Sintercom : experiment in online civil society

This essay hopes to analyse how the self-styled Singapore Internet Community, Sintercom developed, and through its activities, contributed to the opening-up of civil society in Singapore in the 1990s. Sintercom the website was started in 1994, only to shut down in 2001 – along the way, it faced chal...

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Main Author: Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee
Other Authors: Hallam Stevens
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69779
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-697792019-12-10T12:57:01Z Sintercom : experiment in online civil society Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee Hallam Stevens School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities This essay hopes to analyse how the self-styled Singapore Internet Community, Sintercom developed, and through its activities, contributed to the opening-up of civil society in Singapore in the 1990s. Sintercom the website was started in 1994, only to shut down in 2001 – along the way, it faced challenges internal and external. It specifically sets out to engage in a more detailed examination of specific Sintercom projects in a chronological order. This is to highlight the website and its projects as an experiment in civil society – by its creators, users, the government and other actors. It concludes that Sintercom’s experiment did open-up civil society space, at least on the Internet, although at the same time, the government’s experiment with what it saw as a “Light Touch” style of regulations using Sintercom as a testing-ground (due to its prominence in the 1990s Internet) also seemed to have succeeded at that point. Bachelor of Arts 2017-03-27T06:15:54Z 2017-03-27T06:15:54Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69779 en Nanyang Technological University 94 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee
Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
description This essay hopes to analyse how the self-styled Singapore Internet Community, Sintercom developed, and through its activities, contributed to the opening-up of civil society in Singapore in the 1990s. Sintercom the website was started in 1994, only to shut down in 2001 – along the way, it faced challenges internal and external. It specifically sets out to engage in a more detailed examination of specific Sintercom projects in a chronological order. This is to highlight the website and its projects as an experiment in civil society – by its creators, users, the government and other actors. It concludes that Sintercom’s experiment did open-up civil society space, at least on the Internet, although at the same time, the government’s experiment with what it saw as a “Light Touch” style of regulations using Sintercom as a testing-ground (due to its prominence in the 1990s Internet) also seemed to have succeeded at that point.
author2 Hallam Stevens
author_facet Hallam Stevens
Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee
format Final Year Project
author Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee
author_sort Kwok, Amanda Ching Yee
title Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
title_short Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
title_full Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
title_fullStr Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
title_full_unstemmed Sintercom : experiment in online civil society
title_sort sintercom : experiment in online civil society
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69779
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