Recent News
My chapter "Privacy and Participation in the Cloud: Ethical Implications of Google’s Privacy Practices and Public Communications" will be published in The Ethics of Emerging Media: Information, Social Norms, and New Media Technology edited by K. German, & B.E. Drushel (Continuum, 2011). "This collection provides a rare opportunity to ask how emerging media affect the ethical choices in our lives and the lives of people across the globe."
My paper "Assessing Social Network Sites as International Platforms: Guiding Principles”" has been accepted for publication in the Special Issue, "Making the net work" of the Journal of International Communication 16, 2 (August-September 2010)
My contribution, "Opening the social media ecosystem: the tenuous nature of interoperability, crossposting, and sharing among dominant social media sites, services and devices" has been accepted for presentation at the 11th Annual International and Interdisciplinary Conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) – "Sustainability, Participation, Action," Gothenburg, Sweden.
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Robert Bodle, Ph.D.
About
Robert Bodle is Assistant Professor
of Communication Studies at the College of Mount St. Joseph, researching and teaching about new media, the Internet, film and visual culture. Bodle received his Ph.D. in Critical Studies from the University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television (now the School of Cinematic Arts) where he documented and analyzed various online forms of cultural activism in his dissertation Radical Culture in the Digital Age: A Study of Critical New Media Practice (2004).
Bio
As a surfer, Bodle explored the beaches of Southern California, from Solana beach and Leo Carrillo, up to Rincon. He now resides in Ohio, USA, where he “gets it done” (writes, researches, teaches, advocates, does service, yard work, composting, etc.).
Robert’s scholarly research looks at the uses of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for the public good (or commons). Often these uses are framed as “issues of access and issues of control.” Bodle examines the tensions between technology as a force for positive change, empowerment, and emancipation, and technology as a force for enclosure, discrimination, and repression. He is currently researching Internet governance and human rights, information and media literacies, privacy in web 2.0, social media and online advertising.
Click for more information on research foci and academic development.
At the community level, Bodle has worked with a variety of nonprofits and independent media arts organizations that help give voice to underrepresented groups, support independent news and information, and use media to promote social and economic justice. Bodle helped organize the Independent Media Center in Los Angeles, in San Diego he helped produce the youth documentary series - Tu Voz TV! He is a non profit consultant at RED! Webzine, a site dedicated to promoting prisoner rights and their successful reentry. He also works with the Dynamic Coalition on Internet Rights and Principles (IRP), an initiative formed by people and institutions to establish an Internet Governance regime founded upon human rights. At the Mount, Bodle leads a variety of service learning projects utilizing digital media to help support community development, senior’s quality of life, environmental causes, and information literacy efforts.
Upcoming Events
- The fifth annual IGF Meeting will be held in Vilnius, Lithuania, on 14-17 September 2010. The overall theme is: "IGF 2010 – developing the future together"
- The 11th Annual Conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR), takes place October 21-23, 2010. This year’s conference, "Internet Research 11.0: Sustainability, Participation, Action" will take place at Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden.


Internet Governance Project Award









