• Third world citizens and the information technology revolution
  • Record Type: Electronic resources : monographic
    Author: SalehNivien.,
    Secondary Intellectual Responsibility: Palgrave Connect (Online service)
    Place of Publication: New York
    Published: Palgrave Macmillan;
    Year of Publication: 2010
    Edition: 1st ed.
    Description: 1 online resource (xix, 273 p.)ill. :
    Series: Information technology and global governance
    Subject: Information technology - Egypt. -
    Subject: Information technology - Political aspects - Egypt. -
    Subject: Information technology - Developing countries. -
    Subject: COMPUTERS - Information Technology. -
    Online resource: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230114784An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
    Notes: Description based on print version record.
    Summary: This book challenges the widely held view that the information technology revolution has been a blessing for citizens of the Third World. It shows how the governments and corporations of the industrialized countries created the global IT regime by systematically excluding Third World representatives and their visions of the information society. Then these same actors pressured Third World societies to abide by the new international regime. Using Egypt as a case study, the book explains from a critical realist perspective how Third World peoples are being deprived of the essential human right to shape new rules that govern their lives.
    ISBN: 9780230114784electronic bk.
    ISBN: 0230114784electronic bk.
    ISBN: 9780230103641electronic bk.
    ISBN: 0230103642electronic bk.
    Content Note: Cover; Contents; List of Illustrations; List of Acronyms; Preface; Chapter 1 A Human Rights Approach to Globalization; Inside the Giant Globe; Turning the Globe; Meet a Nineteen-Year-Old Egyptian; Ways of Looking at Information Technology; Embarking on a Dissertation; From Fordism to Flexible Accumulation; The IT Revolution from a Post-Marxist Perspective; The Social Construction of the IT Revolution; On Regime Theory; Transformation of the State; Autonomy; Measuring Respect for Autonomy; Looking Ahead; Part I: The Rules of the Game are Forged; Chapter 2 Telephony for the Global Economy.
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