Hernon, P.; Relyea, H.C.: Information policy: United States (2009)
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- Abstract
- Information policy, a field encompassing both public policy and information science, treats information as both a commodity-adheres to the economic theory of property rights-and a resource to be collected, protected, shared, manipulated, and managed. Although the literature often refers to information policy in the singular, there is no single all-encompassing policy. Rather, information policies tend to address specific issues and, at times, to be fragmented, overlapping, and contradictory.
- Source
- Encyclopedia of library and information sciences. 3rd ed. Ed.: M.J. Bates