Information Commons have successfully served as platforms for innovations in facilities and service programs within libraries over the past 2 decades. In this article, the author makes a series of points concerning the significance and meaning of the Information Commons as a trend, including the strength of the concept as a bridge between the past and future of libraries, limitations in perceptions concerning Information Commons, and the ways that the trend may play out in the future
There was a time when working in the information industry as known to libraries was relatively predi...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to question whether, in an increasingly commercialised “24/7...
Edited by Charles Forrest, Martin Halbert. Includes a chapter by former College at Brockport faculty...
The spontaneous appearance of facilities and services termed “Information Commons” in many major aca...
First established in the United States in the 1990’s, the information commons (IC) has become a comm...
That the practice of libraries and librarianship is changing is an understatement. Throughout their ...
The academic literature the first portion of this paper discusses includes scholarly commentaries on...
No longer an innovation, the information commons has become a mainstream approach in U.S. academic l...
Innovation implies the opening of new ideas, methods, and techniques applied to any organization for...
Journal ArticleFor much of the 20th century libraries were known and valued for their collections, a...
The information commons (IC) strives to unite both electronic and traditional library resources to p...
With the advent of the new Knowledge Society, special libraries need to review user zones and servic...
Once an innovative idea but now a standard feature of many academic libraries, the information comm...
This paper reviews “information commons” concepts and describes administrative and functional integr...
Innovation is widely considered to be an essential component of a successful library, but what does ...
There was a time when working in the information industry as known to libraries was relatively predi...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to question whether, in an increasingly commercialised “24/7...
Edited by Charles Forrest, Martin Halbert. Includes a chapter by former College at Brockport faculty...
The spontaneous appearance of facilities and services termed “Information Commons” in many major aca...
First established in the United States in the 1990’s, the information commons (IC) has become a comm...
That the practice of libraries and librarianship is changing is an understatement. Throughout their ...
The academic literature the first portion of this paper discusses includes scholarly commentaries on...
No longer an innovation, the information commons has become a mainstream approach in U.S. academic l...
Innovation implies the opening of new ideas, methods, and techniques applied to any organization for...
Journal ArticleFor much of the 20th century libraries were known and valued for their collections, a...
The information commons (IC) strives to unite both electronic and traditional library resources to p...
With the advent of the new Knowledge Society, special libraries need to review user zones and servic...
Once an innovative idea but now a standard feature of many academic libraries, the information comm...
This paper reviews “information commons” concepts and describes administrative and functional integr...
Innovation is widely considered to be an essential component of a successful library, but what does ...
There was a time when working in the information industry as known to libraries was relatively predi...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to question whether, in an increasingly commercialised “24/7...
Edited by Charles Forrest, Martin Halbert. Includes a chapter by former College at Brockport faculty...