Political web sites and e-mail lists were novelties in 1996. By 2000, they were a news trend. By 2004, they will be a part of every electoral and policy campaign. News-seekers, activists, and decision makers increasingly turn to the Net as a matter of course. The Civic Web delineates the basic issues, opportunities, and dilemmas posed by the introduction of computer-networked communications into U.S. national politics. Leading scholars from several academic disciplines join pioneer practitioners of online advocacy, discussion, and law in considering how the Internet can host, and even advance, enlightened self-government by a free people in a constitutional republic.
Foreword by: Christopher F. Arterton
Contributions by: F Christopher Arterton, Jerry Berman, Michael X. Delli Carpini, Steven Clift, Michael Cornfield, William A. Galston, Deborah G. Johnson, Kirk L. Jowers, Scott Keeter, Peter Levine, Deirdre K. Mulligan, Trevor Potter, Michael Vlahos, Anthony G. Wilhelm, Langdon Winner