cybersociety
cybersociety The mesh (‘space’ or ‘virtual reality’) of electronically based communications created by the world-wide network of computer users. Although it is conventional to distinguish between ‘information technology’ (the term applied to any computer-based application or process, such as is found in the case of office automation), on the one hand, and ‘telecommunications technology’ (for example fax machines or video conferencing), on the other, the multi-media integration of almost all technologies of communication via computers has effectively made this distinction redundant. The newer terminology of cyberspace refers to both developments.
Computer-mediated social interaction has become increasingly prominent in the organization of everyday life in the late twentieth century. Electronic mail and the creation of the
Internet have made possible such things as on-line shopping, Web-based ‘chat-rooms’, and personalized video pornography in the home. The implications of this explosion in communications for work, leisure, and politics are a matter of controversy among sociologists (see, for example, Steven G. Jones ( ed.) ,
CyberSociety, 1994
).
Curiously, one of the most thought-provoking statements about the possible sociological characteristics of a thoroughgoing cybersociety is the novel
The Naked Sun, written by the prolific science-fiction author Isaac Asimov and first published (in 1956) while computer-development was still in its infancy. The story features a distant world in which people ‘view’ each other remotely via ‘trimensional images’ and are only exceptionally involved in direct face-to-face physical contact. It also contains a good deal of speculation about the role of sociologists in this and other no less abnormal societies (in Asimov's novel, people on Earth, by contrast, live underground in vast over-populated caves of steel, and are terrified of open spaces and contact with fresh air), and includes the immortal line, spoken in response to the need to send an Earthly representative to other planets in order to save the human species, that the ruling authorities ‘had better send a sociologist’.
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General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (Gatt)
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History
GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE (GATT) Prior to World War...flexibility to set and revise tariffs as long as they (tariffs) were consistent with MFN ideals. (A tariff is a special tax applied to...
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General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA...the initial agreement in 1947: Geneva...Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934...multinational agreement, the most...way, world tariffs on industrial...continued tariff reduction, leading to a general overall rate...
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General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to United States History
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), a never...generally observed agreement that governed international...x2010;trade agreements with various countries...to by executive agreement. Seven rounds...aimed at lowering tariffs barriers and thereby...and ...
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Trade Agreements
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...return. Each trade agreement was...reconstruction of world trade and payments...defects in the trade agreements program, and...then conducted tariff negotiations...combined to form the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT...
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Reciprocal Trade Agreements
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...period. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade During World...reconstruction of world trade and payments...the trade agreements program...conducting tariff negotiations...to form the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade...
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