Difference between revisions of "Technology Populism"
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[[Technology Populism]] is “an adoption trend led by a technology-native workforce that self provisions collaborative tools, information sources, and human networks – requiring minimal or no ongoing support from a central IT organization”<ref>Forrester ''Report Hidden'' https://www.forrester.com/allSearch?query=technology%20populism&publishedSinceInDays=-1&sortType=relevance&accessOnly=true&activeTab=allResults</ref> | [[Technology Populism]] is “an adoption trend led by a technology-native workforce that self provisions collaborative tools, information sources, and human networks – requiring minimal or no ongoing support from a central IT organization”<ref>Forrester ''Report Hidden'' https://www.forrester.com/allSearch?query=technology%20populism&publishedSinceInDays=-1&sortType=relevance&accessOnly=true&activeTab=allResults</ref> | ||
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+ | * Wikipedia defines Techno-populism<ref>Wikipedia ''Techno-populism'' https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techno-populism</erf> as either a populism in favor of technocracy or a populism concerning certain technology – usually information technology – or any populist ideology conversed using digital media. It can be employed by single politicians or whole political movements respectively. Neighboring terms used in a similar way are technocratic populism, technological populism and cyber-populism. Italy’s Five Star Movement and France’s La République En Marche! have been described as technopopulist political movements. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
[[Category: Philosophy]] | [[Category: Philosophy]] | ||
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Revision as of 12:12, 5 July 2023
Full Title or Meme
Technology Populism is “an adoption trend led by a technology-native workforce that self provisions collaborative tools, information sources, and human networks – requiring minimal or no ongoing support from a central IT organization”[1]
Context
- Wikipedia defines Techno-populism<ref>Wikipedia Techno-populism https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techno-populism</erf> as either a populism in favor of technocracy or a populism concerning certain technology – usually information technology – or any populist ideology conversed using digital media. It can be employed by single politicians or whole political movements respectively. Neighboring terms used in a similar way are technocratic populism, technological populism and cyber-populism. Italy’s Five Star Movement and France’s La République En Marche! have been described as technopopulist political movements.