The Electronic Library: Volume 21 Issue 5

Digital information organization and use

Subject:

Table of contents

The impact of IT on indigenous peoples

Loriene Roy, David Raitt

This Special Issue of The Electronic Library on the “Impact of information technology on indigenous peoples” gathers articles from several different countries and cultures in an…

1842

Digital libraries: barriers or gateways to scholarly information?

Alex Byrne

Unprecedented desktop access to scholarly information has been made possible by the introduction of digital libraries. The powerful combination of digital publications, specialist…

2418

Perspectives on tribal archives

Loriene Roy, Daniel L. Alonzo

Tribal archives are an essential resource for documenting cultural history. This article explores the essential archival functions of a tribal repository and addresses special…

2748

Native American technology access: the Gates Foundation in Four Corners

Andrew C. Gordon, Margaret Gordon, Jessica Dorr

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Native American Access to Technology Program (NAATP) was designed to provide computer and Internet access to Native peoples in the Four…

1161

School‐museum partnerships for culturally responsive teaching

Mark Christal

A dissertation study combined four case studies that examined school‐museum partnerships for virtual museum projects in which students did virtual reality imaging of museum…

1477

Indians on the Internet – selected Native American Web sites

Lisa Mitten

Native Americans made an early appearance on the Internet in 1994. The number of Indian‐run Web sites about Native American issues, histories and cultures continues to expand. Web…

843

American Indian tribal Web sites: a review and comparison

Cokie Gaston Anderson

Many Native American tribes have Web sites, but the content of these sites varies depending on a number of factors, including the audience, purpose and context of the site…

823

Maori access to information technology

Brett Parker

The extent of Internet access is a key indicator of the Maori people’s ability to use information technologies for social, e‐commerce and e‐government communication. The key…

1838

Iwi archivists as recordmakers?

Sandra Falconer

This paper is a brief summary of a presentation and the ensuing discussion that was part of a workshop on recent developments in iwi (tribal) archives at the LIANZA Conference…

1318

Te Mata o te Tai – the edge of the tide: rising capacity in information technology of Maori in Aotearoa‐New Zealand

Robyn Kamira

This paper argues that one can extract relevant lessons in the information technology era from one’s colonial past. One such lesson is to understand how information technologies…

1356

Impact of ICT‐based distance learning: the African story

Pieter A. van Brakel, Justin Chisenga

Neither distance learning courses nor utilising information and communication technologies (ICT) to enhance these courses are new to sub‐Saharan Africa. “Long‐distance” training…

4714

A survey of cybercafés in Delta State, Nigeria

Esharenana E. Adomi, Rose B. Okiy, Josiah O. Ruteyan

This article surveys the cybercafés in Delta State, Nigeria. By means of questionnaires and observation techniques, data were collected from the cybercafés. Frequency counts and…

752
Cover of The Electronic Library

ISSN:

0264-0473

Online date, start – end:

1983

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Open Access:

hybrid

Editors:

  • Prof. Jeonghyun Kim
  • Assistant Prof Haihua Chen
  • Ms Marie Bloechle