Information Technology and Society
A Reader
Edited by:
- Nick Heap
- Ray Thomas
- Geoff Einon
- Robin Mason
- Hugh Mackay - Open University in Wales, United Kingdom
July 1995 | 448 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
"Providing a complete overview of the issues that inform any discussion about the impact of information technology, this book is an invaluable resource for teaching and research on information technology."
--Current Literature on Science of Science
Thorough and comprehensive, Information Technology and Society examines the social, political, and technological implications of the information revolution. The editors explore the major social and technological issues surrounding the introduction of information technology into everyday life; present historical and comparative perspectives on the social and technological processes involved in the uses of, control of, and access to information technology (IT); and critically examine the assumptions underpinning technological development. Key issues, from technological determinism to globalization, privacy to labor relations, and telework to disability, are discussed from comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. This collection also examines future applications of the technology including advanced telecommunications and virtual reality. Contributors place the debates around IT in an international context, illustrating the importance of social values as well as government policy.
Providing a complete overview of the issues that inform any discussion about the impact of information technology, this is an invaluable resource for teaching and research in information technology.
Nick Heap
Introduction
PART ONE: DIFFERING PERSPECTIVES
Ray Thomas
Introduction
David Edge
The Social Shaping of Technology
Bruce Sterling
The Hacker Crackdown
Hugh Mackay
Theorising the IT/Society Relationship
David Lyon
The Roots of the Information Society Idea
Anne-Jorun Berg
A Gendered Socio-Technical Construction
Ray Thomas
Access and Inequality
PART TWO: IT IN THE WORKPLACE
Geoff Einon
Introduction
Paul Kennedy
Robotics, Automation and a New Industrial Revolution
Christel Lane
The Pursuit of Flexible Specialization in Britain and West Germany
Gert Hartmann, Ian Nicholas, Arndt Sorge and Malcolm Warner
Computerized Machine Tools, Manpower Consequences and Skill Utilization
Peter Senker
Technological Change and the Future of Work
Ian McLoughlin and Jon Clark
Technological Change at Work
PART THREE: IT AND LEARNING
Robin Mason
Introduction
David Hawkridge
Do Companies Need Technology-Based Training?
Anthony Kaye
Computer Supported Collaborative Learning
Robin Mason
The Educational Value of ISDN
Tom Vincent and Mary Taylor
Access to Books for Visually Impaired Learners
Josie Taylor and Diana Laurillard
Supporting Resource Based Learning
Ann Jones
Constructivist Learning Theories and IT
PART FOUR: IT AND THE HOME
Hughie Mackay
Introduction
Graham Murdock, Paul Hartmann and Peggy Gray
Conceptualizing Home Computing
Ann Moyal
The Feminine Culture of the Telephone
Hughie Mackay
Patterns of Ownership of IT Devices in the Home
PART FIVE: IT FUTURES
Nick Heap
Introduction
Arthur C Clarke
Extra Terrestrial Relays
Lawrence W Lockwood
Iridium
Frederick P Brooks, JR
No Silver Bullet
Brad J Cox
There Is a Silver Bullet
Ralph Schroeder
Virtual Reality in the Real World
Leslie Haddon and Roger Silverstone
Telework and the Changing Relation of Home and Work
David B Crosbie
The New Space Race
`Compiled with care.... One aspect of information technology which is growing fast... is electronic mail. Professor Palme has been working on computer-mediated-communication since 1977 and is well qualified to write on the subject of e-mail which he does concisely and with clarity' - Intermedia
`Providing a complete overview of the issues that inform any discussion about the impact of information technology, this book is an invaluable resource for teaching and research' - Current Literature on Science of Science