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CNI SPRING 1997 TASK FORCE MEETING

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[CNI Spring '97 Icon]



Access to and Services for Federal Information
in the
Networked Environment


With the increasing use and availability of information technologies, there has been a significant change in how federal agencies disseminate government information. This change is resulting in new dissemination mechanisms, as well as new and changing user needs and expectations. As a result, the responsibilities and capacities of institutions that facilitate the flow of federal information to academic and citizen communities need to be rethought in this shifting environment.

"Access to and Services for Federal Information in the Networked Environment," an initiative of the Coalition for Networked Information, is a white paper that will guide higher education and other institutions, such as public and state libraries, in the development of strategies for providing access to federal government information by their constituencies using the powerful, and rapidly expanding global information infrastructure.

The paper primarily focuses on issues and models for collecting, preserving, providing access to, and providing services for federal government information. It addresses these issues at the enterprise-wide or institutional level. The paper also summarizes policy and technical directions to provide a framework for understanding the issues involved.


Background

For the last ten years the federal government's focus on accountability, budget management, and the potential of rapidly developing information and communications has resulted in the development of policies and practices which are significantly changing how agencies create, produce, and disseminate their data, information, and knowledge. The pace of change has quickened in the last five years and will continue to do so between now and the end of the century. This shift is producing both opportunities and challenges for institutions who collect and service federal information.


The Problem

The problem is that what has been a stable, well-known system is now in flux and the local institutional investments which have supported providing access to and use of federal information are increasingly out of sync with the future of federal information.


What This Report Covers

The important issue focuses on how local institutions can adapt their own policies and strategic investments -- as well as how to have ongoing discussions with federal agencies in order to build complementary programs.


Main Recommendations

There are three overall recommendations:

The major recommendations in the paper are:

A draft of the paper is available for comment at: <http://www.cni.org/>.



©1997 by the Coalition for Networked Information
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


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