Information policy is the development of guidelines, rules, and principles (among other things) to manage information flows in support of particular ends and interests, as well guide human behavior in analog and digital life. Intrigued? Read on and ponder whether or not this course is a good fit with your personal interests and professional pathway.
Faculty and Staff
Associate Faculty, Rachel Williams, Wins Dissertation Award
The department congratulates Rachel Williams for winning this year’s Jesse H. Shera Award for Dissertation Research.
Copeland is co-editor for “Participatory Heritage”
How can heritage institutions work with their communities to build broader, more inclusive, and culturally relevant collections? Professor Andrea Copeland is co-editor for Participatory Heritage, a new volume of selected international case studies that addresses the question. Copeland, associate professor in the Department of Library and Information Science at the Indiana University School of Informatics and… Read more »
Annette Lamb, a Senior Lecturer in LIS Published Two Articles
Annette Lamb, a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Library and Information Science published two articles in the February 2017 issue of Teacher Librarian: The Journal for School Library Professionals. The first article titled “A Collection of Digital Collections and More” describes a variety of digital collections across content areas of interest to K-12 students… Read more »
Senior Lecturer Lamb Publishes “Debunking the librarian ‘gene’”
Senior Lecturer Annette Lamb published a paper in the Winter 2017 issue of the Journal of Education for Library and Information Science (JELIS).