Evolving paradigms in the networked world and their implications for information management in African libraries
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Date
2008Author
Mutula, S.M.
Publisher
Archlib and Information Services, http:www.hwwilson.com/journals;http://www.ajol.infoType
Published ArticleMetadata
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The networked world is characterised by the
ubiquity and ever increasing application of
Information and Communications Technologies
(ICTs) in various sectors of an economy,
including education, government, libraries,
businesses, healthcare and homes. The
networked world generates and moves large
amounts of electronic information in the form
of text, video, audio, graphics, and animations.
A networked world affords opportunities for
people, for example, to use e-mail for
communication, use Web portals to access
government information, access digital libraries
from any point with a Web connection, and
undertake formal and lifelong learning
electronically. The evolving networked world has
fuelled several paradigm shifts that are greatly
impacting the way information and knowledge
are created and managed. These paradigm shifts
include information society, e-government,
digital divide, and e-learning/digital scholarship.
This paper provides an overview of the paradigm
shifts sweeping the information landscape in the
networked world and the implications for the
creation and management of information,
especially in African libraries