Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy

Magister Administrationis - MAdmin === The increasing importance of media, especially digital media in society has been studied widely, from identity formation to activist movements. In international relations, digital media studies have focused considerably on public digital diplomacy and social ne...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leray, Victor A.
Other Authors: Pretorius, Joelien
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4936
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-49362017-08-02T04:01:05Z Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy Leray, Victor A. Pretorius, Joelien Open data Digital diplomacy Knowledge management Secrecy Magister Administrationis - MAdmin The increasing importance of media, especially digital media in society has been studied widely, from identity formation to activist movements. In international relations, digital media studies have focused considerably on public digital diplomacy and social networks, sometimes neglecting a crucial step: the making, the processing and the transmission of the sacrosanct and secret diplomatic data. This study aims to explore how digital revolutions impact on the way diplomats communicate and share information. The dependent question will revolve around the notion of secrecy; the independent question will analyse secrecy in the era of digital diplomacy. A statistical database was built and semi-structured interviews with American, French and South African diplomats have been conducted. It aims to highlight three thematic fields. The first one looks into organization, legitimacy, sovereignty and governance issues raised by the emergence of new technologies. The second one looks into the redefinition of secrecy in our digital era. The third part is a case study that will investigate how software, open platforms and processing of computerized data redefine, modernize and legitimize the way diplomats work, share information and engage with the general public for the greater good. The main assumption is that public action will only be legitimate in society if – and only if – society recognizes the state as a true network actor. 2016-04-19T13:13:42Z 2016-04-19T13:13:42Z 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4936 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Open data
Digital diplomacy
Knowledge management
Secrecy
spellingShingle Open data
Digital diplomacy
Knowledge management
Secrecy
Leray, Victor A.
Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
description Magister Administrationis - MAdmin === The increasing importance of media, especially digital media in society has been studied widely, from identity formation to activist movements. In international relations, digital media studies have focused considerably on public digital diplomacy and social networks, sometimes neglecting a crucial step: the making, the processing and the transmission of the sacrosanct and secret diplomatic data. This study aims to explore how digital revolutions impact on the way diplomats communicate and share information. The dependent question will revolve around the notion of secrecy; the independent question will analyse secrecy in the era of digital diplomacy. A statistical database was built and semi-structured interviews with American, French and South African diplomats have been conducted. It aims to highlight three thematic fields. The first one looks into organization, legitimacy, sovereignty and governance issues raised by the emergence of new technologies. The second one looks into the redefinition of secrecy in our digital era. The third part is a case study that will investigate how software, open platforms and processing of computerized data redefine, modernize and legitimize the way diplomats work, share information and engage with the general public for the greater good. The main assumption is that public action will only be legitimate in society if – and only if – society recognizes the state as a true network actor.
author2 Pretorius, Joelien
author_facet Pretorius, Joelien
Leray, Victor A.
author Leray, Victor A.
author_sort Leray, Victor A.
title Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
title_short Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
title_full Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
title_fullStr Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
title_full_unstemmed Diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
title_sort diplomatie : reframing secrecy in the age of digital diplomacy
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4936
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