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- David.Hakken

 saggio, 2004

The Cyberspace Anthropology

 http://www.CYBERCULTURA.IT/PDF/The_Cyberspace_ Anthropo.pdf

This special issue of the Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia originated in a suggestion by Nuria W. Soeharto, a student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Indonesia. She wanted a session on the Internet and Identity included in the 3rd Journal conference scheduled for July, 2002, in Denpasar, Bali. Her interest in the topic flowed from her own experience of and research on the role of the Internet in the Indonesian reformasi of 1998.

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 saggio, 2001

KNOWLEDGE, CYBERSPACE, AND ANTHROPOLOGY

 http://www.knowledgenet.org/papers/01aaapaper01.pdf

Among the most important transformations in the discipline of anthropology over the last hundred years are changes in our conception of what constitutes anthropological knowledge. In the wake of the adoption early in the Twentieth Century of ethnographic fieldwork as something of a methodological standard in social and cultural anthropology came an implicit recognition of the cultural relativity of knowledge, that what counts as “known” varies from cultural to culture. Over the century, this recognition co-existed more or less uneasily with the Malinowskian and both earlier and later forms of commitment to a “science” program in the discipline.

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 saggio, 2000

Ethical Issues in the Ethnography of Cyberspace

 http://www.annalsnyas.org/cgi/content/abstract/925/1/170

The project of developing an anticipatory anthropology of the future reveals unique ethical opportunities. For example, the increased importance of performance means there is a substantial potential for a substantive "resocialing". of work in organizations, just as the decline of Modernism opens space for collective, situated ethics as opposed to individualized categorical imperatives.

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 ricercatore - sito web,

Hakken David

 http://www.informatics.indiana.edu/people/profiles.asp?u=dhakken

Professor of Anthropology and Director, Policy Center State University of New York Institute of Technology.
For more than 25 years, David Hakken has been preoccupied with the relationship between the deployment of automated information and communication technologies and social change. Most recently, this has meant study of Free/Libre and Open Source Software, Knowledge and Information, the Ethnograpy of Information, Globalization, and the rise of technoscience in Asia.

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