loader on the governance of cyberspace (study notes)

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  • 8/14/2019 Loader on the Governance of Cyberspace (study notes)

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    some study notes on

    The Governance of Cyberspace; Politics, Technology and Global Restructuring

    Brian D. Loader (1997)

    Information and communication technology are the core of the restructuring of advanced

    capitalism. The internet is the manifestation.

    Loader's concern is how the 'cyberspace' made possible by the internet and underlying advances in

    ICT changes modernist governance, economically, politically and culturally.

    What is cyberspace? Outline of William Gibson's vision in Neuromancer (via Barlow) whose

    original pessimistic visions of commodification and control was leavened with space for

    individuality and democracy that are closer to our current concerns. Utopian or dystopian?

    Contributing to the development of 'cyberspace' are groups described by Loader as cyber-

    libertarians, like Barlow, international commercial interests (ICT, media, porn etc), and cyber-

    enthusiasts like Rheingold.

    Sterling's 'electronic frontier' (1994) to an alternative virtual reality expects a qualitative difference

    to the real reality for our social space, which leads the cyberlibertarians to equate freedom with

    progress and social trumps political in a rather modernist manner like the settling of the 'wild west'.

    In this utopian vision, politics and commerce are individually anarchically negotiated to the benefit

    of all and explicitly independent of the nation state (Barlow's 'declaration of the independence of

    cyberspace').

    Loader finds the mystical rhetoric surrounding the internet is muddying the waters as prophesy is

    confused with analysis of current behavioural practise. Is the internet being used for the benefit of

    humanity? What about spam and porn. Is the internet open to all? What about the digital divide.

    Who owns which bits?

    Loader proposes dissecting cyberspace into usages or technologies as sharing TCP/IP alone does

    not make a common space. Will cyberspace colonise and homogenise global culture? What about

    the privileging of English language US .com ownership.

    Perhaps the internet is the apparatus of the post-industrial state. The most rapidly growing

    multinational corporations (MNCs) 'are the very computer and software companies responsible for

    driving the visions of the information age'. (Loader).

    Loader points out the development of internet funded by military, educational and commercial

    corporations and agencies and is still indirectly funded by govt and in many ways connected to the

    bodies it supposedly frees us from.

    In conclusion, this is not to say that the internet is not challenging traditional models of governance

    simply that cyberspace is not separate or alternative to the real space. Not a utopian or dystopian

    construct by ICTs but their response to economic, political and social drivers.

    PostModernity, Identity and Governmentality

    Most theorists are linking post-industrial society and postmodern cultural theory. David Harveyconsiders 'the condition of postmodernity' (1989) a social account of structural change. Mark

    Poster's 'second media age' synergises postmodern culture with wider political, economic and social

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    change seen through the mediation of ICTs. (1995a, 1995b).

    Loader summarises key concepts in postmodernism 'to consider the idea that cyberspace is in some

    sense a manifestation of the post-modern world: a domain where post-modern cultural theories fuse

    with the post-industrial information society thesis'. (1997)

    Little narratives, fragmentation and pluralism in cyberspace.

    Social critic and 'high priest of postmodernity', Jean-Francois Lyotard foregrounds 'the knowledge

    society' in 1984. Knowledge becomes a commodity through the use of ICTs and at the same time

    our cultural is losing the 'grand' or 'meta-narratives' of modernity. Universal progress through

    rationality towards social advancement is replaced by postmodern 'little narratives'.

    Postmodernists and cyberenthusiasts find the communications of cyberspace a good fit for a

    fragmented, pluralist and ephemeral society which evades older power relations and social bonds. Is

    a new society emerging, not based on socio-economic grouping, hierarchical power relations or

    geographic location?

    Loader suggests that communication does not equal political participation and that the internet

    appears full of 'the sound-bite politics which epitomises the commodification of political discourse

    rather than informed political dialogue. In a postmodern world where information and knowledge

    are said to be power, this is surely not without significance.'

    The rise of the global and local, and fall of the nation-state.

    National, financial and cultural boundaries, which were intrinsic to modernism, have been

    weakened through ICT networks like the internet. The traditional functions of the modern state,

    external defence, internal surveillance and the maintenance of citizenship rights, have been eroded

    (Crook 1992).

    New formulations of governance at local level are expressed by enhanced participation and

    economic regeneration contiguous with re-emergence of local cultural identity. Nation-states are

    under threat from urban communities, 'the rise of electronic cities such as Singapore, Tokyo,

    London or New York (Sassen 1991) could be regarded as a significant reconfiguration of

    international, political and economic relations'.

    'Hyperreality' and virtual reality.

    Baudrillard's exposition of 'hyperreality' (1988) contends that technologies are creating a newelectronic reality, an entirely new social environment. However, his is a dystopic vision, in which

    media communication technologies conceal reality 'behind a veil of signs, images and symbols

    which constitute processes of commodification, propaganda and advertising'.

    Classic examples of Baudrillard's 'hyperreality' are Disneyland and Las Vegas, where copy and

    fabrication have become reality. Cyberspace is seen as an extension of 'hyperreality', where time,

    place and individual identity are separated from modernist reality and can become fabricated at will.

    Virtual reality technology is held out as a promise for the future. (I contend MMORPGs are now at

    that visionary place as VR technology continues to evade fulfilment).

    Virtual empowerment may allow escape from gender (Haraway 1985), race, class or physicaldisability, however living in a fantasy world risks becoming psychotic, 'it is the continuity of

    grounded identity that underpins and underwrites moral obligation and commitment' (Robins 1995).

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    Baudrillard's analysis suggests that the governance of cyberspace is bound up in the creation and

    maintenance of metaphors, icons and symbols.

    Government and Identification

    Although technically a post-structuralist rather than a postmodernist, Foucault's work on'governmentality' analyses the power relations between state and individual in modern society and is

    seminal in understanding technologies of control and surveillance.

    Foucault studies the 18th century development of nation-states, the rise of capitalism and population

    increases. He compares sovereignty's ruling for ruling's sake with government's mandate being the

    welfare of the population and improvement of its condition, 'and the means that the government

    uses to attain these ends are themselves all in some sense immanent to the population '

    (Foucault 1991).

    Governmentality allows the subsumation of individual needs in the common interest. Its power is

    the synergy of satisfying the individual (or group) while policing and regulating them to strengthengovernance.

    Governmentality is not centralised state control or coercion, rather an everyday form of power

    which celebrates the individual yet by doing so imposes truths and consequences. Loader continues,

    This internalisation of individual identity according to external classifications implies that

    governmentality can also involve manipulation of the subject.

    So, in pursuit of economic prosperity, the individual colludes with the state through confession,

    identification, classification and regulation. With this background, cyberspace clearly has liberating

    potential! Individuals may free themselves from subjugated identities and nation states therefore

    seem threatened. However, Foucault differs from cyberlibertarians by asserting that 'power is aprecondition for freedom rather than a barrier to its attainment'.

    Power is exercised only over free subjects, and only insofar as they are free. By this we mean

    individual or collective subjects who are faced with a field of possibilities in which several ways of

    behaving, several reactions and diverse compartments may be realized. (1982)

    Loader asserts that cyberspace is not a new society but only new communications (with the same

    grounding as any other reality) but that governments may need to adjust policing and regulation in

    response. A response that is defended on the grounds of security, commerce and law enforcement.

    Loader sees a continuation of governmentality in cyberspace, 'power relationships based upon

    public compliance and subject identity will continue to play an important part in human interaction'.

    We will voluntarily surrender some privacy and autonomy in exchange for quality of life.

    Exploring the Debate Further

    The remaining chapters clarify the concept cyberspace to provide a critical framework for the

    considerations of governance which follow.

    *please note, this summary is my study notes and therefore not properly cited, however I have tried

    to keep names and dates in place. If you want more info go straight to the real thing!