tripleC: Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society
Edited by Christian Fuchs
tripleC is a peer-review open access journal that focuses on information
society studies and studies of media, digital media, information and
communication in society with a special interest in critical studies in
these thematic areas. It is indexed in Scopus, Communication and Mass
Media Complete, Sociological Abstracts.
The 2012 volume will feature besides regular contributions the three
special issues “Marx is Back – The Importance of Marxist Theory and
Research for Critical Communication Studies Today” (edited by Christian
Fuchs and Vincent Mosco), "Political Economy and Critical Theory of the
Internet @ Nordmedia 2011" (edited by Christian Fuchs and Göran Bolin),
“The Difference that Makes a Difference 2011” (edited by David Chapman
and Magnus Ramage”).
http://www.triple-c.at
Table of Contents Vol. 9 (2011)
Vol 9, No 2 (2011)
Articles:
* Privacy as Invisibility: Pervasive Surveillance and the Privatization
of Peer-to-Peer Systems
Francesca Musiani, 126-140
* Selling You and Your Clicks: Examining the Audience Commodification of
Google
Hyunjin Kang, Matthew P. McAllister, 141-153
* Can Online Forums Be Designed to Empower Local Communities?
Kerill Dunne, 154-174
* Consumer Protection in Cyberspace
Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., 175-189
* Neoliberalism in the Information Age, or Vice Versa? Global
Citizenship, Technology, and Hegemonic Ideology
Robert Neubauer, 195-230
* Communicative Informatics: An Active and Creative Audience Framework
of Social Media
Linda M. Gallant, Gloria M. Boone, 231-246
* Can Environmental Governance Benefit From an ICT-Social Capital Nexus
in Civil Society?
Subas P. Dhakal, 551-565
* Critical Surveillance Studies in the Information Society
Thomas Allmer, 566-592
* Avatar: A Marxist Saga on the Far Distant Planet
Yong Tang, 657-557
* From Seven Years to 360 Degrees: Primitive Accumulation, the Social
Common, and the Contractual Lockdown of Recording Artists at the
Threshold of Digitalization
Matt Stahl, 668-688
* Social Networking and Transnational Capitalism
David Kreps, 689-701
Reflections:
* Two New Critical Internet Studies-Books: Marcus Breen’s “Uprising” and
Eran Fisher’s “Media and New Capitalism in the Digital Age”
Christian Fuchs, 190-194
* Critical Media and Communication Studies Today. A Conversation
Christian Fuchs, Dwayne Winseck, 247-271
Special Issue: ICTs and Society - A New Transdiscipline?
Edited by Joseph E. Brenner and Celina Raffl, 593-656 (introduction + 5
contributions)
Special Issue: Towards a New Science of Information
Edited by Wolfgang Hofkirchner, 272-550 (introduction + 31 contributions)
Vol 9, No 1 (2011)
Articles
* Doing Research, Doing Politics: ICT Research as a Form of Activism
Juliet Webster, 1-10
* Embracing Technology and the Challenges of Complexity
Alice Robbin, 11-27
* Social Media for Digital and Social Inclusion: Challenges for
Information Society 2.0 Research & Policies
Pieter Verdegem, 28-38
* From Financialization to Low and Non-Profit: Emerging Media Models for
Freedom
Nuria Almiron-Roig, 39-61
* Deconstructing Bentham’s Panopticon: The New Metaphors of Surveillance
in the Web 2.0 Environment
Manuela Farinosi, 62-76
* Information – is it Subjective or Objective?
Andrzej Stanislaw Zaliwski, 77-92
* The Need for an Informational Systems Approach to Security
José María Díaz Nafría, 93-122
Reflections
* Book Review: Signs of Science - Linguistics meets Biology
Robert Prinz, 123-125
|