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Our society is becoming inextricably intertwined with digital platforms. Mapping the Evolution of Platform Society brings together a team of multidisciplinary scholars to investigate the intricate web of challenges and opportunities posed by the digital landscape.
The chapters provide novel research on the impact of platforms on education, media, politics and social disadvantage. Delivering a necessary update to seminal work with new empirical evidence and evolving key challenges – such as the role of TikTok – the authors do not merely identify risks of the ‘platformization’ of society, they offer a vital exploration of potential solutions and best practices. Opening with an introduction by the editors, it then covers five sections exploring education and lifelong learning, discrimination and marginalized communities, media and news dissemination, the digital transformation of government, and the environmental challenges of the platform society. Encompassing case studies and analyses from countries and regions often overlooked in existing literature, this collection offers a global perspective on the evolution of the opportunities and inherent challenges posed by the platform society.
Emerging from genuine interdisciplinarity, deriving from rigorous research across education, social work, journalism, government, and environmental studies, this is rich reading for scholars from across the political and social sciences interested in the risks and opportunities of this evolving societal trend.
Chapter 1. Introduction: Mapping the evolution of the platform society; Cecilia Biancalana and Valentina Goglio
Valentina Goglio is Associate Professor of Economic Sociology at the Department of Cultures, Politics and Society of the University of Turin, Italy. Her research interests are at the intersection between education and the labour market, with a particular focus on the implications of the digital transformation for education and work.
Cecilia Biancalana is Assistant Professor in the Department of Culture, Politics and Society at the University of Turin, Italy. Her research focuses on political ecology, party change, populism, and the relationship between the internet and politics.