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Aug 1993
ISBN 0262082225
424 pp.
18 illus.
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Global Networks
Linda M. Harasim

Global Networks takes up the host of issues raised by the new networking technology that now links individuals, groups, and organizations in different countries and on different continents. The twenty-one contributions focus on the implementation, application, and impact of computer-mediated communication in a global context.

Previously limited to scientific research, global networks now have an impact on social, educational, and business communications. Individuals with a personal computer, a modem, and some simple software can join a new social community that is based on interest, not location. Global Networks, which was written largely with the assistance of the internet, provides an understanding of the issues, opportunities, and pitfalls of this new social connectivity. It looks at how -networking technology can support and augment communication and collaboration from such perspectives as policy constraints and opportunities, language differences, cross-cultural communication, and social network design.

Linda M. Harasim is a Professor in the Department of Communications at Simon Fraser University.

Table of Contents
 Preface
I Overview
1 Global Networks: An Introduction
by Linda M. Harasim
2 Networlds: Networks as Social Space
by Linda M. Harasim
3 The Global Matrix of Minds
by John S. Quaterman
4 A Slice of Life in My Virtual Community
by Howard Rheingold
II Issues
5 Jurisdictional Quandaries for Global Networks
by Anne Wells Branscomb
6 Computers, Networks, and Work
by Lee Sproull and Sara Kiesler
7 Integrating Global Organizations through Task/Team Support Systems
by Marvin Manheim
8 Cross-Cultural Communication and CSCW
by Hiroshi Ishii
9 Global Networking for Local Development: Task Focus and Relationship Focus in Cross-Cultural Communication
by Jan Walls
10 Information Security: At Risk?
by Michael Kirby and Catherine Murray
III Applications
11 Building a Global Network: The WBSI Experience
by Andrew Feenberg
12 Computer Conferencing and the New Europe
by Robin Mason
13 Global Education through Learning Circles
by Margaret Riel
14 Technology Transfer in Global Networking: Capacity Building in Africa and Latin America
by Beryl Bellman, Alex Tindimubona and Armando Arias, Jr.
15 Islands in the (Data)Stream: Language, Character Codes, and Electronic Isolation in Japan
by Jeffrey Shapard
16 Cognitive Apprenticeship on Global Networks
by Lucio Teles
17 Computer Networks and the Emergence of Global Civil Society
by Howard Frederick
IV Visions for the future
18 Social and Industrial Policy for Public Networks: Visions for the Future
by Mitchel Kapor and Daniel Weitzner
19 Co-Emulation: The Case for a Global Hypernetwork Society
by Shumpei Kumo and Izumi Aizu
20 Sailing through Cyberspace: Counting the Stars in Passing
by Robert Jacobson
21 The Global Authoring Network
by Linda M. Harasim and Jan Walls
 Appendix: A Sampler of Global Network Addresses
 Contributors
 Notes
 References
 Index
 
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