Portland Public Library

Real-time diplomacy, politics and power in the social media era, Philip Seib

Label
Real-time diplomacy, politics and power in the social media era, Philip Seib
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Real-time diplomacy
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
757475558
Responsibility statement
Philip Seib
Sub title
politics and power in the social media era
Summary
The 2011 uprisings in the Middle East proved that democracy retains its appeal, even to people who have long lived without it. They also illustrated how, in a high-speed, media-centric world, conventional diplomacy has become an anachronism. Not only do events move quickly, but so too does public reaction to those events. The cushion of time that enabled policymakers to judiciously gather information and weigh alternatives is gone. Real-Time Diplomacy analyzes the essential, but often unhappy, marriage between diplomacy and new media, evaluating media's reach and influence, and determining how policy makers might take advantage of media's real-time capabilities rather than being driven by them
Table Of Contents
The political revolution -- The media revolution -- Traditional diplomacy and the cushion of time -- The arrival of rapid-reaction diplomacy -- The expeditionary diplomat and the case for public diplomacy -- The promise of networks -- Ripple effects -- Looking ahead
Content
Mapped to