
New Community Networks
Wired for Change
Douglas Schuler(Author)
Addison Wesley (Publisher)
Published on 20. May 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
544 pages
978-0-201-59553-6 (ISBN)
Description
"Doug Schuler has been a crusading pioneer in the community network arena and it will help the cause to have a significant book available that presents his views. His breadth of knowledge, personal experience, and the numerous examples he presents are the strong parts of this project. His enthusiasm shows and there are many appealing anecdotes. This has the potential to be an important book that gains national attention."-- Ben Shneiderman, University of Maryland Author of Designing the User InterfaceIn an era when many communities are declining, activists at the grassroots level all over the world are building community networks that are designed to reinvigorate communities by encouraging dialogue and providing a forum for voices that too often go unheard. Via the new computer networking technology, new communities can now connect electronically to pursue various activities including: community and public health projects, long-distance learning, performances, and "virtual spaces."
This book should be read by government officials, librarians, policy analysts, educators, journalists, social service administrators, students, social and political activists and -- in fact -- by anyone concerned about our communities and the uses of technology in our society.Highlights: * Provides a helpful reference for people trying to develop and sustain their own community networks. * Details issues critical for the success of a community-based network. * Includes case studies from the Santa Monica PEN project, Community Memory in Berkeley, the Cleveland Free-Net, and the Big Sky Telegraph system in rural Montana. * Explains short- and long-term issues about community networks. * Includes an extensive reference section and numerous appendices providing handy access to a plethora of information related to community networks. "Doug Schuler brings us the good news about the Internet: many-to-many communications can be a rich and powerful tool for community-building. Schuler tells us why and how community networks are a promising new technology for revitalizing not just community, but democracy. This is not just a manifesto.
It's an invaluable and deep sourcebook for grassroots activists."Howard Rheingold, Author of The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier Interview by Howard Rheingold with Doug Schuler, (Salon, Issue #11, Apr 6-21, 1996) 0201595532B04062001
This book should be read by government officials, librarians, policy analysts, educators, journalists, social service administrators, students, social and political activists and -- in fact -- by anyone concerned about our communities and the uses of technology in our society.Highlights: * Provides a helpful reference for people trying to develop and sustain their own community networks. * Details issues critical for the success of a community-based network. * Includes case studies from the Santa Monica PEN project, Community Memory in Berkeley, the Cleveland Free-Net, and the Big Sky Telegraph system in rural Montana. * Explains short- and long-term issues about community networks. * Includes an extensive reference section and numerous appendices providing handy access to a plethora of information related to community networks. "Doug Schuler brings us the good news about the Internet: many-to-many communications can be a rich and powerful tool for community-building. Schuler tells us why and how community networks are a promising new technology for revitalizing not just community, but democracy. This is not just a manifesto.
It's an invaluable and deep sourcebook for grassroots activists."Howard Rheingold, Author of The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier Interview by Howard Rheingold with Doug Schuler, (Salon, Issue #11, Apr 6-21, 1996) 0201595532B04062001
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Boston
United States
Publishing group
Pearson Education (US)
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
670 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-201-59553-6 (9780201595536)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
About Douglas Schuler
Doug Schuler is chair of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility and a founding member of the Seattle Community Network. Doug has edited several books and articles, including an article on Communications of the ACM that Apple librarian Steve Cisler called "the definitive article on community networks." He is a software engineer who has been working on social issues of computing for nearly 15 years.
0201595532AB04062001
Doug Schuler is chair of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility and a founding member of the Seattle Community Network. Doug has edited several books and articles, including an article on Communications of the ACM that Apple librarian Steve Cisler called "the definitive article on community networks." He is a software engineer who has been working on social issues of computing for nearly 15 years.
0201595532AB04062001