default search action
The Information Society, Volume 32
Volume 32, Number 1, 2016
- Kathleen Menzies, Frances C. Johnson:
Academic attitudes toward new media: An exploratory multidisciplinary study. 1-13 - Luke Stark:
The emotional context of information privacy. 14-27 - John Michael Roberts:
Co-creative prosumer labor, financial knowledge capitalism, and Marxist value theory. 28-39 - Burcu S. Bakioglu:
The gray zone: Networks of piracy, control, and resistance. 40-50 - Kirsten Martin:
Data aggregators, consumer data, and responsibility online: Who is tracking consumers online and should they stop? 51-63 - Patrick Keilty:
Embodied engagements with online pornography. 64-73
- Alireza Isfandyari-Moghaddam:
The Ethics of Information, by Luciano Floridi - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2013. xxii + 357 pp. $55.49 hardcover. ISBN 9780199641321 (hardcover). 74-75 - Nicholas J. Rowland, Frank Joseph, Jeffrey A. Knapp, Christopher Lehman:
I Am Error: The Nintendo Family Computer/Entertainment System Platform, by Nathan Altice. - Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2015. xii + 426 pp. $40.00 hardcover. ISBN 9780262028776 (hardcover). 76-77 - Wesley D. Shirley:
Beyond Consumer Capitalism: Media and the Limits of Imagination, by Justin Lewis - Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2013. 234 pp. $24.95 paper. ISBN 97807456-50241 (paper). 78-79
Volume 32, Number 2, 2016
Introduction
- June Ahn, Ingrid Erickson:
Revealing mutually constitutive ties between the information and learning sciences. 81-84
- Morgan G. Ames:
Learning consumption: Media, literacy, and the legacy of One Laptop per Child. 85-97 - Katie Davis, Sean Fullerton:
Connected learning in and after school: Exploring technology's role in the learning experiences of diverse high school students. 98-116 - Carla Casilli, Daniel T. Hickey:
Transcending conventional credentialing and assessment paradigms with information-rich digital badges. 117-129 - Drew Paulin, Caroline Haythornthwaite:
Crowdsourcing the curriculum: Redefining e-learning practices through peer-generated approaches. 130-142 - Alan Rubel, Kyle M. L. Jones:
Student privacy in learning analytics: An information ethics perspective. 143-159
- Tin-Yuet Ting:
Public Access ICT Across Cultures: Diversifying Participation in the Network Society, edited by Francisco J. Proenza. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2015. 476 pp. $36.00 paper. ISBN 9780262527378 (paper). 160-161 - Christopher Lehman, Nicholas J. Rowland, Jeffrey A. Knapp:
Memes in Digital Culture, edited by Limor Shifman. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014. x + 200 pp. $15.95 paper. ISBN 9780262525435 (paper). 162-163
Volume 32, Number 3, 2016
- Hamid R. Ekbia:
Digital inclusion and social exclusion: The political economy of value in a networked world. 165-175 - Bryce Clayton Newell, Ricardo Gómez, Verónica E. Guajardo:
Information seeking, technology use, and vulnerability among migrants at the United States-Mexico border. 176-191 - Jens-Erik Mai:
Big data privacy: The datafication of personal information. 192-199 - Kirsten Martin, Katie Shilton:
Putting mobile application privacy in context: An empirical study of user privacy expectations for mobile devices. 200-216
- Kwang-Suk Lee:
On the historiography of the Korean Internet: Issues raised by the historical dialectic of structure and agency. 217-222
- Matthew Buttacavoli:
New Media, Development and Globalization, by Don Slater. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2013. 210 pp. $24.95 paper. ISBN 9780745638331 (paper). 223-224 - Madeline Carr:
Digital Dilemmas: Power, Resistance, and the Internet, by M. I. Franklin. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2014. 286 pp. $105.00 hardcover. ISBN 9780199982691 (hardcover). 225-226 - Gavin Cross:
Interactive Visualization: Insight Through Inquiry, by Bill Ferster. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2012. 275 pp. $42.00 hardcover. ISBN 978262018159 (hardcover). 227-228
Volume 32, Number 4, 2016
- Torin Monahan:
Built to lie: Investigating technologies of deception, surveillance, and control. 229-240 - Chih-Hui Lai, James E. Katz:
Volunteer associations in the Internet age: Ecological approach to understanding collective action. 241-255 - Debora Halbert:
Intellectual property theft and national security: Agendas and assumptions. 256-268 - Marty J. Wolf, Nir Fresco:
Ethics of the software vulnerabilities and exploits market. 269-279 - Isto Huvila:
Awkwardness of becoming a boundary object: Mangle and materialities of reports, documentation data, and the archaeological work. 280-297
- Theresa Donofrio:
Ubiquitous Photography, by Martin Hand. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2012, 220 pp. $22.95 paper. ISBN 9780745647159 (paper). 298-299
Volume 32, Number 5, 2016
Introduction
- Ian Gordon, Sun Sun Lim:
Introduction to the special issue "Cultural industries and transmedia in a time of convergence: Modes of engagement and participation". 301-305
- Valerie Wee:
Spreading the Glee: Targeting a youth audience in the multimedia, digital age. 306-317 - Bart Beaty:
Superhero fan service: Audience strategies in the contemporary interlinked Hollywood blockbuster. 318-325 - Ian Gordon:
Refiguring media: Tee shirts as a site of audience engagement with superheroes. 326-332 - Srividya Ramasubramanian:
Racial/ethnic identity, community-oriented media initiatives, and transmedia storytelling. 333-342 - Lynn Schofield Clark:
Participant or zombie? Exploring the limits of the participatory politics framework through a failed youth participatory action project. 343-353 - Cheryll Ruth Soriano:
Transmedia mobilization: Agency and literacy in minority productions in the age of spreadable media. 354-363
- Randall M. Livingstone:
Crowdsourcing, by Daren C. Brabham. 364-365 - Nicholas J. Rowland, Christian Lucia:
Developer's Dilemma: The Secret World of Videogame Creators, by Casey O'Donnell. 366-367 - Alexander Fink:
Favela Digital: The Other Side of Technology, by David Nemer. 368-369
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.