fuchschristian
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Alejandro Tortolini http://dooid.me/aletor
I posted the eBook info over to the slack for Civic Hall here in NYC. CH does have a small library that relies on donated books. This is something that should be in it. If you've not heard of Civic Hall it's a new Civic Tech co-working and event space run by the folks that do the Personal Democracy Forum. http://civichall.org I wonder if a deep pocket sponsor couldn't be found to buy a few hardcovers and distro them to similar worthy institutions. j On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 3:47 PM, Christian Fuchs <christian.fuchs@uti.at> wrote:
Hello
I contributed to the volume and think it is a very good book.
But I also think that it is too expensive - both the paper edition and the ebook (also €40 for an ebook is a lot).
Handbooks and companions seem at the moment to be a very popular capital accumulation strategy among conventional publishers...
We nowadays all too often end up with books that have great contents and that nobody can read/afford...
Open access book publishing is an alternative, but many of its models just want to put the costs for it on the author-side with high book publishing fees, which is also not acceptable... And non-profit OA book publishers have a good potential - but tend to face a lack of funding and support and are often based on lots of voluntary labour and have to be very selective...
There is no good book publishing model at the moment that guarantees fair/open access, fair prices for the printed editions, and fair payment of workers in the publishing industry... The money that goes into expensive library journal subscription should go into funds for non-profit open access book and journal publishing, advertising be taxed and redistributed to non-profit OA and other non-profit media, etc...
Christian
On 16/10/2015 20:28, Deen Freelon wrote:
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40:
http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f...
On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk>
wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel:
http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio...
Can The Media Serve Democracy?
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co...
Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Prof. Christian Fuchs University of Westminster, http://fuchs.uti.at, http://www.triple-c.at @fuchschristian
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- --------------------------------------------------------------- Joly MacFie 218 565 9365 Skype:punkcast -------------------------------------------------------------- -
Hey, just wanted to follow up on this very old thread and let everyone know that the publisher has now made all 25 chapters of this handbook available for free download here: http://www.elgaronline.com/view/9781782548751.xml I just found out about this by chance a few minutes ago and I have no idea how long this free access will last, so get 'em quick if that's what you're into. Best, ~DEEN On 10/16/2015 4:10 PM, Joly MacFie wrote:
I posted the eBook info over to the slack for Civic Hall here in NYC. CH does have a small library that relies on donated books. This is something that should be in it.
If you've not heard of Civic Hall it's a new Civic Tech co-working and event space run by the folks that do the Personal Democracy Forum. http://civichall.org
I wonder if a deep pocket sponsor couldn't be found to buy a few hardcovers and distro them to similar worthy institutions.
j
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 3:47 PM, Christian Fuchs <christian.fuchs@uti.at> wrote:
Hello
I contributed to the volume and think it is a very good book.
But I also think that it is too expensive - both the paper edition and the ebook (also €40 for an ebook is a lot).
Handbooks and companions seem at the moment to be a very popular capital accumulation strategy among conventional publishers...
We nowadays all too often end up with books that have great contents and that nobody can read/afford...
Open access book publishing is an alternative, but many of its models just want to put the costs for it on the author-side with high book publishing fees, which is also not acceptable... And non-profit OA book publishers have a good potential - but tend to face a lack of funding and support and are often based on lots of voluntary labour and have to be very selective...
There is no good book publishing model at the moment that guarantees fair/open access, fair prices for the printed editions, and fair payment of workers in the publishing industry... The money that goes into expensive library journal subscription should go into funds for non-profit open access book and journal publishing, advertising be taxed and redistributed to non-profit OA and other non-profit media, etc...
Christian
On 16/10/2015 20:28, Deen Freelon wrote:
Hi all, second editor here--the ebook version is only $40:
http://www.ebooks.com/2059341/handbook-of-digital-politics/coleman-stephen-f...
On 10/16/2015 12:11 PM, Nathaniel Poor wrote:
Hi Stephen-
Amazon says the list price is $240. I know about library pricing and such (and have opinions about it), but don’t we want people who don’t have access to university libraries reading our work?
I’d love to buy it, but not at that price.
-Nat
PS: Yes, a can of worms, I know. I don’t have the answer.
On Oct 16, 2015, at 3:08 AM, Stephen Coleman <S.Coleman@leeds.ac.uk>
wrote:
List members might be interested in the following new publication:
Handbook of Digital Politics
Edited by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication, School of Media and Communication, University of Leeds, UK and Deen Freelon, Assistant Professor, School of Communication, American University, Washington, DC, US
Published by Edward Elgar
Contents:
1. Introduction: Conceptualising Digital Politics Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon
PART I THEORIZING DIGITAL POLITICS 2. The Internet as a Civic Space Peter Dahlgren
3. The Social Foundations of Future Digital Politics Nick Couldry
4. The Fifth Estate: A Rising Force of Pluralistic Accountability William H. Dutton and Elizabeth Dubois
5. Silicon Valley Ideology and Class Inequality: A Virtual Poll Tax on Digital Politics Jen Schradie
PART II GOVERNMENT AND POLICY 6. Online Voting Advice Applications: Foci, Findings and Future of an Emerging Research Field Fadi Hirzalla and Liesbet van Zoonen
7. Internet Voting: The State of the Debate Thad Hall
8. Digital Campaigning Daniel Kreiss
9. e-Petitions Scott Wright
10. Argumentation Tools for Digital Politics: Addressing the Challenge of Deliberation in Democracies Neil Benn
PART III COLLECTIVE ACTION AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT 11. The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and The Personalization of Contentious Politics W. Lance Bennett and Alexandra Segerberg
12. Youth Civic Engagement Chris Wells, Emily Vraga, Kjerstin Thorson, Stephanie Edgerly and Leticia Bode
13. Internet Use and Political Engagement in Youth Yunhwan Kim and Erik Amnå
PART IV POLITICAL TALK 14. Everyday Political Talk in the Internet-Based Public Sphere Todd Graham
15. Creating Spaces for Online Deliberation Christopher Birchall and Stephen Coleman
16. Computational Approaches to Online Political Expression: Rediscovering a “Science of the Social” Dhavan V. Shah, Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Alex Hanna, Timothy Mcafee, and JungHwan Yang
17. Two-screen Politics: Evidence, Theory and Challenges Nick Anstead and Ben O’Loughlin
PART V JOURNALISM 18. From News Blogs to News on Twitter: Gatewatching and Collaborative News Curation Axel Bruns and Tim Highfield
19. Research on the Political Implications of Political Entertainment Michael A. Xenos
20. Journalism, Gatekeeping and Interactivity Neil Thurman
PART VI INTERNET GOVERNANCE 21. Internet Governance, Rights and Democratic Legitimacy Giles Moss
22. Social Media Surveillance Christian Fuchs
PART VII EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF DIGITAL POLITICS RESEARCH 23. Visibility and Visualities: ‘Ways of Seeing’ Politics in the Digital Media Environment Katy Parry
24. Automated Content Analysis of Online Political Communication Ross Petchler and Sandra González-Bailon
25. On the Cutting Edge of Big Data: Digital Politics Research in the Social Computing Literature Deen Freelon
‘The Handbook of Digital Politics edited by Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon is an incredibly rich and outstanding collection of essays on the ideologies, theories and methodologies that currently inspire the field of political science and communication. The editors brilliantly succeed in guiding us through this fascinating world – avoiding any rhetoric, or either a dystopian or utopian perspective on the subject. The articles collected here represent the golden section of the contemporary debate on digital politics.’ – Leopoldina Fortunati, Head of the Ph.D program in Multimedia Communication, University of Udine, Italy
‘Coleman and Freelon have deftly edited a series of essays that help us transition to the next big thing in political communication—an internet connecting many people over many kinds of devices, making large volumes of data. Digital politics is no longer so much about what happens in your browser, but about what happens when your devices talk to each other on their own. This collection helps us to get ready to understand the new infrastructure of political life.’ – Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, US
Stephen Coleman Professor of Political Communication School of Media and Communication University of Leeds
Recent publications: How Voters Feel:
http://www.cambridge.org/gb/academic/subjects/politics-international-relatio...
Can The Media Serve Democracy?
http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/can-the-media-serve-democracy-stephen-co...
Handbook of Digital Politics: https://www.e-elgar.com/bookentry_main.lasso?currency=US&id=15497
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
------------------------------- Nathaniel Poor, Ph.D. http://natpoor.blogspot.com/ https://sites.google.com/site/natpoor/
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Prof. Christian Fuchs University of Westminster, http://fuchs.uti.at, http://www.triple-c.at @fuchschristian
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Deen Freelon, Ph.D. Associate Professor American University School of Communication Office: McKinley 325 freelon@american.edu | http://dfreelon.org | @dfreelon <https://twitter.com/dfreelon> New report: Beyond the Hashtags: #Ferguson, #Blacklivesmatter, and the Online Struggle for Offline Justice <http://www.cmsimpact.org/blmreport>
participants (7)
-
Alejandro Tortolini -
Christian Fuchs -
Deen Freelon -
Joly MacFie -
Nathaniel Poor -
Patricia Aufderheide -
Stephen Coleman