1. Introduction Part 1: Usage, Usability and Design 2. How Democracies have Disengaged from Young People 3. Contrasting Producer and Recipient Views of Youth Participation Websites 4. Logged On and Engaged?: The Experience of Italian Young People 5. Rethinking Online Youth Civic Engagement: Reflections on Web Content Analysis 6. Logged On and Disaffected: A Causal Link? Part 2: Innovation in Action 7. Youth Engagement Sites: Appealing to Young Voters in the US 8. Youth Internet Use during the Last UK Elections 9. Young Activists, Political Horizons, and the Internet: Adapting the Net to One’s Purposes 10. Australian Young People’s Participatory Practices and Internet Use Part 3: Citizenship Education through ICTs 11. ICT and Citizenship in Northern Ireland: A Critique of Experience since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement 12. The Place of Online Citizenship Education 13. P2P Politics: Young People and Policy Deliberation Online 14. Postscript: Towards a New Research Agenda
Brian D. Loader is Senior Lecturer and Co-Director of the new Social Informatics Research Unit at the University of York, UK. His academic interests are focused around the emergence of new information and communications technologies, the social, political and economic factors shaping their development and diffusion, and their implications for social, economic, governmental and cultural change.
Brian D. Loader brings together an all star line-up of scholars to
address the intersection of two of the most important debates about
the future of democracy – the state of political engagement among
young people and the impact of new media on the democratic practice
of citizens. Taking a comparative and global perspective, the
various chapters of Young Citizens in the Digital Age collectively
provide an exceptional mix of theory and evidence that contributes
significantly to these debates.
Michael X. Delli Carpini, Annenberg School for Communication,
University of Pennsylvania
This is an impressive collection of work, which features many of
the leading international scholars in the field. The contributions
combine rigorous empirical research with challenging discussions of
the broader issues at stake.
David Buckingham, Institute of Education, University of London'This
is a valuable book for researchers in politics, communications, ICT
and social sciences, which succeeds in clearly addressing the main
issues surrounding youth political participation and the influence
of new media' Silvia Gallagher, Independent Researcher, Social
Research Asscoaition Sept 2009
“Brian D. Loader brings together an all star lineup of scholars
to address the intersection of two of the most important debates
about the future of democracy – the state of political engagement
among young people and the impact new media on the democratic
practice of citizens. Taking a comparative and global perspective,
the various chapters of Young Citizens in the Digital Age
collectively provide an exceptional mix of theory and evidence that
contributes significantly to these debates.â€Michael X. Delli
Carpini, Dean, The Annenberg School for Communication of the
University of Pennsylvania 'This is an impressive collection of
work, which features many of the leading international scholars in
the field. The contributions combine rigorous empirical research
with challenging discussions of the broader issues at stake."David
Buckingham, Institute of Education, University of London
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