Negotiating Digital Citizenship: Control, Contest and Culture

Front Cover
Anthony McCosker, Sonja Vivienne, Amelia Johns
Rowman & Littlefield, Oct 12, 2016 - Political Science - 272 pages
With pervasive use of mobile devices and social media, there is a constant tension between the promise of new forms of social engagement and the threat of misuse and misappropriation, or the risk of harm and harassment.

Negotiating Digital Citizenship explores the diversity of experiences that define digital citizenship. These range from democratic movements that advocate social change via social media platforms to the realities of online abuse, racial or sexual intolerance, harassment and stalking. Young people, educators, social service providers and government authorities have become increasingly enlisted in a new push to define and perform ‘good’ digital citizenship, yet there is little consensus on what this term really means and sparse analysis of the vested interests that drive its definition.

The chapters probe the idea of digital citizenship, map its use among policy makers, educators, and activists, and identify avenues for putting the concept to use in improving the digital environments and digitally enabled tenets of contemporary social life. The components of digital citizenship are dissected through questions of control over our online environments, the varieties of contest and activism and possibilities of digital culture and creativity.
 

Contents

The Three Layers of Control in Digital
21
Rethinking Childrens and Young Peoples Citizenship through
41
Reimagining Digital Citizenship via Disability
61
The Digitised Reproductive Citizen
81
XNet and the Radicalisation of Citizenship
97
A Global Response
115
Conflict and Governance
131
Intimate Citizenship 3 0
147
The MIPSTERZ Digital
169
Holding a Space for GenderDiverse and Queer
191
Politics of Sexting Revisited
213
Civic Practices Design and Makerspaces
231
Collective Digital Citizenship through Local Memory Websites
247
Index
265
About the Contributors
279
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2016)

Anthony McCosker is Senior Lecturer in Media and Communications, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia

Sonja Vivienne is Lecturer in Digital Media at Flinders University of South Australia


Amelia Johns is Research Fellow at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalization, Deakin
University

Bibliographic information