Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Volume 15, Number 4, December 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Verna Urbanski
Volume 15, Number 4, December 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Verna Urbanski
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized December 1995 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
Volume 15, Number 3, September 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Vicki Toy-Smith, Verna Urbanski
Volume 15, Number 3, September 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Vicki Toy-Smith, Verna Urbanski
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized September 1995 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
Volume 15, Number 2, June 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Vicki Toy-Smith, Verna Urbanski
Volume 15, Number 2, June 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Vicki Toy-Smith, Verna Urbanski
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized June 1995 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
Volume 15, Number 1, March 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Verna Urbanski
Volume 15, Number 1, March 1995 Olac Newsletter, Sue Neumeister, Ian Fairclough, Barbara Vaughan, Verna Urbanski
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized March 1995 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
The Global Electronic Community: Modeling The Sociology Of Self-Organization, Joan Roca, William Ammentorp, Thomas Morgan
The Global Electronic Community: Modeling The Sociology Of Self-Organization, Joan Roca, William Ammentorp, Thomas Morgan
Library Services Publications
The revolution in telecommunications of the past decade has brought about fundamental changes in the patterns of professional communication. Internet and other electronic networks make it possible for geographically-dispersed individuals to engage in meaningful dialog concerning common problems. These exchanges result in a Global Electronic Community which is unique in human experience. This is a community that is truly self-organizing in that it can take on new forms momentarily. Consequently, it is a dynamic community with continually-changing membership and structure; a society populated with both human and electronic agents. It is, as a result, more complex in the roles its …