The article elaborates on the informational relationship between nature, animals and humans. In traditional societies, nature and animals are rich sources of information and documentation, as seen in Sámi reindeer husbandry. Today, research on animal behaviour has shown that animals are capable of sophisticated communication with humans. In the field of documentation and information studies, Marcia Bates has made a significant contribution to this perspective. The article presents some of her concepts, and discusses their potential use in empirical research on documentation in the Sámi society
International audienceThis paper concerns what farmers have achieved in the way of animal identifica...
In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In ...
Without animals this planet would be a very different place, indeed many of the remaining life forms...
The article elaborates on the informational relationship between nature, animals and humans. In trad...
This article introduces a new class of socio-technical systems, interspecies information systems (II...
Animals are everywhere. Whether as pets, pests, sources of food, fuel, or materials for manufacture,...
Zooarchaeology—the study of the human past through animal remains—has often been said to demonstrate...
This target article has three parts. The first briefly reviews the thinking about nonhuman animals’ ...
This article poses the question ‘How do we look at animals?’, suggesting a link to inherent problems...
Scholars of globalization tend to write about humans. They are interested in the movements of and co...
This article explores the potential of giving animals a more prominent role in landscape studies. Th...
This dissertation wonders what non-human animals can illuminate about media in the visible contact z...
Purpose: While exploring the information experience within multispecies families, the subjective nat...
In this paper I explore the differences in the ways people write and talk about their relationships ...
Ishi, the “last wild Indian in North America,” was “discovered” in 1911 and spent the last years of ...
International audienceThis paper concerns what farmers have achieved in the way of animal identifica...
In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In ...
Without animals this planet would be a very different place, indeed many of the remaining life forms...
The article elaborates on the informational relationship between nature, animals and humans. In trad...
This article introduces a new class of socio-technical systems, interspecies information systems (II...
Animals are everywhere. Whether as pets, pests, sources of food, fuel, or materials for manufacture,...
Zooarchaeology—the study of the human past through animal remains—has often been said to demonstrate...
This target article has three parts. The first briefly reviews the thinking about nonhuman animals’ ...
This article poses the question ‘How do we look at animals?’, suggesting a link to inherent problems...
Scholars of globalization tend to write about humans. They are interested in the movements of and co...
This article explores the potential of giving animals a more prominent role in landscape studies. Th...
This dissertation wonders what non-human animals can illuminate about media in the visible contact z...
Purpose: While exploring the information experience within multispecies families, the subjective nat...
In this paper I explore the differences in the ways people write and talk about their relationships ...
Ishi, the “last wild Indian in North America,” was “discovered” in 1911 and spent the last years of ...
International audienceThis paper concerns what farmers have achieved in the way of animal identifica...
In 1951 Suzanne Briet wrote, with minimal explanation, that an antelope could become a document. In ...
Without animals this planet would be a very different place, indeed many of the remaining life forms...