NETWORK SOCIETY BY CASTELLS
Castells claims that we are passing from the industrial age into
the information age. This historical change is brought about by the advent of
new information technologies – particularly those for communication and
biological technologies. Society remains capitalist, but basis of the
technological means by which it acts has changed from energy to information.
This information is of central importance in determining economic productivity.
Communications technologies allow for the annihilation of space and for
globalization; the potential for rapid and asynchronous communication also
changes the relationship to time.
According to Castells, power now rests in networks the logic of
the network is more powerful than the powers of the network. Some networks,
such as that of financial capital, are global in scale. The ability of an actor
in the network – be it a company, individual, government, or other organization
– to participate in the network is determined by the degree to which the node
can contribute to the goals of the network. This new environment requires
skilled flexible workers: the organization man gives way to the flexible woman.
This leads to a binary process of inclusion and exclusion from the network. The
people at the bottom are those who, with nothing to offer the network, are
excluded.
Capital and Labor
Castells distinguishes the terms information and informational. He
says that information has been an essential component of all societies, whether
capitalist or not. In the new network economy, information becomes a key factor
in economic productivity. Today, for example, for example, the flow of capital
into currencies, commodities, and stocks is based upon access to information
about relevant topics, from international politics to climate change, weather
predictions, and social trends. In that sense, the importance of information in
contemporary society is not new. What is new, he claims, is the informational
shift to the manipulation of information itself: the action of knowledge upon
knowledge itself, is now the basis to increased productivity.
Flows vs. Places and the Role of the Nation
State
Castells is an urban geographer, so his examination of space is
central to his work. One of his key spacial characterizations of the
information age is the space of flows. This is the domain of networks of
capital, of information, of business alliances, etc. He argues that “While
organizations are located in places, the organizational logic is place less,
being fundamentally dependent on the space of flows that characterizes
information networks. This space of flows challenges what Castells calls the
space of places, including regional communities and nation states.
The inclusion and exclusion
The inclusion and
exclusion logic of the network switches off people and territories dubbed as
irrelevant from the perspective of dominant interests. This enforces domination
domination depends on the simultaneous capacity of elites to articulate themselves
and dis articulate the masses. Groups may choose to develop their own networks
with their own goals, but if they wish to interact with the dominant networks
in society they must adapt to the goals of those networks.
BY
KIMATI ELITRUDAH. BAPRM 42582.
No comments:
Post a Comment