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Digital Capitalism
Book

Digital Capitalism

Networking the Global Market System

MIT Press, 1999 更多详情

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自动生成的音频

Editorial Rating

6

Qualities

  • Analytical
  • Eye Opening
  • Background

Recommendation

Dan Schiller’s book is an exhaustive history and analysis of network deregulation, the Internet, and the emerging global economic order. In this academic work, Schiller examines the social and political issues of the Internet, the new economic landscape. He is, above all, a critic of the political realities that shaped the Internet. He laments its lack of social and "welfarist" features and argues that a system created by market forces to serve market forces can only exacerbate existing inequities. His dry, academic tone still reveals a little emotion, making it clear that Schiller is no cheerleader for the neo-liberal orientation he perceives on the Internet. Is there an overt political slant to the book? You might say that. getabstract recommends it to students of economics, social sciences, and communications, and to anyone else with a good political filter who wants to better understand the Internet’s impact on the global economy, albeit from a U.S. perspective.

Take-Aways

  • A system created by market forces to serve market forces can only exacerbate existing social inequities.
  • Traditional network (Internet) policies were generally protectionist, nationalist, and socially oriented.
  • Network advocates applied political pressure to change protectionist network policies into neo-liberal policies.

About the Author

Dan Schiller  is a Communications Professor at the University of California at San Diego.


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