B36. Cheong, P.H. (in press, 2024). Authority and communication: Dialectical tensions and paradoxes in religious organizing. In Campbell, H.A. & P.H. Cheong (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Digital Religion, Oxford University Press. . https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549803.001.0001
B35. Cheong, P.H. & Campbell, H.A. (in press, 2024) Digital Religion Futures: Propositions and Complexities in the Now and Not Yet. In Campbell, H.A. & P.H. Cheong (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Digital Religion, Oxford University Press. . https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549803.001.0001
B34. Campbell, H. & Cheong, P.H. (in press, 2024). Introduction to the study of digital religion. In Campbell, H.A. & P.H. Cheong (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Digital Religion, Oxford University Press.https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549803.001.0001
B33. Cheong, P.H. (in press, 2024). Communicating sacred spaces: Religious authority, community and bounded automation in virtual worlds. In L. Kong, O. Woods, & J. Tse (Eds.), The Handbook of the Geographies of Religion. Dordrecht: Springer.
B32. Cheong, P.H. & Chen, Y. (2023). Religious human-machine communication: Practices, Power, and Prospects. In A. Guzman, McEwen, R. & Jones, S. (Eds.), The SAGE Human-Machine Communication Handbook (p.555-561). UK, London: Sage.
B31. Cheong, P. H. & Mossberger, K. (2022). Voicing the future: Folk epistemic understandings of Smart and datafied Lives. In Katz, J., Floyd, J. & Schiepers, K. (Eds.), Perceiving the future through new communication technologies. Robots, AI & Everyday life (p. 195-208). Palgrave Macmillan, Switzerland.
B30. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Authority. In H. Campbell & Tsuria, R. (Eds). In Digital Religion: Understanding Religious Practice in Digital Worlds, 2nd Ed. (p. 87-102). UK, Oxfordshire: Routledge.
B29. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Data, discernment & duty: Illuminating engagement in the Internet of Things. In K. Callaway & Bolger, R. (Eds). Techno-Sapiens in a networked era. (p.77-98). Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock Publishers.
B28. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Religious datafication: Platforms, practices and power. In Radde-Antweiler, K. & Zeiler, X. (Eds). The Routledge Handbook of Religion and Journalism. (p.397-410). London, UK: Routledge
B27. Cheong, P. H. (2020). Robots, religion and communication. Rethinking piety, practices and pedagogy in the era of Artificial Intelligence. In Isetti, G., Innerhofer, E., Pechlaner, H., de Rachewiltz, M. (eds.). Religion in the Age of Digitalization: From New Media to Spiritual Machines. London: Routledge. 86-96
B26. Cheong, P.H. (2018). Religion and the Internet. In B. L. Warf (Ed). The SAGE Encyclopedia of the Internet. (pp. 725-732) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
B25. Cheong, P.H. (2018). Church digital applications and the communicative meso-micro interplay: Building religious authority and community through everyday organizing. In Radde-Antweiler, K. & Zeiler, X. (Eds). Mediatized Religion in Asia: Studies on Digital Media and Religion. (pp. 105-117) London, UK: Routledge.
B24. Cheong, P.H. (2016). Religious Authority and Social Media Branding in a Culture of Religious Celebrification. In S. Hoover (Ed). The Media and Religious Authority (pp. 81-104). PA: Penn State University Press.
B23. Cheong, P.H. & Arasa, D. (2015). Religion. In L. Cantoni & J. Danowski (Eds.) Handbooks of Communication Science. Vol 5. Communication and Technology, Pp. 455-466. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
B22. Cheong, P.H. & Chen, Y. (2015). Memetic Engagement as Middle Path Resistance: Contesting Mainland Chinese Immigration and Social Cohesion. In W. Chen & S. Reese (Eds.), Networked China: Global Dynamics of Digital Media and Civic Engagement, Pp. 93-124. NY: Routledge.
B21. Cheong P.H, Brummans H.J.M., Hwang J.M. (2015). Researching Religious Authority in Organizations from a Communicative Perspective: A Connective Online-Offline Approach. In Contractor S, Shakkour S (Ed.), Digital Methodologies in the Sociology of Religion, Pp 137-146, London: Bloomsbury.
B20. Cheong, P.H., Hwang, J.M. & Brummans, H.J.M. (2015). Transnational Immanence: The Autopoietic Co-Constitution of a Chinese Spiritual Organization through Mediated Communication. In W. Chen (Ed.), The Internet, social networks and civic engagement in Chinese societies, Pp. 7-25, New York, NY: Routledge.
B19. Cheong, P.H. (2014). Religion and the Internet: Understanding digital religion, social media and culture. In G. Laderman & L. Leon (Eds). Religion and American Cultures. An Encyclopedia of Traditions, Diversity and Popular Expressions, Pp. 1215-1236. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO.
B18. Cheong, P.H. (2014). Considering ethical tensions in transmedia culture. In B. Musa & J. Willis (Eds.), From Twitter to Tahrir Square. Ethics in social and new media communication.Volume 2 (pp 3-16). Santa Barbara, California: Praeger.
B17. Cheong, P.H. (2014). New Media and Terrorism. In M. Eid (Ed.), Exchanging terrorism oxygen for media airwaves: The age of terroredia. Pp. 184-197. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B16. Cheong, P.H. (2014). From cyberchurch to faith apps: Religion 2.0 on the rise? In A. Brazal, & V. A. Kochurani (Eds.), Feminist cyberethics in Asia. Religious discourses on human connectivity. Pp 141-160. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
B15. Lundry, C. & Cheong, P.H. (2013). Rumor, culture and strategic communication across old and new media. In G. Dalziel (Ed.), Rumors and communication in Asia in the Internet age, Pp 124-142. New York, NY: Routledge.
B14. Cheong, P.H. (2013). Authority. In H. Campbell (Ed.), Digital religion: Understanding religious practice in new media worlds. Pp 72-87. New York, NY: Routledge.
B13. Cheong, P.H. (2012). Intercultural dialectics and secondary divides: Understanding tensions in digitally mediated identities in multimodal research experiences. In R. Andrews, E. Borg, S.B. Davis, M. Domingo, J. England (Eds.), Sage Handbook of Digital Theses and Dissertations, Pp. 208-222. London, UK: Sage.
B12. Cheong, P.H. & Ess, C. (2012). Religion 2.0? Relational and hybridizing pathways in religion, social media and culture. In P.H. Cheong, P. Fischer-Nielsen, P., S. Gelfgren, & C. Ess. (Eds.), Digital religion, social media and culture: Perspectives, practices, futures. pp. 1-24. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B11. Cheong, P.H. (2012). Twitter of Faith: Understanding social media networking and microblogging rituals as religious practices. In P.H. Cheong, P. Fischer-Nielsen, P., S. Gelfgren, & C. Ess. (Eds.), Digital religion, social media and culture: Perspectives, practices, futures. pp. 191-206. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B10. Cheong, P.H., Martin, J.N. & Macfadyen, L. (2012). Mediated intercultural communication matters: Understanding new media, dialectics and social change. In P.H. Cheong, J.N. Martin, & L. Macfadyen, L. (Eds.), New Media and Intercultural Communication: Identity, Community and Politics. pp. 1-20. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B9. Cheong, P. H. & Martin, J. N. (2011). Bridging participation divides in e-learning: The case of an intercultural communication class. In C. Haythornwaite & R. Andrews (Eds.), E-learning: Theory and Practice, London, UK: Sage.
B8. Lundry, C. & Cheong, P.H. (2011). Rumors and strategic communication: The gendered construction and transmediation of a terrorist life story. In Kuhn, T. (Ed). Matters of Communication Political, Cultural and Technological Challenges to Communication. International Communication Association Theme Book Series, pp. 145-166, NJ: Hampton Press.
B7. Martin, J.N. & Cheong, P.H. (2011). Cultural Considerations of Online Pedagogy. In K. St Amant & S. Kelsey (Eds.), Computer-Mediated Communication across Cultures: International Interactions in Online Environments, pp. 283-311. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B6. Cheong, P. H., Hwang, J. M., Elbirt, B., Chen, H., Evans, C. & Woelfel, J. (2010). Media use as a function of identity: The role of self concept in media usage. In M. Hinner (Ed.), A Forum for General and Intercultural Business Communication. Vol. 6. The interrelationship of business and communication. pp. 365 - 381, Berlin: Peter Lang.
B5. Cheong, P. H. & Martin, J. N. (2009). Cultural implications of E-learning access (& divides): Teaching Intercultural communication courses Online. In B. A. Olaniran (Ed.). Cases on Successful E-Learning Practices in the Developed and Developing World: Methods for Global information Economy, (Pg. 78-91). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B4. Kluver, R., Detenber, B., Lee, W.P., Hameed, S.B.S. Chen, Y. & Cheong, P.H. (2008). The Internet and Religious Harmony in Singapore, In Lai, E. (Ed.) Religious Diversity in Singapore. (pp.434-456). Singapore: Institute of Policy Studies.
B3. Cheong, P.H. (2007). Youth civic participation: Investigating online and offline Engagement. In YouthSCOPE, Issue 2, (pp. 21-34). Singapore: National Youth Council.
B2. Cheong, P.H., & Wilkin, H.A (2005). The Internet for Hispanic immigrants: Health communication and the digital divides. In Allen, M. & Convalso, M. (Eds.), Internet research annual, Vol. 2, (pp. 101-114). New York: Peter Lang Publishers.
B1. Cheong, P.H., Wilkin, H.A., & Ball-Rokeach, S.J. (2004). Diagnosing the Communication Infrastructure in order to reach target audiences: A study of Hispanic communities in Los Angeles. In P. Whitten & D. Cook (Eds.), Understanding health communication technologies (pp. 101-110). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
B35. Cheong, P.H. & Campbell, H.A. (in press, 2024) Digital Religion Futures: Propositions and Complexities in the Now and Not Yet. In Campbell, H.A. & P.H. Cheong (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Digital Religion, Oxford University Press. . https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549803.001.0001
B34. Campbell, H. & Cheong, P.H. (in press, 2024). Introduction to the study of digital religion. In Campbell, H.A. & P.H. Cheong (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Digital Religion, Oxford University Press.https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549803.001.0001
B33. Cheong, P.H. (in press, 2024). Communicating sacred spaces: Religious authority, community and bounded automation in virtual worlds. In L. Kong, O. Woods, & J. Tse (Eds.), The Handbook of the Geographies of Religion. Dordrecht: Springer.
B32. Cheong, P.H. & Chen, Y. (2023). Religious human-machine communication: Practices, Power, and Prospects. In A. Guzman, McEwen, R. & Jones, S. (Eds.), The SAGE Human-Machine Communication Handbook (p.555-561). UK, London: Sage.
B31. Cheong, P. H. & Mossberger, K. (2022). Voicing the future: Folk epistemic understandings of Smart and datafied Lives. In Katz, J., Floyd, J. & Schiepers, K. (Eds.), Perceiving the future through new communication technologies. Robots, AI & Everyday life (p. 195-208). Palgrave Macmillan, Switzerland.
B30. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Authority. In H. Campbell & Tsuria, R. (Eds). In Digital Religion: Understanding Religious Practice in Digital Worlds, 2nd Ed. (p. 87-102). UK, Oxfordshire: Routledge.
B29. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Data, discernment & duty: Illuminating engagement in the Internet of Things. In K. Callaway & Bolger, R. (Eds). Techno-Sapiens in a networked era. (p.77-98). Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock Publishers.
B28. Cheong, P.H. (2021). Religious datafication: Platforms, practices and power. In Radde-Antweiler, K. & Zeiler, X. (Eds). The Routledge Handbook of Religion and Journalism. (p.397-410). London, UK: Routledge
B27. Cheong, P. H. (2020). Robots, religion and communication. Rethinking piety, practices and pedagogy in the era of Artificial Intelligence. In Isetti, G., Innerhofer, E., Pechlaner, H., de Rachewiltz, M. (eds.). Religion in the Age of Digitalization: From New Media to Spiritual Machines. London: Routledge. 86-96
B26. Cheong, P.H. (2018). Religion and the Internet. In B. L. Warf (Ed). The SAGE Encyclopedia of the Internet. (pp. 725-732) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
B25. Cheong, P.H. (2018). Church digital applications and the communicative meso-micro interplay: Building religious authority and community through everyday organizing. In Radde-Antweiler, K. & Zeiler, X. (Eds). Mediatized Religion in Asia: Studies on Digital Media and Religion. (pp. 105-117) London, UK: Routledge.
B24. Cheong, P.H. (2016). Religious Authority and Social Media Branding in a Culture of Religious Celebrification. In S. Hoover (Ed). The Media and Religious Authority (pp. 81-104). PA: Penn State University Press.
B23. Cheong, P.H. & Arasa, D. (2015). Religion. In L. Cantoni & J. Danowski (Eds.) Handbooks of Communication Science. Vol 5. Communication and Technology, Pp. 455-466. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
B22. Cheong, P.H. & Chen, Y. (2015). Memetic Engagement as Middle Path Resistance: Contesting Mainland Chinese Immigration and Social Cohesion. In W. Chen & S. Reese (Eds.), Networked China: Global Dynamics of Digital Media and Civic Engagement, Pp. 93-124. NY: Routledge.
B21. Cheong P.H, Brummans H.J.M., Hwang J.M. (2015). Researching Religious Authority in Organizations from a Communicative Perspective: A Connective Online-Offline Approach. In Contractor S, Shakkour S (Ed.), Digital Methodologies in the Sociology of Religion, Pp 137-146, London: Bloomsbury.
B20. Cheong, P.H., Hwang, J.M. & Brummans, H.J.M. (2015). Transnational Immanence: The Autopoietic Co-Constitution of a Chinese Spiritual Organization through Mediated Communication. In W. Chen (Ed.), The Internet, social networks and civic engagement in Chinese societies, Pp. 7-25, New York, NY: Routledge.
B19. Cheong, P.H. (2014). Religion and the Internet: Understanding digital religion, social media and culture. In G. Laderman & L. Leon (Eds). Religion and American Cultures. An Encyclopedia of Traditions, Diversity and Popular Expressions, Pp. 1215-1236. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO.
B18. Cheong, P.H. (2014). Considering ethical tensions in transmedia culture. In B. Musa & J. Willis (Eds.), From Twitter to Tahrir Square. Ethics in social and new media communication.Volume 2 (pp 3-16). Santa Barbara, California: Praeger.
B17. Cheong, P.H. (2014). New Media and Terrorism. In M. Eid (Ed.), Exchanging terrorism oxygen for media airwaves: The age of terroredia. Pp. 184-197. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B16. Cheong, P.H. (2014). From cyberchurch to faith apps: Religion 2.0 on the rise? In A. Brazal, & V. A. Kochurani (Eds.), Feminist cyberethics in Asia. Religious discourses on human connectivity. Pp 141-160. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
B15. Lundry, C. & Cheong, P.H. (2013). Rumor, culture and strategic communication across old and new media. In G. Dalziel (Ed.), Rumors and communication in Asia in the Internet age, Pp 124-142. New York, NY: Routledge.
B14. Cheong, P.H. (2013). Authority. In H. Campbell (Ed.), Digital religion: Understanding religious practice in new media worlds. Pp 72-87. New York, NY: Routledge.
B13. Cheong, P.H. (2012). Intercultural dialectics and secondary divides: Understanding tensions in digitally mediated identities in multimodal research experiences. In R. Andrews, E. Borg, S.B. Davis, M. Domingo, J. England (Eds.), Sage Handbook of Digital Theses and Dissertations, Pp. 208-222. London, UK: Sage.
B12. Cheong, P.H. & Ess, C. (2012). Religion 2.0? Relational and hybridizing pathways in religion, social media and culture. In P.H. Cheong, P. Fischer-Nielsen, P., S. Gelfgren, & C. Ess. (Eds.), Digital religion, social media and culture: Perspectives, practices, futures. pp. 1-24. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B11. Cheong, P.H. (2012). Twitter of Faith: Understanding social media networking and microblogging rituals as religious practices. In P.H. Cheong, P. Fischer-Nielsen, P., S. Gelfgren, & C. Ess. (Eds.), Digital religion, social media and culture: Perspectives, practices, futures. pp. 191-206. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B10. Cheong, P.H., Martin, J.N. & Macfadyen, L. (2012). Mediated intercultural communication matters: Understanding new media, dialectics and social change. In P.H. Cheong, J.N. Martin, & L. Macfadyen, L. (Eds.), New Media and Intercultural Communication: Identity, Community and Politics. pp. 1-20. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
B9. Cheong, P. H. & Martin, J. N. (2011). Bridging participation divides in e-learning: The case of an intercultural communication class. In C. Haythornwaite & R. Andrews (Eds.), E-learning: Theory and Practice, London, UK: Sage.
B8. Lundry, C. & Cheong, P.H. (2011). Rumors and strategic communication: The gendered construction and transmediation of a terrorist life story. In Kuhn, T. (Ed). Matters of Communication Political, Cultural and Technological Challenges to Communication. International Communication Association Theme Book Series, pp. 145-166, NJ: Hampton Press.
B7. Martin, J.N. & Cheong, P.H. (2011). Cultural Considerations of Online Pedagogy. In K. St Amant & S. Kelsey (Eds.), Computer-Mediated Communication across Cultures: International Interactions in Online Environments, pp. 283-311. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B6. Cheong, P. H., Hwang, J. M., Elbirt, B., Chen, H., Evans, C. & Woelfel, J. (2010). Media use as a function of identity: The role of self concept in media usage. In M. Hinner (Ed.), A Forum for General and Intercultural Business Communication. Vol. 6. The interrelationship of business and communication. pp. 365 - 381, Berlin: Peter Lang.
B5. Cheong, P. H. & Martin, J. N. (2009). Cultural implications of E-learning access (& divides): Teaching Intercultural communication courses Online. In B. A. Olaniran (Ed.). Cases on Successful E-Learning Practices in the Developed and Developing World: Methods for Global information Economy, (Pg. 78-91). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
B4. Kluver, R., Detenber, B., Lee, W.P., Hameed, S.B.S. Chen, Y. & Cheong, P.H. (2008). The Internet and Religious Harmony in Singapore, In Lai, E. (Ed.) Religious Diversity in Singapore. (pp.434-456). Singapore: Institute of Policy Studies.
B3. Cheong, P.H. (2007). Youth civic participation: Investigating online and offline Engagement. In YouthSCOPE, Issue 2, (pp. 21-34). Singapore: National Youth Council.
B2. Cheong, P.H., & Wilkin, H.A (2005). The Internet for Hispanic immigrants: Health communication and the digital divides. In Allen, M. & Convalso, M. (Eds.), Internet research annual, Vol. 2, (pp. 101-114). New York: Peter Lang Publishers.
B1. Cheong, P.H., Wilkin, H.A., & Ball-Rokeach, S.J. (2004). Diagnosing the Communication Infrastructure in order to reach target audiences: A study of Hispanic communities in Los Angeles. In P. Whitten & D. Cook (Eds.), Understanding health communication technologies (pp. 101-110). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.