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impacts
This page considers some
business and regulatory impacts of past communications
revolutions.
business
The
excellent Global Business Regulation (Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press 00) by John Braithwaite & Peter Drahos offers a perspective on how government
has dealt with jurisdictional and other challenges of new
technologies in the past - often slowly and clumsily but
in the long term quite effectively - and the likelihood of
coping in future.
The provocative Politics in Wired Nations: Selected
Writings of Ithiel de Sola Pool (New Brunswick,
Transaction 98) edited by Eli Noam is essential reading for those wondering how digital technologies will affect
politics, the economy and community. We recommend
his Technologies Without Boundaries: On
Telecommunications in a Global Age (Cambridge, Harvard
Uni Press 90).
The outstanding studies of business before a 'dot' seemed
a mandatory part of the title are Alfred Chandler's The
Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American
Business (Cambridge, Harvard Uni Press 80) and Scale
& Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism
(Cambridge, Harvard Uni Press 90).
James Beniger's The Control Revolution: Technological
& Economic Origins of the Information Society
(Cambridge, Harvard Uni Press 86), JoAnne Yates' Control
Through Communication: The Rise of System In American
Management (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Uni Press 89) and
Information Acumen: The Understanding & Use of
Knowledge in Modern Business (London, Routledge 94)
edited by Lisa Bud-Frierman are also of value.
the long wave
For wider impacts David Landes' revisionist The Wealth
& Poverty of Nations (New York, Little Brown 98)
is outstanding. It offers a nuanced cross-cultural
perspective. Joel Mokyr's The Lever of Riches:
Technological Creativity & Economic Progress
(Oxford, Oxford Uni Press 90) and The Carrier Wave: New
Information Technology & the Geography of Innovation,
1846-2003 (London, Unwin Hyman 88) by Peter Hall &
Paschal Preston are also valuable. We've pointed to
similar studies in our economy
guide.
Armand Mattelart's Networking the World, 1794-2000
(Minneapolis, Uni of Minnesota Press 00), like his The
Invention of Communication (Minneapolis, Uni of
Minnesota Press 96) melds Castells and Ferdinand Braudel.
space, time, modernity
Stephen Kern's The Culture of Time & Space,
1880-1918 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983)
dates the birth of the communications age to one hundred
years ago.
At the turn of last century new media made it possible to
think of Australia or other advanced economies as
"running on the same clock of awareness and existing
within a homogeneous national space." The
fin-de-siecle communications revolution was foreshadowed
by the growth of the telegraph, national and
intercontinental, and the penny press. It saw the birth of
the national magazine, the growth of mass newspapers, a
symbiosis between news publishing and wire services, and
experiments in online narrowcasting (eg subscribers in
Melbourne, Paris and London were able to listen to live
performances over the phone from theatres in their city.
Other writers featured in this profile argue that print
(from the 1500s), mechanical images (around the same
time), photographs or sound recordings (last century) had
an immeasurably greater impact on local/international
economies and society at large.
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