Many thanks to everyone who has contributed suggestions to this thread!
I am now happily overwhelmed with papers to find and read. Very grateful
We will circulate a complete reading list in the coming months, once it
has been compiled.
Best wishes,
Simon
On 14/03/2012 12:32, Sam Kinsley wrote:
> Hi Simon, everyone,
>
> I agree with Peter Lugosi's suggestions, which are really useful (thanks!).
>
> Beyond her first methods book, Christine Hine has also edited/written:
>
> Hine, C 2008 'Systematics as Cyberscience: Computers, Change, and
> Continuity in Science' Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
>
> Hine, C (Ed.) 2005 Virtual Methods: Issues of social research on the
> Internet, Oxford& New York, NY: Berg
>
> Hine, C 2002 Cyberscience: and social boundaries: the implications of
> laboratory talk on the Internet. Sociological Research Online. 7(2)
> http://www.socresonline.org.uk/7/2/hine.html.
>
>
> Hine also wrote a chapter to which there are responses in:
> Markham, A. N. and Baym, N. K. Eds. 2009 Internet Inquiry: Conversations
> about Method, Sage: London. (which Peter suggested)
>
> The Association of Internet Researchers have an ethics framework, which
> is rather old now but its worth looking at:
> http://www.aoir.org/reports/ethics.pdf
>
> Barry Wellman's work is worth looking at (there's a lot there!):
> http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman/publications/
>
> These may also be useful:
>
> Downey, G. 2006 “Engaging human geography with library/information
> studies,” Annual Review of Information Science and Technology 41.
>
> Fielding, N Lee, R and Blank, G (Eds.) 2008 Handbook of Online Research
> Methods. Sage.
>
> Holloway, SL& Valentine, G 2002 “Exploring children's identities and
> social networks in on-line and off-line worlds” Annals of the
> Association of American Geographers 92 (2): pp. 302-319
>
> Holloway, SL& Valentine, G 2001a “Children at home in the wired world:
> Reshaping and rethinking home in urban geography”, Urban Geography 22
> (6): pp. 562-583
>
> Holloway, SL& Valentine, G 2001b “Placing cyberspace: processes of
> Americanization in British children's use of the Internet”, Area 33 (2):
> pp. 153-160
>
> Jankowski, N. W& van Selm, M 2005 “Epilogue: Methodological concerns
> and innovations in Internet research” in Hine C (Ed.) Virtual Methods:
> Issues of social research on the Internet, Oxford& New York, NY: Berg
>
> Larner, W 1999 “Consumers or workers?: restructuring telecommunications
> in Aoteroa/New Zealand” in Crang M, Crang P& May J (Eds.) Virtual
> Geographies: Bodies, Space and Relations, London: Routledge: pp.63-78
>
> Pritchard, W 1999 “Local and global in cyberspace: the geographical
> narratives of US food companies on the Internet”, Area 31 (1): pp. 9-17
>
> Reid, E 1996 ‘Informed consent in the study of on-line communities: A
> reflection on the effects of computer-mediated social research’, The
> Information Society 12 (2): pp. 169-174
>
> Valentine, G and Holloway, SL 2002 “Cyberkids? Exploring children's
> identities and social networks in on-line and off-line worlds”, Annals
> of the Association of American Geographers
> 92 (2): pp. 302-319
>
> Wellman, B& Haythornthwaite, C 2002 (Eds.) The Internet and Everyday
> Life, Oxford, Blackwell.
>
>
> Also, while not explicitly about the internet, this is quite useful:
>
> Comaroff J& Comaroff J (2003) “Ethnography on an awkward scale:
> Postcolonial anthropology and the violence of abstraction”, Ethnography
> 4 (2): pp. 147-179.
>
> Best,
> Sam
--
Dr Simon Moreton
Associate Research Fellow
School of Geography
College of Life& Environmental Sciences
University of Exeter
EX4 4RJ
http://geography.exeter.ac.uk/
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