Virtual states : the Internet and the boundaries of the nation-state / Jerry Everard.
Material type: TextSeries: Technology and the global political economyPublication details: London ; New York : Routledge, ©2000.Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 174 pages) : mapContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 0203020081
- 9780203020081
- 9781134692767
- 1134692765
- 0203159217
- 9780203159217
- 9781134692712
- 1134692714
- 9781134692750
- 1134692757
- 9781138163973
- 113816397X
- Information society -- Political aspects
- Internet -- Political aspects
- Internet -- Social aspects
- Nation-state
- Société informatisée -- Aspect politique
- Internet -- Aspect politique
- Internet -- Aspect social
- Nation
- nations
- COMPUTERS -- Information Technology
- Information society -- Political aspects
- Internet -- Political aspects
- Internet -- Social aspects
- Nation-state
- Virtuelle Realität
- Politik
- Gesellschaft
- Entwicklungsländer
- Internet
- Internet
- Politieke aspecten
- Economische aspecten
- Samfundsvidenskab Sociologi
- 303.48/33 21
- HM851 .E94 2000eb
- 54.60
- MF 1000
- MK 8000
- MS 4850
- DAT 614f
- POL 210f
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 162-169) and index.
Print version record.
pt. 1. Virtual states : theory and practice. W(h)ither the state? -- Internet@www.history.edu -- pt. 2. The developing world. Hungry, thirsty and wired -- Sovereignty, boundary making and the net -- Culture and the other on the internet -- pt. 3. The developed world. Process : the key to the cyborg -- Economy@internet.com -- The @ of war -- pt. 4. Internet and society. Virtually real/really virtual -- Internet censorship : US, Europe and Australia -- Alt.cyberspace.binaries.philosophy.
This text analyses the role of the state in a globalising, wired society. The author argues that while information technology poses fundamental challenges to the state, this will mean not the decline but rather the mutation of the state.
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