Knowledge, economy, technology and society: the politics of discourse

  • Authors:
  • David Rooney

  • Affiliations:
  • UQ Business School and Centre for Social Research in Communication, University of Queensland, Ipswich, Australia

  • Venue:
  • Telematics and Informatics - Special issue: The World summit on the information society (WSIS) from an Asian-Pacific region perspective
  • Year:
  • 2005

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Abstract

The WSIS is centrally interested in knowledge and has defined for itself a mission that is broadly humanitarian. Its development 'talk' is rightly, replete with notions of equity. preserving culture, justice, human rights and and so on. In incorporating such issues into knowledge society and economy discussions. WSIS has adopted a different posture toward knowledge than is seen in dominant discourses. This study analyses the dominant knowledge discourse using a large corpus of knowledge-related policy documents, discourse theory and an interrelation understanding of knowledge. I show that it is important to understanding this dominant knowledge discourse because of its capacity to limit thought and action in relation to its central topic, knowledge. The results of this study demonstrate that the dominant knowledge discourse is technocratic frequently insensitive to the humane mission at the core of the WSIS. and is based on a partial understanting of what knowledge is and how knowledge systems work. Moreover I show that knowledge is inherently political that the dominant knowledge discourse is politically oriented toward the concerns of business and technology, but that an emancipatory politics of knowledge is possible.