Difference between revisions of "Bibliography"

From civicintelligence
(Created page with ' I've added most — if not all — of our readings. To discuss any of them, add a link to a page in this form: discuss authorsurname year-of-publication. This can be fo…')
 
 
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I've added most — if not all — of our readings.  To discuss any of them, add a link to a page in this form: discuss authorsurname year-of-publication. This can be followed by a number (.1, .2 ...) if there are multiple writings by the same author in one year.
  
I've added most — if not all — of our readings.  To discuss any of them, add a link to a page in this form: discuss authorsurname year-of-publication. This can be followed by a letter (a..z) if there are multiple writings by the same author in one year.  
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Note that most of these haven't yet been put in proper form yet.  
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Note that these haven't yet been put in proper form.
 
  
Schuler, Cultivating Society's Civic Intelligence: Patterns for a New "World Brain";
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* [[A Global Perspective: Community-driven Solutions to Urban Poverty]], Celine d’Cruz and David Satterthwaite, in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, M. (ed.)
  
Civic Intelligence pattern
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* Addams, J. [[Activities and Investigations from Twenty Years At Hull-House]]
  
Marcus, Memory and Belief from Kluge
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* Basalla, G. (1988). [[The Evolution of Technology]]. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  
Bransford et al, Learning: From Speculation to Science, and How Experts Differ from Novices from How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School
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* Blewett, L. (2008), [[http://www.publicsphereproject.org/drupal/node/208 Matrifocal Orientation]] pattern in Liberating Voices. Schuler (2008)
  
Chapter(s) from The Art of Game Design (or other game chapters)
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* Bransford et al, [[Learning: From Speculation to Science, and How Experts Differ from Novices from How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School]]
  
Read all pattern cards and 12 full patterns
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* Briggs, X. (2009?). [[Conclusion in Democracy as Problem-Solving]]. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  
Managing Global Environmental Change From Learning to Manage Global Environmental Risks, Social Learning Group, and Matrifocal Orientation pattern
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* Corburn, J. [[The Mapping of Local Knowledge (ch 6) from Citizen Science]]
  
Schuler, D. Deliberation that Matters: Realizing the Potential for Civic Intelligence [[discuss Schuler 2011]]
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* Dewey, J. (April 3, 1937). [["The Democratic Form." School and Society.]]  
  
McCormick, It's Their Call, Stanford Alumni Magazine
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* Diamond, J. (2004). [[Collapse: Why Some Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.]] New York: Viking.
  
Corburn, J. The Mapping of Local Knowledge (ch 6) from Citizen Science
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* Dutton, S. (1902). [["Dedication of the Horace Mann School."]] The Teachers College Record.
  
Addams, J. Activities and Investigations from Twenty Years At Hull-House
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* Homer-Dixon, T. (2000) [[Ingenuity Gap: How Can We Solve the Problems of the Future?]] New York: Knopf.  
  
Bridging the Bay: University-Community Collaborations (San Francisco Bay Area), Manuel Pastor, Rachel Rosner, Juliet Ellis, and Elizabeth Tan in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, M. (ed.)
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* Jones, V. [[Climate Change and the Quest for Regional Equity]], in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, M. (ed.) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  
Schuler, D. Evaluating the Language and Transformation through Communication, Liberating Voices
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* Keck, M. and Sikkink, K (1998). [[Activists Beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics.]] Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  
Conclusion in Democracy as Problem-Solving, Briggs;
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* Lakoff, G. (    ). [[Framing and Mental Models articles]]
  
True Wisdom in Marcus, G. Kluge.
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* Luntz, F. (    ). [[Framing and Mental Models articles]]
  
Framing and Mental Models articles
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* Marcus, G. [[True Wisdom]] in Kluge.
  
Corburn, J. The Mapping of Local Knowledge from Citizen Science;
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* Marcus, [[Memory and Belief]] from Kluge
  
Bridging the Bay: University-Community Collaborations (San Francisco Bay Area); and Manuel Pastor, Rachel Rosner, Juliet Ellis, and Elizabeth Tan, in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, P.  
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* Mathews, D. (November/December 1985). [[“Civic Intelligence,” Social Education.]]
  
Climate Change and the Quest for Regional Equity, Van Jones; A Global Perspective: Community-driven Solutions to Urban Poverty, Celine d’Cruz and David Satterthwaite, both in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, M. (ed.)
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* McCormick, [[It's Their Call]], Stanford Alumni Magazine
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* Moore, J. (March 31, 2003). [[The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful Head.]]  http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jmoore/secondsuperpower.html
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* Pastor, Manuel, Rosner, Rachel, Ellis, Juliet, and Elizabeth Tan (20__). [[Bridging the Bay: University-Community Collaborations]] (San Francisco Bay Area), in Breakthrough Communities, Pavel, M. (ed.) Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
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* Putnam, R. (2000). [[Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community.]] New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.
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* Schell, Jesse. <u>[[''The Art of Game Design.'']]</u> 1st. Burlington, MA: Elsevier, 2008. Print.
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* Schuler, D. (2001, summer). [[Cultivating society's civic intelligence: patterns for a new "world brain"]]; ( Schuler 2001)  Journal of Society, Information and Communication, v. 4 n. 2.
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* Schuler, D. [[Civic Intelligence pattern]] ( Schuler 2008.2)
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* Schuler, D. [[Deliberation that Matters: Realizing the Potential for Civic Intelligence]] (Schuler 2011)
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* Schuler, D. [[Evaluating the Language and Transformation through Communication, Liberating Voices]] ( Schuler 2008.1)
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* Sen, J., Anita Anand, Arturo Escobar and Peter Waterman (Eds.) (2004). [[World Social Forum: Challenging Empires.]] New Delhi, India: Viveka Foundation.
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* Social Learning Group (20__). [[Managing Global Environmental Change From Learning to Manage Global Environmental Risks.]] Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
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* Wells, H. G. (1938). [[World Brain.]] Meuthuen & Co. Limited.
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<span style="color:#0000f1">Hey Doug do you think we should adopt the standard MLA format or stick with the format above, or something in between?</span>
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<span style="color:#6050f4">I'm  not in a hurry to get these ''perfect'' but it would be nice to get them alphabetized by author's last name. (Then things like author's firstname initial, publication date (within parends), name of book or name of chapter within a book.)(Publisher location and publisher name towards end.</span>

Latest revision as of 11:23, 1 June 2011

I've added most — if not all — of our readings. To discuss any of them, add a link to a page in this form: discuss authorsurname year-of-publication. This can be followed by a number (.1, .2 ...) if there are multiple writings by the same author in one year.

Note that most of these haven't yet been put in proper form yet.





Hey Doug do you think we should adopt the standard MLA format or stick with the format above, or something in between?

I'm not in a hurry to get these perfect but it would be nice to get them alphabetized by author's last name. (Then things like author's firstname initial, publication date (within parends), name of book or name of chapter within a book.)(Publisher location and publisher name towards end.