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Main Author: Varlejs, Jana, Ed.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED379004
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author Varlejs, Jana, Ed.
author_facet Varlejs, Jana, Ed.
Varlejs, Jana, Ed.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Economics of Information in the 1990s. Proceedings of the Annual Symposium of the Graduate Alumni and Faculty of the Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies (31st, New Brunswick, New Jersey, April 15, 1994). Varlejs, Jana, Ed. Academic Libraries Access to Information Annotated Bibliographies Economic Impact Economics Electronics Government Publications Information Dissemination Information Storage Information Systems Information Technology Library Automation Resource Allocation Scholarly Writing Socioeconomic Influences Writing for Publication While the rapid evolution of electronic technology has made possible stunning advances in access to information, the price of adopting new systems and formats has forced major changes in how libraries allocate their resources. The 31st symposium of the graduate alumni and faculty of Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies addressed the impact of technology on the economics of producing, storing, and disseminating information, and, perhaps, the survival of libraries. Papers presented include: "Introduction: The Economics of Information Revisited" (Jana Varlejs); "Information Storage in Academic Libraries: Changing Fundamentals" (Malcolm Getz); "What Bang for the Buck: Costs and Beneficial Impacts of Library Operations" (Paul B. Kantor); "Changing Technology and Changing Markets: A Scholarly Publishing Perspective" (Janet D. Bailey); "The Government Information Market" (James P. Love); and "Costs and Values: The Politics of Economics" (Arthur Curley). A transcript from the panel and audience discussion is provided. A 65-item annotated bibliography offers leads to further discussion aspects of economics of information. (MAS)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED379004
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1995
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Economics of Information in the 1990s. Proceedings of the Annual Symposium of the Graduate Alumni and Faculty of the Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies (31st, New Brunswick, New Jersey, April 15, 1994).
Varlejs, Jana, Ed.
Academic Libraries
Access to Information
Annotated Bibliographies
Economic Impact
Economics
Electronics
Government Publications
Information Dissemination
Information Storage
Information Systems
Information Technology
Library Automation
Resource Allocation
Scholarly Writing
Socioeconomic Influences
Writing for Publication
The Economics of Information in the 1990s. Proceedings of the Annual Symposium of the Graduate Alumni and Faculty of the Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies (31st, New Brunswick, New Jersey, April 15, 1994). Varlejs, Jana, Ed. Academic Libraries Access to Information Annotated Bibliographies Economic Impact Economics Electronics Government Publications Information Dissemination Information Storage Information Systems Information Technology Library Automation Resource Allocation Scholarly Writing Socioeconomic Influences Writing for Publication While the rapid evolution of electronic technology has made possible stunning advances in access to information, the price of adopting new systems and formats has forced major changes in how libraries allocate their resources. The 31st symposium of the graduate alumni and faculty of Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies addressed the impact of technology on the economics of producing, storing, and disseminating information, and, perhaps, the survival of libraries. Papers presented include: "Introduction: The Economics of Information Revisited" (Jana Varlejs); "Information Storage in Academic Libraries: Changing Fundamentals" (Malcolm Getz); "What Bang for the Buck: Costs and Beneficial Impacts of Library Operations" (Paul B. Kantor); "Changing Technology and Changing Markets: A Scholarly Publishing Perspective" (Janet D. Bailey); "The Government Information Market" (James P. Love); and "Costs and Values: The Politics of Economics" (Arthur Curley). A transcript from the panel and audience discussion is provided. A 65-item annotated bibliography offers leads to further discussion aspects of economics of information. (MAS)
title The Economics of Information in the 1990s. Proceedings of the Annual Symposium of the Graduate Alumni and Faculty of the Rutgers School of Communication, Information and Library Studies (31st, New Brunswick, New Jersey, April 15, 1994).
topic Academic Libraries
Access to Information
Annotated Bibliographies
Economic Impact
Economics
Electronics
Government Publications
Information Dissemination
Information Storage
Information Systems
Information Technology
Library Automation
Resource Allocation
Scholarly Writing
Socioeconomic Influences
Writing for Publication
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED379004