Frank Webster

Frank Webster (born 1950) is a British sociologist. His critical writing on the "information society" has been translated into many languages. In his book Theories of the Information Society, he examined six analytically separable conceptions of the information society, arguing that all are suspect to some degree, so much so that the idea of an information society cannot be easily sustained.

Biography

Frank Webster comes from Durham, England where he was raised and educated. He completed his studies at LSE and has worked in several universities, at home and abroad. He joined City full-time in 2003 from the University of Birmingham. He is currently Head of the Department of Sociology at City University London.[1]

Works

His research has centred on information and communications trends, and has included conceptual analysis and critique, as well as studies of higher education, the effects of advanced technologies on libraries, urban change, and new media. He has recently worked on Information War and was involved in researching Internet Activism by examining the anti-war movement and its adoption of ICTs. This work is situated in a context of interest in democratisation and information trends, an interest manifested especially in his teaching at Masters level at City University. - www.antiwarresearch.info/. A book from this project appeared in 2008 titled, Anti-War Activism: New Media and Protest in the Information Age (Palgrave), written with Kevin Gillan and Jenny Pickerill. Frank has begun work on another book, provisionally titled Democratization and Information .http://www.city.ac.uk/sociology/staffdetails/Webster.html

Webster has published books on many aspects of contemporary social change. He has resisted the view that the Information society is radically new, insisting on the primacy of continuities and consolidations of established trends[2]. He conceives today’s ‘informational capitalism’ as a development from corporate capitalism and, before that, laissez-faire capitalism, that advances principles of market society such as private ownership, competition, profitability, commodification, ability to pay, and the centrality of wage labour.

He wrote a Luddite analysis of Information Technology with Kevin Robins in the early 1980s that was one of the first book-length critiques of optimistic analyses of computer and telecommunications technologies. More recently he appears prepared to use the term Information Society, though this seems to contradict his early hostility to the idea.

He often draws attention to the dark sides of informational developments, especially the military dimensions. He has adopted the concept of Information War to examine the changing information environment of recent wars.

Publications