|
former journalist, political scientist Ken Rogerson began publishing
scholarly articles on Internet regulation while still a graduate
student. Today his seminars attract junior and senior engineering
students, computer scientists, sociology majors, cultural anthropologists,
and historians, as well as public policy majors. "They're very
interested in it," he says, "but it's been challenging
for me. When I talk about the technical side, the computer science
students are falling asleep; when I get into politics and public
policy, the engineers are lost. It's been fun for me to adapt to
an interdisciplinary mode."
Part of the solution was to engage the students with one another
in small groups. As a class, they start by reading Andrew Shapiro's
The Control Revolution and Lawrence Lessig's The Future
of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World, books
that set up a basic dialectic that informs the whole semester. "The
world contains Internet pessimists and Internet optimists,"
explains Rogerson, "those who believe that the Internet and
accompanying technologies can change the world for the better, and
those who believe that the Internet is just going to give those
in control more control. When we're talking about privacy, we talk
about privacy-optimism and privacy-pessimism, and that makes for
a nice basis for the course."
They have discussions on democratic pluralism, political aspects
of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (the
nonprofit group that parcels out domain names), the basics of policy-making
theory. They invite such guest speakers as the technology reporter
for MSNBC.com in Seattle, who specializes in covering "hacktivists"--computer
hackers with a moral mission; a computer security expert for the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, who discusses
the changing face of security on government websites; and Brian
Cantwell-Smith, Duke's Kimberly J. Jenkins University Professor
of New Technologies and Society, who talks about the normative dimensions
of computing.
Students spend the first half of the term studying domestic issues
in the United States--the digital divide, the Internet in campaigns,
interest groups, and elections. Online voting isn't yet a burning
issue anywhere in the world but here, even though the populations
of countries such as Estonia are far more "wired." Then
comes Internet regulation, taxation, and free-speech issues--also
peculiar to the U.S., Rogerson says, because unlike even our closest
European cousins, we treat free speech as an inherent right rather
than one that must be created through legislation.
The second half of the class concentrates on international issues,
and the room always seems to contain an international student or
two to add thoughtful perspective and a dose of non-virtual reality.
Here they look into global information infrastructure, Internet
governance and history, and, of course, e-commerce. In their final
week, they cover computer-based terrorism and cyberwarfare.
Students must write two "policy memos," a research paper
on geographical Internet diffusion, a report and presentation on
sites they have monitored for hot policy topics such as online gambling
and pornography, and a final essay. Much of their effort goes into
small-group efforts at creating a merged class website containing
links, analysis, and bibliographies about an Internet-related subject.
At www.pubpol.duke.edu/centers/dewitt/course/internet/images/internet.htm,
for instance, last spring's class explored the broad areas of copyright,
privacy, piracy, medicine on the Net, intellectual property flow,
voting, and financial fraud.
But if any syllabus focused on the Internet sounds like it must
be a moving target or self-destructing artifact, consider that for
next semester Rogerson may also assign a book published in 1944,
a generation before the invention of the personal computer: economic
anthropologist Karl Polanyi's masterwork, The Great Transformation,
which chastised the capitalist world for not looking at the negative
consequences of an economic model that enslaved government to the
dictates of ruthless mercantilism and ignored the very poverty the
system generated. "I think I might invite my students to try
to apply his concepts to the information revolution," Rogerson
says.
--Paul Baerman M.B.A. '90
|