International Journal of E-Politics - primeira edição


PorAnônimo- Postado em 07 março 2010

Acaba de sair o primeiro volume da International Journal of E-Politics (IJEP).

A revista definiu que a e-política é uma área emergente de investigação interdisciplinar e prática, bem como oferece um espaço para publicações que incidem sobre as teorias e pesquisas empíricas sobre as manifestações da e-política em diversos contextos e ambientes. Esta revista abrange diversos aspectos da e-política, incluindo: estratégia, e-commerce, ciências da decisão, marketing, economia, psicologia, sociologia, antropologia, estudos de mídia, estudos de comunicação, estudos sobre as mulheres, os estudos negros, ciência política, filosofia, direito, Criminologia e ética.

Estão disponíveis 6 seguintes artigos: CLIQUE AQUI PARA BAIXAR:

1. From the Streets to the Net? The Political Use of the Internet by Social Movements
2. Election Campaigns on the Internet
3. Between Individuality and Collectiveness
4. Internet-Based Protest in European Policymaking
5. Empirical Analysis of Political Spaces on the Internet
6. The Way is the Goal Interview with Maqui, Indymedia London / IMC-UK Network Activist

Recomendo: Empirical Analysis of Political Spaces on the Internet

ABSTRACT
The Internet has largely been greeted as a technology able to create new spaces of political debate. In order to investigate the issue, scholars have paid attention to how transnational social movements use new information technologies. This has been done mainly exploring the use of the World Wide Web (WWW). However, new political spaces do not take place just on the WWW, and by consequence, research in this field cannot solely carry out Web analysis to explore the role played by the Internet in creating political debate. In looking at other areas of the Internet to understand the creation of new political space, other analytical approaches need
to be adopted. The Internet also includes tools other than the WWW, such as E-Mailing Lists, collaborative on-line software, Peer-to-Peer Networks, Instant Messaging tools, and so forth. This paper explores the role that E-Mailing Lists play in creating new political spaces. To explore if and how this happens, I illustrate this crucial point with an analysis of the use of E-Mailing Lists by social movements. The case I will use is that of the organization of the protest during the G8 Summit held in Genoa in July 2001.