Consequences of the Internet for Self and Society: Is Social Life Being Transformed?ISBN: 978-1-4051-0078-6
Paperback
216 pages
March 2002, Wiley-Blackwell
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The Internet is becoming a primary means of interpersonal
communication, and with this comes implications for many aspects of
social life. This book examines these from a variety of
perspectives: psychological well-being, interpersonal
relationships, social identity, group conflict, negotiation and
bargaining, community involvement, and the development of
democratic institutions. The authors present quantitative as well
as qualitative methodological approaches, along with analyses
reflecting the complexities of the 'Human-Internet
interaction'.
- Examines the implications of the internet as the primary means of personal communication
- Pulls together current research by well established researchers on the social consequences of the Internet, from a variety of levels of analysis, producing a holographic, 3-D look at the Internet's impact on psychological functioning of the individual as well as on the social fabric
- Perspectives of this examination include: psychological
well-being, interpersonal relationships, social identity, group
conflict, negotiation and bargaining,
community involvement, and the development of democratic institutions