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Sandra Braman|SELECTED PUBLICATIONS knowledge industries
The Costs and Benefits of Openness: Sunshine Laws and Higher Education (with Harlan Cleveland).
Minneapolis, MN: Hubert Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, 1984.
The "facts" of El Salvador according to objective and new journalism. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 13(2), 1985, 75-96.
Public expectations versus media codes of ethics. Journalism Quarterly, 62(1), 1988, 71-77, 240.
Information and socioeconomic class in US constitutional law. Journal of Communication, 39(3), 1989, 163-179.
Trade and information policy, Media, Culture & Society, 12, 1990, 361-85. Republished in Justin Lewis & Toby Miller (Eds.), Critical cultural policy studies: A reader, pp. 282-98. (London: Blackwell, 2002). With addition of update: Grit in the North Atlantic turbine: The World Trade Organization and cultural policy, pp. 298-301.
The impact of confidence-building measures on information policy. In Kaarle Nordenstreng & Wolfgang Kleinwachter (Eds.) Confidence-building in the non-military field, pp. 47-58. Tampere, Finland: University of Tampere, 1991.
Why the book? (note: selection includes Table of Contents and Editor's Note) Journal of Communication, 44(1), 9-11, 1994.
Policy for the net and the Internet.
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, 30, 5-75, 1995.
Trigger: Law, labeling, and the hyperreal. In Robert Jensen & David Allen (Eds.), Freeing the First Amendment, pp. 169-192. New York: New York University Press, 1995.
Interpenetrated globalization: Scaling, power, and the public sphere. In Sandra Braman & Annabelle Sreberny-Mohammadi (Eds.), Globalization, communication, and transnational civil society, pp. 21-37. Greenskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 1996.
The filiere electronique: Contributions of public networks to private networks..
In Eli Noam & Aine Nishuilleabhain (Eds.), Public networks and private objectives, pp. 95-104. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1996.
The right to create: Cultural policy in the fourth stage of the information society. Gazette: The International Journal of Communication Studies, 1998, 77-91.
The telecommunications infrastructure and invention, innovation, and diffusion processes. In Stuart MacDonald & Gary Madden (Eds.) Telecommunications and socio-economic development, pp. 13-24. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1999.
Defining tactical media: An historical overview.
In Barbara Abrash & Faye Ginsburg (Eds.), Tactical media: The virtual casebook. New York University, URL: http://www.nyu.edu/fas/projects/vcb/ , 2002.
Informational meta-technologies and international relations: The case of biotechnologies. In James Rosenau & J. P. Singh (Eds.) Information technologies and global politics: The changing scope of power and governance, pp. 91-112. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002.
New information technologies and the restructuring of higher education: The constitutional view. In Brian Loader & William Dutton (Eds.), The digital academe: New media in higher education and learning, pp. 268-89. NY: Routledge, 2002.
Advantage ISP: Terms of service as media law (with Stephanie Lynch).
New Media & Society, 5(3), 2003, 422-48.
Introduction.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 1-9. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
The long view.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 11-31. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
Policy as research context.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 35-60. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
Facing out: Researchers and policy makers.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 221-241. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
Facing in: Researchers and academia.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 415-434. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
Enduring tensions and lessons learned.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 575-591. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
"Are facts not flowers?": Facticity and genetic information.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Biotechnology and communication: The meta-technologies of information, pp. 97-115. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004.
The meta-technologies of information.
In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Biotechnology and communication: The meta-technologies of information, pp. 3-36. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004.
Where has media policy gone? Defining the field in the twenty-first century.
Communication Law and Policy, 9(2), 2004, 153-82.
The micro- and macroeconomics of information.
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST), 40, 3-52, 2005.
Tactical memory: The politics of openness in the construction of memory.
First Monday, 11(7), 2006.
The ideal vs. the real in media localism: Regulatory implications.
Communication, Law, and Policy, 12(3), 231-278, 2007.
When nightingales break the law: Silence and the construction of reality.
Ethics and Information Technology, 9(4), 281-295, 2007.
Policy research in an evidence-averse environment.
International Journal of Communication 2(1), 433-449, 2008.
Theorizing the impact of IT on library-state relations.
In Gloria Leckie & John Buschman (Eds.) Information technology in librarianship: Critical approaches, pp. 105-126. Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, 2008.
Globalizing media law and policy.
In Daya Thussu (Ed.) Internationalizing media studies, pp. 93-115. London: Routledge, 2009.
Art-state relations: Art and power through the lens of international treaties.
In J. P. Singh (Ed.), International cultural policies and power, pp. 36-55. Houndsmills, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.
The representational economy and the global information policy regime.
In Sarita Albagli & Maria Lucia Maciel (Eds.) Information, power and politics: New technological and institutional mediations, pp. 27-46. Boulder, CO: Lexington Books, 2011.
Technology and epistemology: Information policy and desire. In Göran Bolin (Ed.), Cultural technologies in cultures of technology: Culture as means and ends in a technologically advanced media world, pp. 133-150. New York, NY: Routledge, 2012.
"We are Bradley Manning": The legal subject and the WikiLeaks complex.
International Journal of Communication, 8, 2603-2618, 2014.