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Anarchy/authority

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White Noise
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Abstract

Cyberspace is regarded as both the end of the state and the extension of state surveillance and control.

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Notes

  1. Peter Hannington, ‘Anarchy on the Internet’, New Times, 15 April 1995.

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  2. Professor Ian Angell, ‘The Information Revolution and the Death of the Nation State’, LSE magazine, summer 1995.

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  3. Robert Reich, The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for Twenty-first-Century Capitalism (London: Simon & Schuster, 1991), p. 3.

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  4. Martin Jacques, ‘The End of Politics’, Sunday Times, 18 July 1993.

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  5. Simon Davies, ‘Welcome Home, Big Brother’, Wired (UK), May 1995, p. 110.

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  6. Brent Gregston, ‘Open Secrets’, Internet, November 1995, p. 29.

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  7. Bill Thompson, ‘Watching the Virtual Detectives’,. net, May 1995.

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  8. Marshall McLuhan and Bruce Powers, The Global Village (New York: Oxford University Press 1989), p. 118.

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  9. Anne W. Branscomb, ‘Common Law for the Electronic Frontier’, Scientific American: the computer in the 21st century, special issue 1995, p. 160.

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  10. John Kay, ‘Threats to Bill Gates and the Internet’, Financial Times, 15 December 1995.

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  11. Simon Davies, Big Brother: Britain’s Web of Surveillance and the New Technological Order (London: Pan, 1994).

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  12. Robin Cook, ‘Byte-sized Revolution’, New Statesman and Society 5 August 1994.

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  13. 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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