The ongoing expansion of electronic publication and dissemination of federal government information in Canada has prompted a study of the state of readiness of depository libraries to adopt the new technologies. Reported here are findings regarding current use of different publication formats, type of help sought by users, staff skills and training needs, adequacy of physical and financial resources, support from governing bodies, and perceived changes to come. There is a significant degree of uncertainty among depositories about the future use of government information available primarily in electronic form
A look at how the advent of the World Wide Web and transition to primarily electronic distribution o...
The new frontier of electronic access was fully explored in the past year. Government agency “gopher...
Depository libraries have traditionally enjoyed a pretty sweet deal—we receive free copies of docume...
Increasingly, federal government departments in Canada are publishing and disseminating official inf...
information, electronic access to government information Abstract: This paper provides a librarian’...
This past year, as the very nature of government information and its distribution continues to evolv...
Public access to government information forms the foundation of a healthy liberal democracy. Because...
Access to government information varies widely and is, in many cases, changing rapidly. This present...
Rapid technological change has caused some to question the need for the Federal Depository Library P...
As government documents, including periodicals, distributed through the Federal Depository Library P...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Electronic dis...
The Government Printing Office (GPO) has a new vision of disseminating electronic information which ...
A presentation on depository libraries discussing public access to government publications, US docum...
Canada's national science library, the National Research Council Canada Institute for Scientific and...
Government information traditionally published in printed form is increasingly appearing on federal ...
A look at how the advent of the World Wide Web and transition to primarily electronic distribution o...
The new frontier of electronic access was fully explored in the past year. Government agency “gopher...
Depository libraries have traditionally enjoyed a pretty sweet deal—we receive free copies of docume...
Increasingly, federal government departments in Canada are publishing and disseminating official inf...
information, electronic access to government information Abstract: This paper provides a librarian’...
This past year, as the very nature of government information and its distribution continues to evolv...
Public access to government information forms the foundation of a healthy liberal democracy. Because...
Access to government information varies widely and is, in many cases, changing rapidly. This present...
Rapid technological change has caused some to question the need for the Federal Depository Library P...
As government documents, including periodicals, distributed through the Federal Depository Library P...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Electronic dis...
The Government Printing Office (GPO) has a new vision of disseminating electronic information which ...
A presentation on depository libraries discussing public access to government publications, US docum...
Canada's national science library, the National Research Council Canada Institute for Scientific and...
Government information traditionally published in printed form is increasingly appearing on federal ...
A look at how the advent of the World Wide Web and transition to primarily electronic distribution o...
The new frontier of electronic access was fully explored in the past year. Government agency “gopher...
Depository libraries have traditionally enjoyed a pretty sweet deal—we receive free copies of docume...