Information technology : social issues : a reader

Bibliographic Information

Information technology : social issues : a reader

edited by Ruth Finnegan, Graeme Salaman and Kenneth Thompson

Hodder and Stoughton in association with the Open University, 1987

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Is there really an "information revolution"? What are the implications of information technology for our lives and social institutions? What social, political and ethical issues does it raise? This collection of papers by international specialists confronts these controversial questions. The book aims to provide a challange to many facile assumptions, making it a valuable resource for teaching and research on information technology at university level, particularly in social scientific and interdisciplinary courses. Designed to accompany the Open University course DT200 - An Introduction to Information Technology - the reader aims to go beyond usual conclusions, futurist speculation and specialist appraisal, and builds on social scientific research and thinking to bring out social rather than purely technical implications.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 The shaping of information technology - determinism or choice?: the case for technological determinism
  • electronics takes command
  • models of computer literacy
  • value conflicts and social choice in electronic payment systems. Part 2 The shaping of information technology - some actors in the drama: defence and the electronics industry - civil exploitation of defence electronics
  • managerial strategies - new technology and the labour process
  • new technology and bank work - banking on IT as an organizational technology
  • telecommunication - policy directions for the technology and information services. Part 3 Some critical issues for the information age - control and power: surveillance, computers and privacy
  • dangers of information technology and responsibilities of education
  • information technology and the north-south divide
  • decision-making in the information age - computer models and public policy. Part 4 Some critical issues for the information age - access and participation: communication satellites - a third world perspective
  • the social economics of information technology
  • IT futures in households and communities. Part 5 The future of the human spirit - depersonalization or new development?: social psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication
  • computers and the human spirit
  • engineers and the work that people do
  • artificial intelligence.

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