Sandra Braman|SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
An introduction to information policy. In Change of state: Information, policy, and power, pp. 1-8. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006 (reprinted 2007).
Information, policy, and power in the informational state. In Change of state: Information, policy, and power, pp. 313-328. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006 (reprinted 2007).
The limits of diversity. In Philip M. Napoli (Ed.), Media diversity and localism: Meaning and metrics, pp. 139-50. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2007.
Tactical memory: The politics of openness in the construction of memory, First Monday, 11(7), 2006,
firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_7/braman/index.html.
The micro- and macroeconomics of information, Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST), 40, 3-52, 2005.
Where has media policy gone? Defining the field in the twenty-first century, Communication Law and Policy, 9(2), 2004, 153-82.
The meta-technologies of information. In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Biotechnology and communication: The meta-technologies of information, pp. 3-36. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004.
"Are facts not flowers?": Facticity and genetic information. In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Biotechnology and communication: The meta-technologies of information, pp. 97-115. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004.
Technology. In John Downing, et al. (Eds.), Handbook of media studies, pp. 123-144. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2004.
Posthuman law: Information policy and the machinic world, First Monday, 7(12), 2002. (Reprinted -- In Tasha Oren & Patrice Petro (Eds.), Global currents: Media and technology now, pp. 136-156. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2004.)
The emergent global information policy regime. In Sandra Braman (Ed.), The emergent global information policy regime, pp. 12-37. Houndsmills, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Advantage ISP: Terms of service as media law (with Stephanie Lynch), New Media & Society, 5(3), 2003, 422-48.
Introduction. In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 1-9. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
The long view. In Sandra Braman (Ed.), Communication researchers and policy-making, pp. 11-31. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003.
New information technologies and the restructuring of higher education: The constitutional view. In Brian Loader & William Dutton (Eds.), The digital academe: New media in higher education and learning, pp. 268-89. NY: Routledge, 2002.
From the modern to the postmodern: The future of global communications theory and research in a pandemonic age. In Bella Mody (Ed.), International and development communication: A 21st-century perspective, pp. 109-23, 2003. Thousand Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
Trade and information policy, Media, Culture & Society, 12, 1990, 361-85. Republished in Justin Lewis & Toby Miller (Eds.), Critical cultural policy studies: A reader, pp. 282-98. (London: Blackwell, 2002). With addition of update: Grit in the North Atlantic turbine: The World Trade Organization and cultural policy, pp. 298-301.
"We are all natives now": An overview of international and development communication research (with Hemant Shah & JoEllen Fair). In William Gudykunst (Ed.), Communication yearbook, 24, pp. 160-86. Thousand Hills, CA: Sage, 2000.
The information economy: An evolution of approaches. In S. Macdonald & J. Nightingale (Eds.), Information and organization, pp. 109-25. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science B. V., 1999. (Previously published as Economie de l’information: Une evolution des approches. In Anne Mayere [Ed.], La societe de l’information: Enjeux sociaux et approches economiques, Vol. 2: Pour une “mise a jour” de la theorie orthodoxe de l’information, pp. 87-113. Paris: Editions l’Harmattan, 1997.)
The right to create: Cultural policy in the fourth stage of the information society, Gazette: The International Journal of Communication Studies, 1998, 77-91.
From virtue to vertu to the virtual: Art, self-organizing systems, and the net, Readerly/Writerly Texts: Essays on Literature, Literary/Textual Criticism, and Pedagogy, 3(2), 1996, 149-166. (Reprinted -- In Stephanie Gibson & Ollie Oviedo (Eds.), The emerging cyberculture: Literacy, paradigm, and paradox, pp. 307-324. Greenskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 2000.)
Art in the information economy, Canadian Journal of Communications, 21, 1996, 179-196.
Interpenetrated globalization: Scaling, power, and the public sphere. In Sandra Braman & Annabelle Sreberny-Mohammadi (Eds.), Globalization, communication, and transnational civil society, pp. 21-37. Greenskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 1996.
Trigger: Law, labeling, and the hyperreal. In Robert Jensen & David Allen (Eds.), Freeing the First Amendment, pp. 169-192. New York: New York University Press, 1995.
The autopoietic state: Communication and democratic potential in the Net, Journal of the American Society of Information Science, 45(6), 1994, 358-368.
Contradictions in Brilliant Eyes, Gazette: The International Journal of Communication Studies, 47(3), 1991, 177-194. (on defense and information policy)
Information and socioeconomic class in US constitutional law, Journal of Communication, 39(3), 1989, 163-179.
Defining information: An approach for policy-makers, Telecommunications Policy, 13(3), 1989, 233-242. (Reprinted -- in Donald Lamberton (Ed.), The economics of communication and information, pp. 3-12. London: Edward Elgar, 1996.)
Public expectations versus media codes of ethics, Journalism Quarterly, 62(1), 1988, 71-77, 240.
The "facts" of El Salvador according to objective and new journalism, Journal of Communication Inquiry, 13(2), 1985, 75-96.