Difference between revisions of "Peer-to-Peer Diplomacy"

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Peer-to-Peer Diplomacy, also abbreviated P2P, describes the recent notion that civilians, by virtue of the internet and more specifically social media, are producers as well as consumers of government information, with the potential to bypass official Government bodies if necessary. Public Diplomacy nowadays is therefore about more than just governments employing ‘soft and smart’ power, but increasingly also about dealing and collaborating with a public that can produce and distribute information themselves.
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Peer-to-Peer Diplomacy, also abbreviated P2P, describes the recent notion that civilians, by virtue of the internet and more specifically [[Social Media|social media]], are producers as well as consumers of government information, with the potential to bypass official Government bodies if necessary. Public Diplomacy nowadays is therefore about more than just governments employing ‘soft and smart’ power, but increasingly also about dealing and collaborating with a public that can produce and distribute information themselves.
  
 
[[Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]]
 
[[Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]]

Revision as of 10:33, 27 March 2014

Peer-to-Peer Diplomacy, also abbreviated P2P, describes the recent notion that civilians, by virtue of the internet and more specifically social media, are producers as well as consumers of government information, with the potential to bypass official Government bodies if necessary. Public Diplomacy nowadays is therefore about more than just governments employing ‘soft and smart’ power, but increasingly also about dealing and collaborating with a public that can produce and distribute information themselves.