Skip to product information
1 of 0

Digital Island

Regular price £87.95
Sale price £87.95 Regular price £87.95
Sale Sold out
A critical account of how Ireland became a key infrastructural hub for platform capitalism, examining how digital platforms reshape states, media systems, governance, labour, and lived experience u...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 26 April 2027
View Product Details

Digital Island: From Nation to Node examines how Ireland became a central infrastructural hub for global platform capitalism and, in the process, was transformed from a small national media system into a strategic node within transnational digital ecosystems. Moving beyond familiar accounts of tax policy or foreign direct investment, the book argues that Ireland’s role in the platform economy reveals deeper changes in how states, media systems, and everyday life are reorganised under conditions of digital capitalism.

Drawing on political economy, media sociology, and phenomenology, the book traces Ireland’s digital transformation across telecommunications liberalisation, television’s transition to digital media, the rise of participatory platforms, and the growing concentration of AI infrastructure. Through these developments, Digital Island demonstrates how platform firms increasingly shape not only markets and governance structures, but also cultural production, labour relations, institutional priorities, and forms of social experience.

At the centre of the study is the argument that Ireland has become simultaneously a gateway for multinational technology firms into Europe, a regulatory and infrastructural partner within platform ecosystems, and a state struggling to preserve democratic communication, public service values, and cultural autonomy while embedded within global circuits of accumulation.

To explain these transformations, the book develops a series of original theoretical concepts — including “ecosystem capitalism,” “automated legitimation,” and “phenomenological capture” — that together provide a framework for understanding how digital platforms extend power across institutions, infrastructures, and embodied experience itself.

By positioning Ireland as an especially revealing case within wider global processes, Digital Island offers a major contribution to media and communication studies, platform studies, digital political economy, and critical internet research. Combining structural analysis with close attention to lived experience and institutional transformation, the book will be essential reading for scholars, policymakers, regulators, journalists, and readers interested in the changing relationship between technology, governance, media, and contemporary capitalism.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £87.95
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 26 April 2027
ISBN: 9781835954492
Format: eBook
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, Media studies, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Industries / Media & Communications, Media, entertainment, information and communication industries, Political economy

REVIEWS Icon

Kenneth Murphy is a Lecturer in Media Theory and Research at TU Dublin, Ireland

Acknowledgements

 

1. Digital Island: Ireland, Media and the Digital Transition

2. Assetization as Analytical Framework

3. Infrastructural Subordination and Ecosystem Enablement: Ireland’s Communications Transformation (1990–2025)

4. Ecosystem Capitalism and Irish Television: Coordinated Strategies of Value Extraction and Cultural Subordination

5. Apple’s Ecosystem Infrastructure: Enabling Platform Constellation Coordination Through Ireland’s Institutional Facilitation

6. Extending Cultural Assetization: Deepening Platform Capitalism’s Environmental Transformation

7. Automated Legitimation and the Architecture of Platform Consent in Ireland

 

Conclusion: Ecosystem Capitalism, Automated Legitimation, and the Limits of Comprehensive Control

Appendices

   Appendix A: Ireland’s Tax and Regulatory Architecture

   Appendix B: Methodology for the Thematic Analysis of Irish Print Media Coverage

   Appendix C: Methodology for the Analysis of Streaming Platform Coverage in Irish Media

References