Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
List of Figures and Tables
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction and Overview
Chapter 2: The Evolution of the Digital Society
Chapter 3: Defining Digital Literacy and Digital Inclusion
Chapter 4: Public Policy, Literacy, and Inclusion
Chapter 5: Libraries as Institutions of Digital Literacy and
Inclusion
Chapter 6: Models of Digital Inclusion: South Korea, the
Netherlands, and Australia
Chapter 7: Moving Toward Digital Inclusion: Colombia, Honduras, and
Ghana
Chapter 8: Recommendations for Policy, Practice, Advocacy, and
Research
References
About the Authors
Kim M. Thompson, PhD, is lecturer in the School of Information
Studies of the Charles Sturt University and an affiliate faculty
member of Information Policy and Access Center (iPAC) in the
College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland. Her
research and teaching focus on information poverty and the
physical, intellectual, and socio-cultural supports for and
barriers to information access. Her articles are found in the
Journal of Documentation, Public Library Quarterly, Library
Quarterly, and Library and Information Science Research, among
others.
Paul T. Jaeger, PhD, JD, is associate professor and diversity
officer of the College of Information Studies and co-director of
the Information Policy and Access Center at the University of
Maryland. He is the author of more than one hundred and thirty
journal articles and book chapters. This is his ninth book. His
other recent books include Information Worlds: Social Context,
Technology, and Information Behavior in the Age of the Internet
with Gary Burnett; and Public Libraries and the Internet: Roles,
Perspectives, and Implications. Dr. Jaeger is co-editor of Library
Quarterly and the Information Policy Book Series from MIT Press,
and associate editor of Government Information Quarterly.
Natalie Greene Taylor is a research associate and doctoral
candidate of the Information Policy and Access Center (iPAC) in the
College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland. She
has published articles in Library and Information Science Research,
Public Library Quarterly, Information Polity, and International
Journal of Public Administration in the Digital Age, among
others.
Mega Subramaniam, PhD, is assistant professor and associate
director of the Information Policy and Access Center (iPAC) in the
College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland. She
is the co-editor of School Library Research, and she has published
articles in Library Quarterly, School Library Research, Library
Trends, Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, and many
more.
John Carlo Bertot, PhD, is professor and co-director of the
Information Policy and Access Center in the College of Information
Studies at the University of Maryland. He is president of the
Digital Government Society of North America and serves as chair of
the International Standards Organization’s Library Performance
Indicator (ISO 11620). Bertot is editor of Government Information
Quarterly and Co-Editor of Library Quarterly.
[T]his is a valuable book for policy makers, . . . [and] for those
who help influence policy as well as put policy into action, like
state libraries, federal agencies, and state and national library
organizations.
*Library Preservation 2*
This book is an important and invaluable resource for library
staff, managers, planners and policy makers as well as teachers and
students. Digital literacy and digital inclusion are social justice
and human rights issues, and it is not simply a matter of providing
technology and assuming people will be able to use it. The unique
knowledge and skills of library staff are a central part of
protecting these rights.
*Australian Library Journal*
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