| All party briefing: On the differences between a compulsory and voluntary regime |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Response to second s.37 cost report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Web resources |
Edgar
Whitley |
| All Party Briefing for Report Stage: Voluntary v. compulsory regimes |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Research Status Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Submission to House of Commons Science and Technology Select Committee Inquiry into “Scientific advice, risk and evidence: how government handles them” with particular reference to the technologies supporting the Government’s proposals for identity cards |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Home Office Accounting Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Home Office Accounting Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Press Release about |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Main Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| LSE Team Responds to Home Office’s Criticisms of The Identity Project Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Interim Report |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Social theory and Y2K |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Rhetorical confidence and technological certainty in technology led policy initiatives |
Edgar
Whitley |
| How do you make a deal when you can't shake hands? |
Edgar
Whitley |
| What impact will the Government's identity cards scheme have on society? |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Policy or politics? One year on for the LSE Identity Project |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Dotcompetition: Surviving in e-business |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Biometric technology in the public sector: Implications of the Identity Cards Bill |
Edgar
Whitley |
| The ranking of top IS journals: The perspective from the London School of Economics |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Developing the information and knowledge agenda in information systems: Insights from philosophy |
Edgar
Whitley |
| What is it like to do an Information Systems PhD in Europe? Diversity in the practice of IS research |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Creating and maintaining obligations with emerging technologies: An empirical study of mediated and face-to-face communication |
Edgar
Whitley |
| The Spring model for knowledge based systems analysis: A case study |
Edgar
Whitley |
| Special issue on Heidegger and information technology |
Edgar
Whitley |