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引用次数: 0

摘要

“信息经济”一词最初在20世纪60年代和70年代被广泛使用,指的是战后美国经济的一次重大转变,即制造业被信息的生产和管理所掩盖。然而,信息经济在20世纪中期首次被确定为许多信息经济之一,这些信息经济在两个多世纪以来一直是美国工业化、商业和资本主义的核心。信息经济的出现可以从两个方面来理解:一是信息本身成为商品的连续过程,二是经济生活依赖于各种形式的信息的不平衡和竞争(不是必然的)过程。从历史上看,信息的生产、流通和商品化对美国资本主义的发展至关重要,对美国经济和社会中结构性的种族、性别和阶级不平等的创造和延续(有时是抵制)至关重要。然而,从18世纪到21世纪,信息经济虽然不平衡、竞争激烈,但也变得更加官僚化、量化和商品化。美国信息经济的历史也以系统、网络和基础设施的重要性为特征,这些系统、网络和基础设施将人、信息、资本、商品、市场、官僚机构、技术、思想、专业知识、法律和意识形态联系起来。信息经济的物质性在历史上与经济知识的生产密不可分,“信息”和“经济”的概念本身就是随着时间而变化的历史建构。信息经济的历史并不是一个目的论的进步故事,在这个故事中,越来越多的官僚主义理性、效率、可预测性和利润不可避免地导致了21世纪的大数据时代。它也不是一个单一的、连贯的、统一的信息经济的单一故事。在不同地区以不同的规模创建多重信息经济是一个偶然的、有争议的、往往不公平的过程,它不会自动使获取客观信息的民主化。
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The Information Economy
The term “information economy” first came into widespread usage during the 1960s and 1970s to identify a major transformation in the postwar American economy in which manufacturing had been eclipsed by the production and management of information. However, the information economy first identified in the mid-20th century was one of many information economies that have been central to American industrialization, business, and capitalism for over two centuries. The emergence of information economies can be understood in two ways: as a continuous process in which information itself became a commodity, as well as an uneven and contested—not inevitable—process in which economic life became dependent on various forms of information. The production, circulation, and commodification of information has historically been essential to the growth of American capitalism and to creating and perpetuating—and at times resisting—structural racial, gender, and class inequities in American economy and society. Yet information economies, while uneven and contested, also became more bureaucratized, quantified, and commodified from the 18th century to the 21st century. The history of information economies in the United States is also characterized by the importance of systems, networks, and infrastructures that link people, information, capital, commodities, markets, bureaucracies, technologies, ideas, expertise, laws, and ideologies. The materiality of information economies is historically inextricable from production of knowledge about the economy, and the concepts of “information” and “economy” are themselves historical constructs that change over time. The history of information economies is not a teleological story of progress in which increasing bureaucratic rationality, efficiency, predictability, and profit inevitably led to the 21st-century age of Big Data. Nor is it a singular story of a single, coherent, uniform information economy. The creation of multiple information economies—at different scales in different regions—was a contingent, contested, often inequitable process that did not automatically democratize access to objective information.
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