1st Edition

The Economics of Information in the Networked Environment

Edited By Meredith A. Butler, Bruce R. Kingma Copyright 1998
    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this book, first published in 1998, world-renowned experts on the subject of contemporary librarianship analyse the problems associated with coping with an ever-expanding knowledge base, given their current economic constraints and budgets. It examines challenging marketplace solutions to problems in the economics of information; economic modelling of investments in information resources at academic institutions; the economics of resource sharing, consortia, and document delivery; and measuring the costs and benefits of distance learning.

    1. Information Technology and the Transformation of the University David P. Roselle  2. Costs and Benefits of Investments in Technology: How Can Technology Serve the Public Interest? Mario Morino  3. JSTOR and the Economics of Scholarly Communication William G. Bowen  4. The Economics of Information Roger Noll  5. The Economics of the Internet and Academia Hal Varian  6. The Economics of University Investments in Information Resources Michael McPherson  7. Funding Social Science Data Archiving and Services in the Networked Environment Richard C. Rockwell  8. Building the Distributed North American Collection for Foreign Languages Burkart Holzner  9. The Economics of Resource Sharing, Consortia, and Document Delivery Meredith A. Butler  10. The Economics of Access versus Ownership: The Costs and Benefits of Access to Scholarly Articles via Interlibrary Loan and Journal Subscriptions Bruce R. Kingma  11. Can E-Journals Save Us?: A Publisher's View Lorrin R. Garson  12. Can E-Journals Save Us?: A Scholar's View James O’Donnell  13. Economic Considerations for Digital Libraries: A Library of Congress Perspective Hiram L. Davis  14. Cost Centers and Measures in the Networked Information Value-Chain Paul Evan Peters  15. This Little User Went to Market, This Little User Stayed Home: What Users, Potential Users, and Nonusers Can Tell Us Ann P. Bishop  16. Measuring Costs and Benefits of Distance Learning James H. Ryan  17. The Need for Collaboration to Build the Knowledge Infrastructure Richard P. West

    Biography

    Meredith A. Butler, Bruce R. Kingma