Jan A.G.M. van Dijk is an internationally recognized expert in the field of communication, his specific interest being new media studies. Van Dijk is the author of The Network Society (SAGE, 2012) and co-editor of Digital Democracy: Issues of Theory and Practice (SAGE, 2000). He is an advisor of the European Commission in the Information Society Forum. As a professor of Communication Science at Twente University, van Dijk teaches and develops the sociology of the information society, in particular the social-cultural, political, and organizational aspects.
Chapter 1. Introduction
A New Infrastructure of Society
A Second Communication Revolution
Characteristics of the Digital Media
Communication Capacities of Digital Media
The Nature and Design of this Book
Chapter 2. Networks: the Nervous System of Society
What is a Network Society?
A Short History of the Human Web
Networks at All Levels
Causes of the Rise of Networks
The Seven 'Laws' of the Web
From Mass Society to Network Society
Chapter 3. Technology
The Relationship Between Technology and Society
Technical Foundations of the Network Society
Current Technical Trends
Chapter 4. Economy
The First, Second and Third Communications Revolution
Markets, Hierarchies and Networks
Main Characteristics of a Network and Data Economy
The Network Producers: From Infrastructure to Service Providers
The Rise of a Platform Economy
Consumers: the Pushers and the Pulled
Chapter 5. Social Structure
Space and Time in the Network Society
The Blurring Spheres of Living
Social Networks and Social Media
Unity and Fragmentation: A New Social Cohesion
The Instability of the Network Society
Networks and Social (In)equality
The Digital Divide
Chapter 6. Power and Politics
What is Network Power?
Technological Power
Societal Power: Politics and Democracy
Internet: Between Freedom and Control
Power in the Organization
Privacy and Personal Autonomy
Chapter 7. Culture
What is Digital Culture?
Characteristics of Digital Culture
The Quantity and Quality of Digital Media Content
Digital Youth Culture
Trends in Digital Media Use
Chapter 8. Psychology
Perception and the Digital Media
Cognition and the Digital Media
Learning with the Digital Media
The Social Psychology of Digital Media Communication
Changes in Human Personality?
Chapter 9. Law
The Law Undermined by Networks
Who Rules the Internet?
Information and Communication Freedom
Intellectual Property Rights
The Right to Privacy
Platform Regulation
Chapter 10. Conclusions and Policy Perspectives
General Conclusions
The Network Society in North America, Europe, East Asia and the Third World
Policy Perspectives for the Network Society