Cybering Democracy
 


Cybering Democracy

Public Space and the Internet

Diana Saco

Cybering Democracy

$26.00 Paper
ISBN: 0-8166-3541-2

ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-3541-2

 

Reconceptualizes the relationship between participatory democracy, technology, and space.

The Internet has been billed by some proponents as an "electronic agora" ushering in a "new Athenian age of democracy." That assertion assumes that cyberspace's virtual environment is compatible with democratic practice. But the anonymous sociality that is intrinsic to the Internet seems at odds with theories of democracy that presuppose the possibility, at least, of face-to-face meetings among citizens. The Internet, then, raises provocative questions about democratic participation: Must the public sphere exist as a physical space? Does citizenship require a bodily presence?

In Cybering Democracy, Diana Saco boldly reconceptualizes the relationship between democratic participation and spatial realities both actual and virtual. She argues that cyberspace must be viewed as a produced social space, one that fruitfully confounds the ordering conventions of our physical spaces. Within this innovative framework, Saco investigates recent and ongoing debates over cryptography, hacking, privacy, national security, information control, and Internet culture, focusing on how different online practices have shaped this particular social space. In the process, she highlights fundamental issues about the significance of corporeality in the development of civic-mindedness, the exercise of citizenship, and the politics of collective action.

“Diana Saco provides us with a very detailed, vivid, and technically savvy account of how cyberspace operates as a technological, spatial, social, and political reality. Her orientation, grasping cyberspace as a complex social construct, illuminates a host of important Internet-related terminology, issues, and debates—virtual embodiment, bit space, nonlinear networks, the new Private Network Access Points (PNAP)-dependent Internet, National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance, hacker culture, and the U.S. encryption debate, to name a few. Saco does a superb job of rethinking spatiality and showing how Internet cyberspace is a social space relevant to democratic theory. Valuable.” —Perspectives on Politics

Diana Saco is an independent scholar based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

344 pages | 4 figures | 5 7/8 x 9 | 2002
Electronic Mediations Series, volume 7

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