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Five reasons ‘technological solutions’ are a distraction from the Irish border problem

Helen Margetts - 21 February 2019

Can “We the People” really help draft a national constitution? (sort of..)

Bursting the bubbles of the Arab Spring: the brokers who bridge ideology on Twitter

Call for Papers: Government, Industry, Civil Society Responses to Online Extremism

In a world of “connective action” — what makes an influential...

10 June 2018

How can we encourage participation in online political deliberation?

1 June 2018

Making crowdsourcing work as a space for democratic deliberation

26 May 2018

Habermas by design: designing public deliberation into online platforms

3 May 2018

Human Rights and Internet Technology: Six Considerations

17 April 2018

Could Counterfactuals Explain Algorithmic Decisions Without Opening the Black Box?

15 January 2018

A distributed resilience among darknet markets?

9 November 2017

Mapping Fentanyl Trades on the Darknet

16 October 2017

Why we shouldn’t be pathologizing online gaming before the evidence is...

10 October 2017

Censorship or rumour management? How Weibo constructs “truth” around crisis events

3 October 2017
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This blog investigates the relationship between the Internet and public policy. It covers work by the Oxford Internet Institute, and work published in its journal Policy & Internet (Wiley-Blackwell).
Contact us: policyandinternet@oii.ox.ac.uk

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