Nouveautés parutions
"Doing internet governance. Practices, controversies, infrastructures, and institutions"
Internet Policy Review
Volume 5, n° 3, 2016. Coord. : Dmitry Epstein, Christian Katzenbach et Francesca Musiani.
This special issue makes an argument for, and illustrates, the applicability of a science and technology studies (STS) informed approach to internet governance research. The conceptual framework put forward in this editorial and the articles composing this issue add to the mainstream internet governance scholarship by unpacking macro questions of politics and power. They do so through the analysis of the mundane and taken-for-granted practices and discourses that constitute the design, regulation, maintenance, and use of both technical and institutional arrangements of internet governance. Together, this body of work calls to rethink how we conceptualise both internet and governance.
Editorial
Doing internet governance : how science and technology studies inform the study of internet governance (Dmitry Epstein, Christian Katzenbach, Francesca Musiani)
Disclosing and concealing : internet governance, information control and the management of visibility (Mikkel Flyverbom)
Beyond “Points of Control” : logics of digital governmentality (Romain Badouard, Clément Mabi, Guillaume Sire)
Instability and internet design (Sandra Braman)
The problem of future users : how constructing the DNS shaped internet governance (Steven Malcic)
The myth of the decentralised internet (Ashwin J. Mathew)
The invisible politics of Bitcoin : governance crisis of a decentralised infrastructure (Primavera De Filippi, Benjamin Loveluck)
Multistakeholder governance processes as production sites : enhanced cooperation "in the making" (Julia Pohle)
Internet governance as ’ideology in practice’ – India’s ’Free Basics’ controversy (Anita Gurumurthy, Nandini Chami)
What we talk about when we talk about cybersecurity : security in internet governance debates (Josephine Wolff)
Governing the internet in the privacy arena (Carsten Ochs, Fabian Pittroff, Barbara Büttner, Jörn Lamla)
En savoir plus : http://policyreview.info/archives/2016/issue-3