The Fifth Estate Emerging Through the Network of Networks
Prometheus, Vol. 27, No. 1, pp. 1-15, 2009
32 Pages Posted: 25 Jul 2008 Last revised: 17 Aug 2011
Date Written: June 10, 2008
Abstract
The rise of the press, radio, television and other mass media enabled the development of an independent institution: the ‘Fourth Estate’, central to pluralist democratic processes. The growing use of the Internet and related digital technologies is creating a space for networking individuals in ways that enable a new source of accountability in government, politics and other sectors. This paper explains how this emerging ‘Fifth Estate’ is being established and why this could challenge the influence of other more established bases of institutional authority. It discusses approaches to the governance of this new social and political phenomenon that could nurture the Fifth Estate’s potential for supporting the vitality of liberal democratic societies.
Keywords: network society; information and communication technologies; democratic institutions; political studies; media studies; fourth estate
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Wisdom of Collaborative Network Organizations: Capturing the Value of Networked Individuals
-
Seriosity: Addressing the Challenges of Limited Attention Spans
By David A. Bray, Karen Croxson, ...
-
Information Markets: Feasibility and Performance
By David A. Bray, Karen Croxson, ...
-
The Performance of Distributed News Aggregators
By Wolf Richter, Tobias Escher, ...
-
The Atlas Collaboration: A Distributed Problem-Solving Network in Big Science
-
Reconfiguring Government - Public Engagements: Enhancing the Communicative Power of Citizens
By William H. Dutton and Malcolm Peltu
-
Sermo: A Community-Based, Knowledge Ecosystem
By David A. Bray, Karen Croxson, ...
-
By Irene Cassarino and Aldo Geuna
-
Knowledge Ecosystems: Technology, Motivations, Processes, and Performance (Doctoral Dissertation)