
Contents
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The Origins and Evolution of Sovereignty The Origins and Evolution of Sovereignty
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Technology and the Nation-State Technology and the Nation-State
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Information Sovereignty and the Rise of the Intranets Information Sovereignty and the Rise of the Intranets
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Egypt Egypt
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China China
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Iran Iran
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The United States The United States
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Conclusion Conclusion
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6 Toward Information Sovereignty
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Published:March 2015
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Abstract
This chapter examines how state actors assert authority over the physical nature of transnational data flows in order to maintain domestic stability and expand influence abroad. Information sovereignty refers to a state's attempt to control information flows within its territory. Control is asserted in a variety of ways, including filtering, monitoring, and structuring industry–government relations in order to maximize state preferences in privately operated communications systems The chapter explores the relationship between sovereignty, the nation-state, and connective technologies in the context of absolute freedom of expression and total information control. It considers how the governments of China, Egypt, Iran, and the United States control access to a singular internet while developing more malleable intranets capable of creating a balance between freedom and control. It shows that a state's capacity to adapt is crucial to its survival, but that information control is also in increasingly effective means of reasserting state sovereignty. The chapter argues that, despite any promises that governments would fail at taming the Internet, they have achieved an impressive level of success thus far.
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