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Government Information Quarterly, Volume 19
Volume 19, Number 1, 2002
- John A. Shuler:

Libraries and government information: the past is not necessarily prologue. 1-7 - Harold C. Relyea:

E-gov: introduction and overview. 9-35 - George Barnum:

Availability, access, authenticity, and persistence: Creating the environment for permanent public access to electronic government information. 37-43 - Richard J. Cox:

America's pyramids: Presidents and their libraries. 45-75 - Patrick Birkinshaw:

Freedom of information in the UK and Europe: Further progress? 77-86 - William Sleeman:

It's not all on the net: Identifying, preserving and protecting rare and unique federal documents. 87-97
Volume 19, Number 2, 2002
- Peter Johan Lor

, Adri van As:
Work in progress: Developing policies for access to government information in the New South Africa. 101-121 - Juris Dilevko, Lisa Gottlieb:

Subject access to government documents in an era of globalization: Intellectual bundling of entities affected by the decisions of supranational organizations1. 123-145 - Vinod Kumar, Bharat Maheshwari, Uma Kumar

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ERP systems implementation: best practices in Canadian government organizations. 147-172 - Christopher S. Thompson:

Enlisting on-line residents: Expanding the boundaries of e-government in a Japanese rural township. 173-188 - Tain Sue Jan, Fu Longe Tsai:

Government budget and accounting information policy and practice in Taiwan. 189-200 - Tiffeni J. Fontno

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FirstGov http://www.firstgov.gov/. 203-206 - Lisa Pillow:

Government online: one-click access to 3, 400 federal and state Websites: ed. by John Maxymuk, 2001, 323 pages, $75.00, Neal-Schuman Publishers, ISBN 1-55570-416-6. 207 - Valerie D. Glenn:

Copyright in Cyberspace: Questions and Answers for Librarians: Gretchen McCord Hoffman; New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, 2001. xvii, 264 pp. (Neal-Schuman NetGuide series). $55.00 (paper) ISBN 1-55570-410-7. 207-208 - Ben Amata:

New England in U.S. Government Publications 1789-1849: An Annotated Bibliography: Suzanne M. Clark; Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1998. xv, 598 pp. $125.00 (cloth). ISBN 0-313-281218-9. 209-210 - Suzanne L. Holcombe:

The White House Web Site. Washington, DC. Visited February 2002.<http: //www.whitehouse.gov/>. 210-212
Volume 19, Number 3, 2002
- Harold C. Relyea:

Homeland security and information. 213-223 - Jeffrey W. Seifert:

The effects of September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on public and private information infrastructures: a preliminary assessment of lessons learned. 225-242 - L. Elaine Halchin:

Electronic government in the age of terrorism. 243-254 - Robert Gellman:

Perspectives on privacy and terrorism: all is not lost - yet. 255-264 - Lotte E. Feinberg:

Homeland security: implications for information policy and practice - first appraisal. 265-288 - J. Timothy Sprehe, Charles R. McClure, Philip Zellner:

The role of situational factors in managing U.S. federal recordkeeping. 289-305 - Giovanna Patterson, J. Timothy Sprehe:

Principal challenges facing electronic records management in federal agencies today. 307-315 - Paul T. Jaeger, Charles R. McClure, Bruce T. Fraser:

The structures of centralized governmental privacy protection: approaches, models, and analysis. 317-336 - Charles D. Bernholz:

Understanding state constitutions: G. Alan Tarr, Princeton, NJ: Princeton university press, 1998, $16.95, 247 pp., ISBN: 0-691-07066-0. 343-344 - Diane Bradley:

Locating United States Government Information: A Guide to Sources: 2nd edition. Edward Herman; Buffalo, N.Y.: William S. Hein & Co., Inc., 1997, 580 pp. $68.00 (includes 2001 supplement). (hardcover). ISBN: 1-57588-203-5. 344-346 - Claudene Sproles:

Social responsibility in the information age: issues and controversies: Gurpreet Dhillion, editor; Hershey, PA: Idea publishing group, 2001, 272 pp. $74.95 (hardcover). ISBN: 1-930708-11-4. 346-347
Volume 19, Number 4, 2002
- Duncan Aldrich, John Carlo Bertot, Charles R. McClure:

E-Government: initiatives, developments, and issues. 349-355 - Paul T. Jaeger:

Constitutional principles and E-government: an opinion about possible effects of Federalism and the separation of powers on E-government policies. 357-368 - Philip Doty, Sanda Erdelez

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Information micro-practices in Texas rural courts: methods and issues for e-government. 369-387 - Robert D. Carlitz, Rosemary W. Gunn:

Online rulemaking: a step toward E-governance. 389-405 - Ron Sepic, Kate Kase:

The national biological information infrastructure as an E-government tool. 407-424 - Ben Amata:

Encyclopedia of the U.S. Census: Margo J. Anderson (Editor). Washington D.C.: CQ Press, 2000. xxiv, 324 pp. $125.00 (cloth). ISBN 1-56802-428-2. 427-428 - Suzanne L. Holcombe:

Environmental Information Systems in Industry and Public Administration: Claus Rautenstrauch and Susanne Patig, Hershey, PA: Idea Group Publishing, 2001, 436 p., $119.95 (cloth). ISBN 1-930708-02-5. 428-430 - Faye Couture:

Telecommuting and Virtual Offices: Issues & Opportunities: Nancy J. Johnson; Hershey, [PA]: Idea Group Publishing, 2001, 255 pp. [includes index] $34.98 (paperback), ISBN 1-87829879-9. LC 00-047192. 430-431 - Charles D. Bernholz:

The Interstate 40 bridge collapse at Webbers Falls web site: Oklahoma Department of Libraries. Visited August 2002. http: //www.odl.state.ok.us/usinfo/topiclists/us-i40.htM. 431-432 - Denise Arial Dorris:

The National Security Archive web site: http: //www.gwu.edu/∼nsarchiv/. 432-434

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