Vol 6, Number 1, 2008

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Preface

Since its inception in 2003, the Australian Journal for Emerging Technologies and Society (AJETS) has published articles on the social aspects of emerging technologies. Committed to an interdisciplinary approach, our authors have come from fields as diverse as psychology, law, history and sociology. Our topics have ranged from biotechnologies to communications technologies to games and beyond.

With this issue we are relaunching AJETS as the International Journal for Emerging Technologies and Society (iJETS), broadening its focus to enable the publication of international research on emerging technologies and society. Internationalising the journal is also designed to reflect the global nature of many of our areas of interest, as emerging technologies seldom recognize national boundaries.

This first issue of the iJETS focuses on life online. Three of the articles examine different aspects of Internet dating. In his article, Robert Reynolds reflects on the world of gay online dating and his ambivalence about it, and Millsom Henry-Waring and Jo Barraket report on their study of users of Internet dating sites, suggesting that meeting in this way involves what they term hypercommunication. Komalsingh Rambaree's article looks at Mauritian youth and their views about meeting online. The combination of articles provides insight into how the Internet is facilitating romance. The final article, by Mary-Helen Ward and Sandra West, looks at a different aspect of the Internet: blogging in PhD study.

As a web-only publication, iJETS will continue to publish relevant research in a timely fashion. We welcome submissions from authors around the world on the social aspects of new technologies or innovative applications of existing technologies.

Deb Dempsey
Karen Farquharson
Mark Finn

 

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About the Editors

Dr. Deb Dempsey is a Lecturer in Sociology at Swinburne University of Technology. Her research interests include kinship in the era of assisted reproductive technology, and lesbian and gay family formation.
Contact:
ddempsey @ swin.edu.au

Dr. Karen Farquharson is a Lecturer in Sociology at Swinburne. She is currently conducting research into the Sociology of the Internet focussing on the impact of online learning software on students’ friendship networks, and the sociological structures of online parenting communities.  She is also examining Australian attitudes towards new technologies, using data from the Swinburne National Technology and Society Monitor. 
Contact:
http://opax.swin.edu.au/~kfarquharson.

Dr. Mark Finn is a Lecturer in Media and Communications at Swinburne University of Technology. He is currently conducting research into the development and usage of mobile computers, in particular their application to education, and the social and cultural implications of video games.
Contact:
mfinn @ swin.edu.au.

 

International Journal of Emerging Techologies and Society © 2008 Faculty of Life and Social Sciences, Swinburne University of Technology spacer