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REFERENCES
insights also challenge accounts of 'mobile culture'
(Goggin, 2006) as being partly autonomous from
socio-cultural contexts, while moving beyond the
over-emphasis on the social impacts of mobile
telephony in general (Ling, 2004). At the same
time, these insights extend socio-cultural accounts
of mobile telephony and particularly 'domestica-
tion' approaches (Haddon, 2003 & 2004), showing
that culture is something up to the individual and
his or her domestic space as well as dependent
on broader cultural structures and historical pa-
rameters. As a result, the chapter attempted to go
deeper into the socio-cultural traits affecting the
adoption of new technologies in Greece, while it
illustrated the somewhat contested character of
those traits and the contrasting impacts they have
on different technologies.
Hence, the contribution of this work lies in:
Bakalis, S., Abeln, M., & Mante-Meijer, E. (1997).
The Adoption and Use of Mobile Telephony in
Europe. In L. Haddon (Ed.), Communications on
the Move: The Experience of Mobile Telephony in
the 1990s (pp. 19-28). Farsta: COST248 Report.
Bauer, M. (Ed.). (1995). Resistance to New Tech-
nology - Nuclear Power, Information Technology,
Biotechnology . Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511563706
Castells, M. (2007). Mobile Communication and
Society . Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Castells, M., & Himanen, P. (2002). The Informa-
tion Society and the Welfare State: The Finnish
Model . Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cathelat, B. (1993). Socio-Lifestyles Marketing .
Chicago: Probus.
Its effort to translate social culture and its
role in the adoption of mobile telepho-
ny into specific trends and values in life,
while indicating the need to contextualise
culture in a historical and everyday life
framework.
European Commission. (2006). Safer Internet .
Special Eurobarometer 250/Wave 64.4. Luxem-
burg: European Commission. Retrieved October
1, 2006, from http://europa.eu.int/information_so-
ciety/ac tivities/sip/docs/eurobarometer/euro
barometer_2005_25_ms.pdf.
Its attempt to provide a somewhat subtle
picture of the diverse and often contrast-
ing effects of culture on ICTs, using the
example of the distinctiveness of mobile
telephony from the Internet in Greece.
European Commission. (2007). E-Communica-
tions Household Survey. Special Eurobarometer
274/Wave 66.3. Luxembourg: European Com-
mission. Retrieved November 3, 2008, from
http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/ archives/
eb_special_280_260_en.htm
However, this paper contains a relatively lim-
ited range of findings which must be elaborated
and further developed in order to provide more
broadly applicable and insightful evidence and
to advance the discussion. In these terms, further
empirical research in Greece is suggested coupled
with the development of a comparative framework
to allow Greek culture to be compared with other
cultures in relation to the course and adoption of
mobile telephony.
European Commission. (2008). E-Communica-
tions Household Survey. Special Eurobarometer
293/Wave 68.2. Luxembourg: European Com-
mission. Retrieved November 3, 2008, from
http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion /archives/ebs/
ebs_293_full_en.pdf.
Goggin, G. (2006). Cell Phone Culture: Mobile
technology in everyday life . New York: Routledge.
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