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POLITICS OF INFORMATION

As you access and use information--especially electronic information-- in your research, it is important to understand some political and social issues that affect the availability of information to the public. Your ability to access information may be affected by how our society answers questions such as: "Who should have access to what information and at what price?", "Who owns or controls what information?", "Is there some information that should not be allowed to be published?", "What rights do you have to copy and use Internet resources?" or "What personal information about you is available to the public?"

Below are links to more information about these issues and questions.

Access to Information for All

Media Concentration, Public Relations & Advertising

Intellectual Freedom

Intellectual Property

Privacy & Human Rights

Background reading on several of the issues listed above:

Branscomb, Anne Wells. Who Owns Information: From Privacy to Public Access. N.Y.: BasicBooks, 1994. 

For more information on all the issues on this page, see the course web site for:

"The Politics of Information Access" - HON 201, Honors College, University of Illinois at Chicago - Instructors: Laura Quilter (lauramd@uic.edu) and Veronda Pitchford (vjpitch@uic.edu) - http://www.uic.edu/classes/hon/hon201/
 

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last revised: 10-23-01 by Eric Brenner, Skyline College, San Bruno, CA

These materials may be used for educational purposes if you inform and credit the author and cite the source as: LSCI 105 Computerized Research. All commercial rights are reserved. To contact the author, send comments or suggestions to: Eric Brenner at brenner@smcccd.cc.ca.us