default search action
The Information Society, Volume 5
Volume 5, Number 1, 1987
- Robert M. Warner:
Preface. 1
- Carolyn O. Frost:
IntroductionPolicy issues in knowledge and information access. 1-6
- Robert Lee Chartrand:
Public laws and public access. 7-18 - J. Timothy Sprehe:
Federal policy on information access and dissemination. 19-24 - Kathleen M. Heim:
Information policy and the information professions. 25-33 - Carla J. Stoffle:
Knowledge access in the academic library. 35-40 - Richard W. Budd:
Limiting access to information: A view from the leeward side. 41-44 - Francis J. Buckley Jr.:
Knowledge access issues. 45-50
- J. J. Fitzsimmons:
CommentThe information millennium. 51-55
Volume 5, Number 2, 1987
- Donald O. Case, Everett Rogers:
The adoption and social impacts of information technology in U.S. agriculture. 57-66 - Kent A. Smith, Patricia E. Healy:
Transborder data flows: The transfer of medical and other scientific information by the united states. 67-75 - Clyde W. Holsapple, Andrew B. Whinston:
Knowledge-based organizations. 77-90 - Gerry P. Sweeney:
The entrepreneurial firm as a learning system in the information economy. 91-99 - Jens C. Arnbak:
Many voices, one structure: The challenge of telematics. 101-117 - Ed Downs:
A contextual view of development information technology. 119-132
Volume 5, Number 3, 1988
- Grant Noble:
The social significance of VCR technology: TV or not TV? 133-146 - Hans-Jürgen Engelbrecht:
Information resources in U.S. manufacturing: A reassessment. 147-159 - Lee Edwards:
Information protectionism: A clear and present danger? 161-168 - Jeffrey Hart:
The politics of global competition in the telecommunications industry. 169-201
Volume 5, Number 4, 1988
- Gerald P. Sweeney:
Introduction. 203-204
- Andre Piatier:
Transectorial innovations and the transformation of firms. 205-231 - Marianne Schatz-Bergfeld:
The northrhine-westphalia project: "Man and technology". 233-244 - Clio Presvelou:
The use of information technologies in dutch households. 245-264 - Raymond-Stone Iwaasa:
Convivial messaging systems: Startling facts and figures about electronic mail (messageries) for French households. 265-269
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.