Document Type
Article
Date
2007
Embargo Period
11-29-2010
Keywords
global governance, communication rights, multistakeholder, transnational advocacy networks, World Summit on the Information Society
Language
English
Disciplines
Library and Information Science
Description/Abstract
This paper is a case study of the role of transnational advocacy networks (TANs) and multi-stakeholder governance processes in the formation of international communication-information policy. It analyzes the Campaign for Communication Rights in the Information Society (CRIS) during the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS). The paper combines methods of historical institutionalism and empirical social network analysis. It documents the important role of the CRIS campaign in determining the norms and modalities of civil society participation in WSIS, and provides a critical assessment of the ideology of "communication rights." The SNA data reveal the centrality of CRIS affiliate Association for Progressive Communications in WSIS civil society and the paper explains that centrality in terms of its organizational capacity to link multiple issue networks. The paper also explores the strengths and weaknesses of multi-stakeholder governance as revealed by the attempts to institutionalize WSIS civil society.
Recommended Citation
Mueller, M. L., Kuerbis, B. and Pagé, C. M. , 2007-05-23 "Democratizing Global Communication? Global Civil Society and the Campaign for Communication Rights in the Information Society, TOP THREE PAPER" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA Online . 2010-06-04 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p169991_index.html