Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Colin J. Bennett |
Author | Charles D. Raab |
Place | London |
Publisher | Routledge |
ISBN | 978-1-315-19926-9 |
Date | 2019-09-29 |
Extra | DOI: 10.4324/9781315199269 |
Abstract | This book was published in 2003.This book offers a broad and incisive analysis of the governance of privacy protection with regard to personal information in contemporary advanced industrial states. Based on research across many countries, it discusses the goals of privacy protection policy and the changing discourse surrounding the privacy issue, concerning risk, trust and social values. It analyzes at length the contemporary policy instruments that together comprise the inventory of possible solutions to the problem of privacy protection. It argues that privacy protection depends upon an integration of these instruments, but that any country's efforts are inescapably linked with the actions of others that operate outside its borders. The book concludes that, in a ’globalizing’ world, this regulatory interdependence could lead either to a search for the highest possible standard of privacy protection, or to competitive deregulation, or to a more complex outcome reflecting the nature of the issue and its policy responses. |
Short Title | The Governance of Privacy |
# of Pages | 272 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Laura Liebig |
Author | Licinia Güttel |
Author | Anna Jobin |
Author | Christian Katzenbach |
URL | https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00146-022-01561-5 |
Publication | AI & SOCIETY |
ISSN | 0951-5666, 1435-5655 |
Date | 2022-10-15 |
Journal Abbr | AI & Soc |
DOI | 10.1007/s00146-022-01561-5 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 16:19:34 |
Library Catalog | DOI.org (Crossref) |
Language | en |
Abstract | The promises and risks of Artificial Intelligence permeate current policy statements and have attracted much attention by AI governance research. However, most analyses focus exclusively on AI policy on the national and international level, overlooking existing federal governance structures. This is surprising because AI is connected to many policy areas, where the competences are already distributed between the national and subnational level, such as research or economic policy. Addressing this gap, this paper argues that more attention should be dedicated to subnational efforts to shape AI and asks which themes are discussed in subnational AI policy documents with a case study of Germany’s 16 states. Our qualitative analysis of 34 AI policy documents issued on the subnational level demonstrates that subnational efforts focus on knowledge transfer between research and industry actors, the commercialization of AI, different economic identities of the German states, and the incorporation of ethical principles. Because federal states play an active role in AI policy, analysing AI as a policy issue on different levels of government is necessary and will contribute to a better understanding of the developments and implementations of AI strategies in different national contexts. |
Short Title | Subnational AI policy |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | E. Turkina |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1080/08276331.2017.1402154 |
Volume | 30 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 1-8 |
Publication | Journal of Small Business & Entrepreneurship |
ISSN | 0827-6331 |
Date | 2018-01-02 |
Extra | Publisher: Routledge _eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/08276331.2017.1402154 |
DOI | 10.1080/08276331.2017.1402154 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 16:16:54 |
Library Catalog | Taylor and Francis+NEJM |
Short Title | The importance of networking to entrepreneurship |
Item Type | Book Section |
---|---|
Author | Gregor Feindt |
Author | Bernhard Gissibl |
Author | Johannes Paulmann |
URL | https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110679151-008/html |
Rights | De Gruyter expressly reserves the right to use all content for commercial text and data mining within the meaning of Section 44b of the German Copyright Act. |
Publisher | De Gruyter Oldenbourg |
Pages | 147-152 |
ISBN | 978-3-11-067915-1 |
Date | 2021-07-05 |
Extra | DOI: 10.1515/9783110679151-008 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 15:30:28 |
Library Catalog | www.degruyter.com |
Language | en |
Abstract | Cultural sovereignty – A conclusion in four theses was published in Band 21 Cultural Sovereignty beyond the Modern State on page 147. |
Book Title | Cultural sovereignty – A conclusion in four theses |
Item Type | Book Section |
---|---|
Author | Jonas Brendebach |
URL | https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110679151-006/html |
Rights | De Gruyter expressly reserves the right to use all content for commercial text and data mining within the meaning of Section 44b of the German Copyright Act. |
Publisher | De Gruyter Oldenbourg |
Pages | 106-127 |
ISBN | 978-3-11-067915-1 |
Date | 2021-07-05 |
Extra | DOI: 10.1515/9783110679151-006 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 15:29:58 |
Library Catalog | www.degruyter.com |
Language | en |
Abstract | Contested sovereignties: The case of the “New World Information and Communication Order” at UNESCO in the 1970s was published in Band 21 Cultural Sovereignty beyond the Modern State on page 106. |
Book Title | Contested sovereignties: The case of the “New World Information and Communication Order” at UNESCO in the 1970s |
Short Title | Contested sovereignties |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Karrmen Crey |
Volume | 60 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 175-180 |
Publication | JCMS: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies |
ISSN | 2578-4900 |
Date | 2021 |
DOI | 10.1353/cj.2021.0011 |
Library Catalog | WorldCat Discovery Service |
Short Title | The Aboriginal Film and Video Art Alliance |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Stephane Couture |
Author | Sophie Toupin |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444819865984 |
Volume | 21 |
Issue | 10 |
Pages | 2305-2322 |
Publication | New Media & Society |
ISSN | 1461-4448 |
Date | 2019-10-01 |
Extra | Publisher: SAGE Publications |
DOI | 10.1177/1461444819865984 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 15:25:55 |
Library Catalog | SAGE Journals |
Language | en |
Abstract | This article analyzes how the notion of “sovereignty” has been and is still mobilized in the realm of the digital. This notion is increasingly used to describe various forms of independence, control, and autonomy over digital infrastructures, technologies, and data. Our analysis originates from our previous and current research with activist “tech collectives” where we observed a use of the notion to emphasize alternative technological practices in a way that significantly differs from a governmental policy perspective. In this article, we review several publications in order to show the difference, if not diverging ways in which the notion is being conceptualized, in particular by different groups. We show that while the notion is generally used to assert some form of collective control on digital content and/or infrastructures, the precise interpretations, subjects, meanings, and definitions of sovereignty can significantly differ. |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Editor | Stuart Hall |
Editor | David Held |
Editor | Tony McGrew |
URL | https://archive.org/details/modernityitsfutu0000unse/page/n3/mode/2up |
Series | Understanding modern societies / series ed.: Stuart Hall |
Place | Cambridge |
Publisher | Polity Press |
ISBN | 978-0-7456-0966-9 978-0-7456-0965-2 |
Date | 1992 |
Series Number | 4 |
Library Catalog | K10plus ISBN |
Language | eng |
# of Pages | 391 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Editor | Lawrence Grossberg |
Author | Stuart Hall |
Author | Paul Du Gay |
URL | https://www.academia.edu/download/35589381/Identity_and_Cultural_Studies_-_Is_That_all_There_is-.pdf |
Pages | 87–107 |
Publication | Identity and Cultural Studies: Is that all there is |
Date | 1996 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 15:06:47 |
Library Catalog | Google Scholar |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Stuart Hall |
Author | Paul Du Gay |
URL | https://books.google.ca/books?hl=en&lr=&id=lKiHAwAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&dq=stuart+hall+THE+QUESTION+OF+CULTURAL+IDENTITY&ots=V7hmN1yrnO&sig=njpxeH0VzwooH9ss89FZT58k1CM |
Publisher | Sage |
Date | 1996 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 15:06:46 |
Library Catalog | Google Scholar |
Short Title | Questions of cultural identity |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Editor | Stuart Hall |
Editor | Paul Du Gay |
Place | London ; Thousand Oaks, Calif |
Publisher | Sage |
ISBN | 978-0-8039-7882-9 978-0-8039-7883-6 |
Date | 1996 |
Call Number | HM101 .Q47 1996 |
Library Catalog | Library of Congress ISBN |
Language | en |
# of Pages | 198 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Ted Allen |
Library Catalog | Zotero |
Language | en |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Ricarda Hammer |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1177/23326492231152919 |
Volume | 9 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 252-255 |
Publication | Sociology of Race and Ethnicity |
ISSN | 2332-6492 |
Date | 2023-04-01 |
Extra | Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc |
DOI | 10.1177/23326492231152919 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 14:50:25 |
Library Catalog | SAGE Journals |
Language | en |
Short Title | Between Stuart Hall and Cedric Robinson |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Stuart Hall |
URL | http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09502389300490251 |
Volume | 7 |
Issue | 3 |
Pages | 349-363 |
Publication | Cultural Studies |
ISSN | 0950-2386, 1466-4348 |
Date | 10/1993 |
Journal Abbr | Cultural Studies |
DOI | 10.1080/09502389300490251 |
Accessed | 2024-03-19 14:45:53 |
Library Catalog | DOI.org (Crossref) |
Language | en |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Stuart Hall |
Issue | 36 |
Date | 2024 |
Library Catalog | Zotero |
Language | en |
Item Type | Web Page |
---|---|
Author | Ina Fried |
URL | https://www.axios.com/2024/03/05/ai-trust-problem-edelman |
Date | 2024-03-05T09:30:00Z |
Accessed | 2024-03-07 19:26:10 |
Language | en |
Abstract | The drop is global, but people in developing countries view the technology more favorably. |
Website Title | Axios |
Short Title | Exclusive |
Item Type | Newspaper Article |
---|---|
URL | https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2023-09-13/google-apple-meta-control-most-of-us-internet-usage |
Publication | Bloomberg.com |
Date | 2023-09-13 |
Accessed | 2024-03-05 15:52:56 |
Library Catalog | www.bloomberg.com |
Language | en |
Abstract | A graphic analysis of the companies customers rely on during their daily visits online. |
Item Type | Web Page |
---|---|
URL | https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffab&q=who+controls+the+internet+bloomberg&ia=web |
Accessed | 2024-03-05 15:39:53 |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Amanda Clarke |
Series | Communication, strategy, and politics |
Place | Vancouver ; Toronto |
Publisher | UBC Press |
ISBN | 978-0-7748-3692-0 |
Date | 2019 |
Call Number | JL86.A8 C58 2019 |
Extra | OCLC: on1080219245 |
Library Catalog | Library of Congress ISBN |
Abstract | "Opening the Government of Canada presents a compelling case for a more open model of governance in the digital age--but a model that also continues to uphold democratic principles at the heart of the Westminster system. Amanda Clarke details the untold story of the federal bureaucracy's efforts to adapt to digital-age pressures from the mid-2000s onwards. This book reveals the mismatch between the bureaucracy's Closed Government traditions and evolving citizen expectations and digital tools. Striking a balance between reform and tradition, Opening the Government of Canada lays out a roadmap for building a democratically robust, digital-era federal government."-- |
Short Title | Opening the government of Canada |
# of Pages | 295 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Eleanor D. Glor |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1080/14616670010009414 |
Volume | 3 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 121-130 |
Publication | Public Management Review |
ISSN | 1471-9037 |
Date | 2001-01-01 |
Extra | Publisher: Routledge _eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/14616670010009414 |
DOI | 10.1080/14616670010009414 |
Accessed | 2024-02-29 21:39:02 |
Library Catalog | Taylor and Francis+NEJM |
Abstract | Following review of definitions of New Public Management (NPM), the paper assesses whether Canada has adopted the NPM, organized by Kernaghan and Charih's (1997) categories and using Loeffler's (1997) definition. Canada has reorganized the machinery of government, changed management methods and reduced the federal public sector substantially. Despite high debt, Canada's federal government reduced its expenditures and/or public service as much or more than the UK and New Zealand. Its expenditures as a proportion of GDP are now similar to those of the UK and New Zealand, the major proponents of NPM. |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Jaana Parviainen |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/publication/343417162_'We're_Flying_the_Plane_While_We're_Building_It'_Epistemic_Humility_and_Non-_Knowledge_in_Political_Decision-Making_on_COVID-19/citation/download |
Issue | 9 |
Pages | 6-10 |
Date | 2020 |
Item Type | Book |
---|---|
Author | Olga Kuchinskaya |
Publisher | MIT Press |
ISBN | 978-0-262-32542-4 |
Date | 2014-08-08 |
Extra | Google-Books-ID: PyYaBAAAQBAJ |
Library Catalog | Google Books |
Language | en |
Abstract | Lessons from the massive Chernobyl nuclear accident about how we deal with modern hazards that are largely imperceptible.Before Fukushima, the most notorious large-scale nuclear accident the world had seen was Chernobyl in 1986. The fallout from Chernobyl covered vast areas in the Northern Hemisphere, especially in Europe. Belarus, at the time a Soviet republic, suffered heavily: nearly a quarter of its territory was covered with long-lasting radionuclides. Yet the damage from the massive fallout was largely imperceptible; contaminated communities looked exactly like noncontaminated ones. It could be known only through constructed representations of it. In The Politics of Invisibility, Olga Kuchinskaya explores how we know what we know about Chernobyl, describing how the consequences of a nuclear accident were made invisible. Her analysis sheds valuable light on how we deal with other modern hazards—toxins or global warming—that are largely imperceptible to the human senses.Kuchinskaya describes the production of invisibility of Chernobyl's consequences in Belarus—practices that limit public attention to radiation and make its health effects impossible to observe. Just as mitigating radiological contamination requires infrastructural solutions, she argues, the production and propagation of invisibility also involves infrastructural efforts, from redefining the scope and nature of the accident's consequences to reshaping research and protection practices. Kuchinskaya finds vast fluctuations in recognition, tracing varyingly successful efforts to conceal or reveal Chernobyl's consequences at different levels—among affected populations, scientists, government, media, and international organizations. The production of invisibility, she argues, is a function of power relations. |
Short Title | The Politics of Invisibility |
# of Pages | 263 |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Ulrich Beck |
URL | https://www.jstor.org/stable/deveandsoci.37.1.1 |
Volume | 37 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 1-21 |
Publication | Development and Society |
ISSN | 1598-8074 |
Date | 2008 |
Accessed | 2024-02-26 13:50:11 |
Library Catalog | JSTOR |
Abstract | In the current phase of reflexive or second modernization, we are witnessing a dialectics of modernity: continuity of the principles and discontinuity of basic institutions of nation-state modernity. This process is leading us from the national industrial society to the world risk society. A theory of reflexive modernization consists of theorems of individualization, cosmopolitanization, and risk society. This radicalized modernity has produced world risk society. What signifies the risk society are manufactured uncertainties which tend to be intangible to our senses. The theory of world risk society as a new Critical Theory assumes three characteristics of global risks: delocalization, uncalculability, and non-compensatability. This theory also adopts eight theses regarding the inequality of global risks; the power of risk definition; risk and culture/trust; cosmopolitian politics of world risk society; a ‘revolutionary subject’ for climate change; global risks empowering states and civil movements; divergent (environmental/ economic/ terrorist) logics of global risks; world risk society as a boundary-transcending process. The “cosmopolitan moment” of world risk society is now set free. |
Short Title | World at Risk |
Item Type | Book Section |
---|---|
Author | Ulrich Beck, Peter Wehling |
Publisher | Routledge |
ISBN | 978-0-203-87774-6 |
Date | 2011 |
Abstract | Before the financial crisis, the political and economic experts pretended to know everything; in the financial crisis, they suddenly know nothing any more (without really admitting this to themselves and to the public). The crisis of the globalised financial markets has again brought home in a dramatic way to a both amazed and deeply distraught public that, especially in the self-proclaimed knowledge societies, phenomena and dynamics of non-knowing are acquiring an importance that is difficult to overestimate as the scale of the threat emanating from civilisation increases. Who – apart from a handful of Cassandras who were mostly dismissed as mavericks and ‘prophets of doom’ – foresaw, or even had an inkling, that within a short space of time the financial sector would experience dramatic collapses across the globe (Beck 2009), that major banks could be prevented from going under only through state aid on a gigantic scale and that even whole states could be rescued from bankruptcy only with difficulty? In retrospect it turned out that the actors who made such a show of their knowledge in the financial markets did not know what they had got themselves into with the so-called innovative financial products. At any rate, they were incapable of assessing the associated risks. The financial crisis is not the only example which illustrates the explosive power of what is not known in contemporary societies. The threatening, man-made climate change, too, and the potential, but unknown consequences of the release of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), of the spread of ‘swine flu’ viruses and of the diffusion of environmental chemicals throughout the world emphatically underline that, notwithstanding all assertions to the contrary, numerous spheres of action and politics in contemporary societies are conditioned by non-knowing rather than by knowledge. 1 Especially in a world of delimited threats – world risk society – we are compelled to act under conditions of more or less non-knowing: that is the message which has the significance of a ticking political time bomb. |
Book Title | The Politics of Knowledge. |
Short Title | The politics of non-knowing |
Item Type | Journal Article |
---|---|
Author | Adam Hannah |
Author | Jordan Tchilingirian |
Author | Linda Botterill |
Author | Katie Attwell |
URL | https://bristoluniversitypressdigital.com/view/journals/evp/19/1/article-p116.xml |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 116-130 |
Publication | Evidence & Policy |
ISSN | 1744-2648, 1744-2656 |
Date | 02/2023 |
DOI | 10.1332/174426421X16552882375377 |
Accessed | 2024-02-26 13:55:15 |
Library Catalog | DOI.org (Crossref) |
Abstract | Background: Recent complex and cross-boundary policy problems, such as climate change, pandemics, and financial crises, have recentred debates about state capacity, democratic discontent and the ‘crisis of expertise’. These problems are contested and open to redefinition, misunderstanding, spin, and deception, challenging the ability of policymakers to locate, discriminate, comprehend, and respond to competing sources of knowledge and expertise. We argue that ‘non-knowledge’ is an under-explored aspect of responses to major policy crises. Key points: While discussed in recent work in sociology and other social sciences, non-knowledge has been given less explicit attention in policy studies, and is not fully captured by orthodox understandings of knowledge and evidence use. We outline three main forms of non-knowledge that challenge public agencies: amnesia, ignorance and misinformation. In each case, ‘non-knowledge’ is not simply the absence of policy-relevant knowledge. Amnesia refers to what is forgotten, reinvented or ‘unlearned’, while claims of ignorance involve obscuring or casting aside of relevant knowledge that could (or even should) be available. To be misinformed is to actively believe false or misleading information. In each instance, non-knowledge may have strategic value for policy actors or aid the pursuit of self-interest. Conclusions and implications: We demonstrate the relevance of non-knowledge through a brief case study, emerging from the inquiry into the COVID-19 hotel quarantine programme in the Australian state of Victoria. We argue that both amnesia and ‘practical’ forms of ignorance contributed to failures during the early part of the programme. |
Short Title | The role of ‘non-knowledge’ in crisis policymaking |