Digital Restructuring: Gender, Class and Citizenship in the Information Society in Canada
Authors: Crow B.1; Longford G.2
Source: Citizenship Studies, Volume 4, Number 2, 1 July 2000 , pp. 207-230(24)
Abstract:
Digital restructuring denotes a phenomenon integral to but also distinct within economic and political restructuring broadly conceived. The concept of restructuring can be modified with digital to forefront the important technological dimension of global restructuring, as well as to indicate developments associated with the new information economy. Digital technology and digitization have been integral to the scope and speed of the global economic and political restructuring of recent decades. They have constituted the technological conditions for some of the more characteristic aspects of this process; from the flexiblization or outright shedding of labour, to the mobility of production and capital and the globalization of trade and financial markets. This paper seeks to debunk much of the corporate and state mythology of digital restructuring currently in circulation by drawing upon the analyses of digital technology and restructuring advanced by critical scholars and progressive social movements, and to highlight the dangers to progressive political movements and discourses posed by the very nature of these representations.Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: Faculty of General Studies, University of Calgary, University Avenue NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada 2: Trent University, Department of Political Studies, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
Publication date: 2000-07-01
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