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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Empowerment is the most appropriate term to describe how the Internet significantly contributes to social democracy. The impact this global network has had upon the 'common man' is both grand and far-reaching; that the Internet has given power to the little people by way of activism, choices and communication speaks to just one of myriad unexpected residual aspects of such technological advancement. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCIntSocDem.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and far-reaching; that the Internet has given power to the little people by way of activism, choices, accurate information, free exchange of ideas and open communication speaks to a particularly
valuable - if not wholly unexpected - aspect of such tremendous technological advancement. "Increasingly easy access to email and the world wide web globally allows politically disenfranchised groups to
communicate with like-minded or sympathetic audience. Furthermore, particularly in regimes where the freedom of the mainstream media is restricted...the internet has become an alternative medium through which opposition groups
have been able to have a voice...the internet is not only a medium of communication, it is effectively a vehicle for political change and transformation" (Abbott, 2001, pp. 99-100).
Social democracy - which represents "participation of all in society guaranteed by basic rights and guided by the concept of citizens in solidarity" (FES, 2007) - has indeed taken root
in todays global environment because of the Internets broad reach across the world. The very nature of human existence is the quest for constant change that ultimately brings about
continued progress (either real or perceived) in order to further the species. Inasmuch as this ongoing push to improve upon the way in which people live, work and interact
seems a logical succession for maintaining mans existence throughout the coming centuries, no one could have truly anticipated the extent to which Web access has given power to those whose
position as meager end-users has metamorphosed into one of great social strength. As such, "information and knowledge are available at almost all locations of the world by pushing buttons"
(FES, 2007). One of the most conspicuously absent components is a persons ability to distinguish between propaganda and truth, a simple yet critical component of social democracy. Propaganda reflects
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