FYI, Barry _____________________________________________________________________ Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director wellman at 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 To network is to live; to live is to network _____________________________________________________________________ ANNOUNCING A WEBCAST LIVE FROM OXFORD INTERNET INSTITUTE Stephen Coleman, Visiting Professor in e-Democracy at the Oxford Internet Institute, will discuss his article 'Connecting Parliament to the Public via the Internet: Two Case Studies of Online Consultations' with response from Dr Damian Tambini, Head of the Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy at Oxford University. ABOUT THIS EVENT Stephen Coleman will take part in a discussion with the Information, Communication & Society Journal Editor, Brian Loader and invited audience, that will be broadcast on the internet via - www.infosoc.co.uk The presentation will start at 17:00 GMT. Following the presentation a critical response to Stephen's paper will be given by Dr Damian Tambini. Viewers having questions for Stephen may forward them to webcast@oii.ox.ac.uk (please also include your name and contact information) and Stephen will answer as many of them as possible during the webcast Stephen Coleman's article is due to be published in Information, Communication & Society, a Taylor & Francis journal, and the article will be available to download prior to the webcast at www.infosoc.co.uk TIMES AND DATES Monday 29th March 2004 1700 - 1800 [GMT] 1800 - 1900 [Central European Time] 1100 - 1200 [US Eastern Standard Time] 0800 - 0900 [US Western Standard Time] 2130 - 2230 [Indian Standard Time] 0400 - 0500 [New Zealand Time - 30 March] -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello everyone, In addition to the recent US news concerning scholars editing Cuban manuscripts as being a form of "trading with the enemy"--with the possibility of 10 years imprisonment and a fine of $500,000--there is the following news about the University of Birmingham expunging academic websites because some of them do not promote whatever the "correct" view of whatever Israel is supposed to be. I am hoping that once we digest these items we will stop focusing on how China and Saudi Arabia control or filter Internet access as opposed to the many "freedoms" that "we" supposedly enjoy. University bans staff websites after anti-semitism row Polly Curtis Thursday March 11, 2004 The Guardian Academics at Birmingham University have condemned moves by the university authorities to ban 300 of their personal websites. The university's decision to stop hosting staff websites on university computers follows a series of controversies over links to allegedly anti-semitic content. As at many other universities, staff have been able to set up sites on a university server on any subject they like. Under new guidelines, from March 31 they will have to demonstrate that content is "relevant and legitimate to their academic or administrative work". Among the 300 websites that will be taken down is one about air quality and another dedicated to genealogy; others are weblogs containing academics' CVs and publications and links to other sites. However, others have caused controversy. In October 2002 the Board of Deputies of British Jews wrote to the university demanding that they sever the university's link to the website of Sue Blackwell, an English lecturer. They said links from her site led to images glorifying suicide bombing and comparing Israel to Nazi Germany. Before this, Ms Blackwell came under attack when she severed all the links between her website and Israeli websites as part of an academic boycott of Israel. Ms Blackwell, who is leading a campaign to keep staff sites, said the move was draconian. "I am sure that the university considers my sites an embarrassment, but it should see them as an asset," she said. "I have had messages of support from all over the world." The Association of University Teachers at the university has also condemned the proposed policy. The union's web owners' group has asked for meetings with university administrators, but says its requests have been turned down. A spokeswoman for the university said: "It is important that our website accurately reflects the business of the university. Personal websites that are relevant and legitimate to academic or administrative work are being re-registered through a process of peer review." She added that staff were free to create websites using external internet service providers. The campaign has set up a website at web.bham.ac.uk/web_campaign - but as it is hosted on university servers, it is likely to disappear when the ban takes effect. From: http://education.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4877272-108341,00.html Dr Maximilian C. Forte Assistant Professor in Anthropology Department of Anthropology and Sociology University College of Cape Breton P.O. Box 5300, Sydney, NS, Canada, B1N 1A3 Tel: 902-563-1947 Fax: 902-563-1247 E-mail: max_forte@uccb.ca Website: http://faculty.uccb.ns.ca/mforte/
Thank you so much Barry. Nicely done, Bill On 11 Mar 2004, at 14:00, Barry Wellman wrote:
FYI, Barry _____________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director wellman at 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 To network is to live; to live is to network _____________________________________________________________________
ANNOUNCING A WEBCAST LIVE FROM OXFORD INTERNET INSTITUTE
Stephen Coleman, Visiting Professor in e-Democracy at the Oxford Internet Institute, will discuss his article 'Connecting Parliament to the Public via the Internet: Two Case Studies of Online Consultations' with response from Dr Damian Tambini, Head of the Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy at Oxford University.
ABOUT THIS EVENT
Stephen Coleman will take part in a discussion with the Information, Communication & Society Journal Editor, Brian Loader and invited audience, that will be broadcast on the internet via - www.infosoc.co.uk
The presentation will start at 17:00 GMT. Following the presentation a critical response to Stephen's paper will be given by Dr Damian Tambini. Viewers having questions for Stephen may forward them to webcast@oii.ox.ac.uk (please also include your name and contact information) and Stephen will answer as many of them as possible during the webcast
Stephen Coleman's article is due to be published in Information, Communication & Society, a Taylor & Francis journal, and the article will be available to download prior to the webcast at www.infosoc.co.uk
TIMES AND DATES
Monday 29th March 2004
1700 - 1800 [GMT] 1800 - 1900 [Central European Time] 1100 - 1200 [US Eastern Standard Time] 0800 - 0900 [US Western Standard Time] 2130 - 2230 [Indian Standard Time] 0400 - 0500 [New Zealand Time - 30 March] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------
participants (3)
-
Barry Wellman -
Maximilian Forte -
William Dutton