41,929 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, April 19, 1999

    Get PDF
    Volume 112, Issue 51https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9408/thumbnail.jp

    Will Unionism Prosper in Cyber-Space? The Promise of the Internet for Employee Organization

    Get PDF
    This paper argues that the low cost of information, communication, and interaction on the Web offers trade unions opportunities to improve services and attract members and thus reinvent themselves for the 21st Century. Analyzing current use of the Internet by unions in the United Kingdom and United States, we develop five hypothesis about the impact of the Internet on unions. 1) the Customized Services hypothesis that unions will individualize services; 2) the Cyber-organizing hypothesis that the Web will ease organization and produce virtual minority unions at many non-union firms; 3) the Cyber-democracy hypothesis that the Web will enhance democracy in unions; 4) the Cyber-dispute hypothesis that the Web will become an important space for industrial disputes; and 5) the New Internationalism hypothesis that the Web will strengthen the international labor community. If unions fail to exploit the opportunities on the Web to gain members, we expect other organizations, Internet recruitment sites, specialized advice centers, and the like, to fill the e-union niche.

    Interactive television or enhanced televisiion? : the Dutch users interest in applications of ITV via set-top boxes

    Get PDF
    This paper is both an analysis of the phenomenon of interactive television with background concepts of interactivity and television and a report of an empirical investigation among Dutch users of set-top-box ITV. In the analytic part a distinction is made between levels of interactivity in the applications of ITV. Activities labelled as selection, customisation, transaction and reaction reveal low levels of interactivity. They may be called ‘enhanced television’. They are extensions of existing television programmes that keep their linear character. Activities called production and conversation have the potential of higher interactivity. They may lead to ‘real’ interactive television as the user input makes a difference to programmes. It is suggested that so-called hybrid ITV– TV combined with telephone and email reply channels- and (broadband) Internet ITV offer better opportunities for high interactivity than set-top-box ITV. \ud The empirical investigation shows that the demand of subscribers to set-top-box ITV in the Netherlands matches supply. They favour the less interactive applications of selection and reaction. Other striking results are that young subscribers appreciate interactive applications more than the older ones and that those with a low level of education prefer these applications more than high educated subscribers. No significant gender differences were found

    In the Battle for Reality: Social Documentaries in the U.S.

    Get PDF
    Provides an overview of documentaries that address social justice and democracy issues, and includes case studies of successful strategic uses of social documentaries

    Spartan Daily, November 2, 1994

    Get PDF
    Volume 103, Issue 44https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8614/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, February 10, 1992

    Get PDF
    Volume 98, Issue 11https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8224/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, April 22, 1993

    Get PDF
    Volume 100, Issue 52https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8410/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, April 22, 1993

    Get PDF
    Volume 100, Issue 52https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8410/thumbnail.jp

    Mobile Voices: Projecting the Voices of Immigrant Workers by Appropriating Mobile Phones for Popular Communication

    Get PDF
    Mobile Voices, also known as VozMob (www.vozmob.net), is a digital storytelling platform for first generation, low-wage immigrants in Los Angeles to create and publish stories about their communities, directly from cell phones. The project is a partnership between the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California (USC) and the Institute of Popular Education of Southern California (IDEPSCA), a nonprofit that organizes low-income immigrants in Los Angeles. Founded in 1984, IDEPSCA's programs are focused on education, economic development, health access and reform, popular communication, and worker rights. Currently IDEPSCA runs six day laborer and household worker centers and two day laborer corners where workers look for jobs in a more humane and dignified way while learning about their rights and gaining valuable leadership skills. The Annenberg School for Communication (the research partner) and IDEPSCA (the community partner) came together around the shared goal of designing communication systems and processes that promote media justice and help those without computer access gain greater participation in the digital public sphere. This chapter is a reflection on popular communication, participatory design, andcommunity-based multimedia practice from the Mobile Voices project team. It was collaboratively written by 13 members of the project and includes a project overview and an exploration of themes including the pedagogy of popular communication, participatory technology design, and the dynamic

    From Nascar to Cirque du Soleil: Lessons in Audience Development

    Get PDF
    Examines marketing trends and principles in entertainment and performance. Case studies include nonprofit arts organizations, mega-concert promoters, for-profit entertainment conglomerates, sports promoters and religious organizations
    • …
    corecore