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008 091218s2009 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aCHRISTOU, George
_938543
245 1 0 _aNew governance, the internet, and country code top-level domains in Europe
260 _aHoboken :
_bWiley Periodicals,
_cOctober 2009
520 3 _aMuch academic work on governance in recent years has explored responses that states have made to sectors of the economy, usually historically well rooted nationally, that have been subject to globalizing pressures. Less work exists on responses that are being made to new parts of the economy emerging outside the nation state with inherently global characteristics. The Internet—and specifically its naming and addressing system—provides an example of how the state has aimed to assert public interest governance authority in a system initially absent of its influence. This article explores the nature and consequences of this activity in the process contributing to the study of the Internet and governance. Working within the limitations but also the opportunities created by policy norms developed at the global level, the article finds that the state has been instrumental in the development of novel public–private governance systems for Internet country code Top-Level Domains.
590 _aVolume 22
590 _aNumber 4
590 _aOctober 2009
700 1 _aSIMPSON, Seamus
_938544
773 0 8 _tGovernance: An International Journal of Policy, Administration and Institutions
_g22, 4, p. 599-624
_dHoboken : Wiley Periodicals, October 2009
_xISSN 09521895
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20091218
_b1001^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20100217
_b1539^b
_cDaiane
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c31290
_d31290
041 _aeng