A Special Section of the International Journal of Communication on WikiLeaks, featuring a collection of essays by leading scholars on the relevance (over time) of WikiLeaks across a variety of academic areas.
September 2014
Source: International Journal of Communication h/t Christian Christensen/Medium
Page 1 - WikiLeaks: From Popular Culture to Political Economy ~ Introduction - Christian Christensen (Stockholm University)
Page 6 - WikiLeaks, Transparency and Privacy: A Discussion with Birgitta Jónsdóttir - Christian Christensen (Stockholm University) & Birgitta Jónsdóttir (Icelandic Modern Media Initiative)
Page 15 - True Confessions: WikiLeaks, Contested Truths, and Narrative Containment - William Uricchio (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Page 22 - WikiLeaks, the State, and Middle-Aged Media - Toby Miller (Cardiff University & Murdoch University)
Page 29 - Is WikiLeaks Challenging the Paradigm of Journalism? Boundary Work and Beyond - Karin Wahl-Jorgensen (Cardiff University)
Page 41 - WikiLeaks and the Afterlife of Collateral Murder - Christian Christensen (Stockholm University)
Page 51 - We Are Bradley Manning: Information Policy, the Legal Subject, and the WikiLeaks Complex - Sandra Braman (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
Page 67 - Wikileaks, Surveillance and Transparency - Mark Andrejevic (University of Queensland)
Page 79 - WikiLeaks and the Shifting Terrain of Knowledge Authority - Leah A. Lievrouw (University of California — Los Angeles)
Page 94 - WikiLeaks: The Napster of Secrets? - Axel Bruns (Queensland University of Technology)
Page 100 - Liquid Information Leaks - Nathan Jurgenson (University of Maryland) & PJ Rey (University of Maryland)
Page 114 - Himalaya of Data - Pelle Snickars (Umeå University)
Page 127 - Oh, WikiLeaks, I would so love to RT you. WikiLeaks, Twitter, and Information Activism - Lisa Lynch (Concordia University)
Page 141 - The Privatization of the Internet, WikiLeaks and Free Expression - Angela Daly (European University Institute, Italy & Swinburne University of Technology)
Page 152 - Digital Prometheus: WikiLeaks, the State–Network Dichotomy, and the Antinomies of Academic Reason - Athina Karatzogianni (University of Leicester) & Andrew Robinson (Independent Researcher)
Page 166 - WikiLeaks and the Critique of the Political Economy - Christian Fuchs (University of Westminster)
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