Philip E. Agre list of publications
The practical republic: Social skills and the progress of citizenship, in Andrew Feenberg and Darin Barney, eds, Community in the Digital Age, Rowman and Littlefield, 2004.Internet research: For and against, in Mia Consalvo et al, eds, Internet Research Annual, Volume 1, Peter Lang, 2004.
Information and institutional change: The case of digital libraries, in Ann P. Bishop, Nancy A. Van House, and Barbara P. Buttenfield, eds, Digital Library Use: Social Practice in Design and Evaluation, MIT Press, 2003.
Hierarchy and history in Simon’s “Architecture of Complexity”, Journal of the Learning Sciences 12(3), 2003, pages 413-426.
Writing and representation, in Michael Mateas and Phoebe Sengers, eds, Narrative Intelligence, John Benjamins, 2003.
Peer-to-peer and the promise of Internet equality, Communications of the ACM 46(2), 2003, pages 39-42.
Real-time politics: The Internet and the political process, The Information Society 18(5), 2002, pages 311-331.
The practical logic of computer work, in Matthias Scheutz, ed, Computationalism: New Directions, MIT Press, 2002.
Cyberspace as American culture, Science as Culture 11(2), 2002, pages 171-189.
Changing places: Contexts of awareness in computing, Human-Computer Interaction 16(2-4), 2001, pages 177-192.
Supporting the intellectual life of a democratic society, Ethics and Information Technology 3(4), 2001, pages 289-298.
Your face is not a bar code: Arguments against automatic face recognition in public places, Whole Earth 106, 2001, pages 74-77.
The market logic of information, Knowledge, Technology, and Policy 13(3), 2000, pages 67-77.
Welcome to the always-on world, IEEE Spectrum 38(1), 2001, pages 10, 13.
Commodity and community: Institutional design for the networked university, Planning for Higher Education 29(2), 2000, pages 5-14.
Infrastructure and institutional change in the networked university, Information, Communication, and Society 3(4), 2000, pages 494-507.
The distances of education, Academe 85(5), 1999, pages 37-41.
Life after cyberspace, EASST Review 18(2), 1999, pages 3-5.
Information technology in higher education: The “global academic village” and intellectual standardization, On the Horizon 7(5), 1999, pages 8-11.
The architecture of identity: Embedding privacy in market institutions, Information, Communication and Society 2(1), 1999, pages 1-25.
Designing genres for new media, in Steve Jones, ed, CyberSociety 2.0: Revisiting CMC and Community, Sage, 1998.
Yesterday’s tomorrow, Times Literary Supplement, 3 July 1998, pages 3-4.
Computation and Human Experience, Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Technology and Privacy: The New Landscape (edited with Marc Rotenberg), MIT Press, 1997. Chapter 1: Beyond the mirror world: Privacy and the representational practices of computing.
Toward a critical technical practice: Lessons learned in trying to reform AI, in Geoffrey C. Bowker, Susan Leigh Star, William Turner, and Les Gasser, eds, Social Science, Technical Systems and Cooperative Work: Beyond the Great Divide, Erlbaum, 1997.
Reinventing Technology, Rediscovering Community: Critical Explorations of Computing as a Social Practice (edited with Douglas Schuler), Ablex, 1997. Introduction: Computing as a social practice.
Lifeworld analysis (with Ian Horswill), Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 6(1), 1997, pages 111-145.
Living math: Lave and Walkerdine on the meaning of everyday arithmetic, in David Kirshner and Tony Whitson, eds, Situated Cognition: Social, Semiotic, and Psychological Perspectives, Erlbaum, 1997.
Computational Theories of Interaction and Agency (edited with Stanley J. Rosenschein), MIT Press, 1996. Introduction: Computational research on interaction and agency.
Institutional circuitry: Thinking about the forms and uses of information, Information Technology and Libraries 14(4), 1995, pages 225-230.
The soul gained and lost: Artificial intelligence as a philosophical project, Stanford Humanities Review 4(2), 1995, pages 1-19.







