Section 1: Understanding Cybercities Part 1. Cybercity Archaeologies Part 2. Theorising Cybercities Part 3. Cybercities : Hybrid forms and recombinant spaces Section 2: Cybercity Dimensions Part 4. Cybercity Mobilities Part 5. Cybercity Economies Part 6. Social and Cultural Worlds of Cybercities Part 7. Cybercity Public Domains and Digital Divides Section 3: Shaping Cybercities? Part 8. Cybercity Strategy and Politics Part 9. Cybercity Futures
Stephen Graham is Professor of Urban Technology at the Global Urban Research Unit in Newcastle University's School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. He is co-author of Telecommunications and the City and Splintering Urbanism, both published by Routledge, and co-editor of Managing Cities.
"In gathering together classic and contemporary papers, this volume
reveals urban landscapes as simultaneously reflective and
constitutive of the digital world, illustrates the powerful ways in
which cyberspace is shot through with social categories of class,
power, gender, and ethnicity, and renders obsolete artificial
dualisms such as on-line and off-line." - Barney Warf, Florida
State University
'Overall this book is a nice addition to one's library... For a new
researcher there are many authors and many topics assembled in one
book, so one gets a broad introduction to a range of topics.' - New
Media and Society
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