Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Macquarie University Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Profiles
Research Units
Projects
Research Outputs
Datasets
Prizes
Activities
Press / Media
Impacts
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Telecommunications and transnationalism: the polarization of social space
Francesco Stolfi
, Gerald Sussman
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
13
Citations (Scopus)
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Telecommunications and transnationalism: the polarization of social space'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Business & Economics
Transnationalism
100%
Information and Communication Technology
79%
World Economy
70%
Telecommunications
68%
Social Space
65%
Polarization
64%
Deregulation
54%
Oligopolistic Competition
40%
International Division of Labour
38%
Spatial Economics
38%
Dualism
37%
Former Soviet Union
35%
Economic Transformation
33%
Political Economics
29%
Eastern Europe
29%
Linkage
28%
Socialism
27%
Multinational Corporations
26%
Government Policy
25%
Technological Change
25%
Liquidity
23%
Government
16%
United States of America
11%
Arts & Humanities
Transnationalism
70%
Telecommunications
68%
Social Space
65%
Polarization
63%
Deregulation
51%
World Economy
35%
Information and Communication Technology
32%
Economics
29%
Liquidity
27%
Multinational Corporations
25%
Dualism
25%
Political Transformation
23%
Technological Change
22%
Division of Labor
21%
Linkage
18%
Eastern Europe
18%
Socialism
18%
Government Policy
17%
Soviet Union
16%
Government
11%
Economy
8%
Social Sciences
social space
62%
polarization
58%
telecommunication
56%
world economy
44%
deregulation
42%
corporation
33%
communication technology
31%
international division of labor
27%
information technology
27%
liquidity
26%
state socialism
26%
economics
24%
technological change
20%
Eastern Europe
18%
government policy
17%
USSR
17%
social effects
17%
restructuring
16%
infrastructure
13%
economy
11%
Engineering & Materials Science
Telecommunication
55%
Polarization
52%
Deregulation
49%
Economics
37%
Communication
19%
Information technology
17%
Industry
16%
Personnel
14%