Abstract
Cyberspace is regarded as both the end of the state and the extension of state surveillance and control.
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Notes
Peter Hannington, ‘Anarchy on the Internet’, New Times, 15 April 1995.
Professor Ian Angell, ‘The Information Revolution and the Death of the Nation State’, LSE magazine, summer 1995.
Robert Reich, The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for Twenty-first-Century Capitalism (London: Simon & Schuster, 1991), p. 3.
Martin Jacques, ‘The End of Politics’, Sunday Times, 18 July 1993.
Simon Davies, ‘Welcome Home, Big Brother’, Wired (UK), May 1995, p. 110.
Brent Gregston, ‘Open Secrets’, Internet, November 1995, p. 29.
Bill Thompson, ‘Watching the Virtual Detectives’,. net, May 1995.
Marshall McLuhan and Bruce Powers, The Global Village (New York: Oxford University Press 1989), p. 118.
Anne W. Branscomb, ‘Common Law for the Electronic Frontier’, Scientific American: the computer in the 21st century, special issue 1995, p. 160.
John Kay, ‘Threats to Bill Gates and the Internet’, Financial Times, 15 December 1995.
Simon Davies, Big Brother: Britain’s Web of Surveillance and the New Technological Order (London: Pan, 1994).
Robin Cook, ‘Byte-sized Revolution’, New Statesman and Society 5 August 1994.
Jonathon Carr-Brown, ‘Blair aims to “do a Kennedy” on Net’, Sunday Times, 8 September 1997.
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© 1999 Andrew Calcutt
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Calcutt, A. (1999). Anarchy/authority. In: White Noise. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230373686_1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230373686_1
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