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The Information Society, Volume 1
Volume 1, Number 1, 1981
- Paul Sieghart:
The International Implications of the Development of Microelectronics. 1-15 - Jaques G. Maisonrouge:
Regulation of international information flows. 17-30 - Mary Gardiner Jones:
Telecommunications technologies: New approaches to consumer information dissemination. 31-52 - William E. Colby:
Intelligence in the 1980s. 53-69 - Edwin B. Parker:
Information services and economic growth. 71-78 - Oswald H. Ganley:
Political aspects of communications and information resources in Canada. 79-89
Volume 1, Number 2, 1981
- Wilson P. Dizard:
The coming information age. 91-112 - Gerry P. Sweeney:
Telematics and development. 113-132 - Joseph Becker:
New departures in scientific and technical communication. 133-142 - Kent Hall:
The economic nature of information. 143-166
Volume 1, Number 3, 1982
- Anne Wells Branscomb:
Beyond deregulation: Designing the information infrastructure. 167-190 - Sena Hoosenally Black, Donald A. Marchand:
Assessing the value of information in organizations: A challenge for the 1980s. 191-225 - Robert T. Smythe:
H.R. 3137 and the search for national information policy. 227-248 - Martin M. Cummings:
Medical information services: For public good or private profit? 249-260
- Enid Mumford:
Comment: The information society: The risks and benefits of microelectronic applications. 275-280
Volume 1, Number 4, 1982
- Richard C. Beaird:
Communications: Commerce and culture. 281-305 - Robert M. Hayes, Timothy Erickson:
Added value as a function of purchases of information services. 307-338 - Burt Nanus:
Developing strategies for the information society. 339-356 - David L. Holzman:
The elusive office automation benefits. 357-373
- Liam J. Bannon:
Report on the conference "information technology: Impact on the way of life". 375-378
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