Journal: Government Information Quarterly

Volume 21, Issue 1

1 -- 2John Carlo Bertot. New editorial board members
3 -- 23Sharon S. Dawes, Theresa A. Pardo, Anthony M. Cresswell. Designing electronic government information access programs: a holistic approach
24 -- 50David Landsbergen. Screen level bureaucracy: Databases as public records
51 -- 64Christopher G. Reddick. A two-stage model of e-government growth: Theories and empirical evidence for U.S. cities
65 -- 85Jody Condit Fagan, Bryan D. Fagan. An accessibility study of state legislative Web sites
86 -- 98Earl H. McKinney Jr.. Learning by fire: the learning challenges facing U.S. Forest Service aviation
99 -- 107Heather Lea Moulaison. The Minitel and France's legacy of democratic information access
108 -- 112Tim Barnes, John Dalton. Implementing a voluntary code on access to information: Nirex's practical experience
113 -- 115Charles R. McClure. United State Government Information: Policies and Sources: by Peter Hernon, Harold C. Relyea, Robert E. Dugan, and Joan F. Cheverie. Libraries Unlimited, 2002. xvii, 430 pp. CD Rom. $70.00 (Cloth), ISBN: 1-56308-978-5, $50.00 (Paperback), ISBN: 1-56308-979-3
115 -- 117Marcy M. Allen. Edgeless Cities: Exploring the Elusive Metropolis: By Robert E. Lang. Washington D.C. The Brookings Institution, 2003, 154 pp. $18.95 (paperback), ISBN 0-8157-0611-1
117 -- 118Valerie D. Glenn. Information Management: Challenges in Managing and Preserving Electronic Records: United States General Accounting Office, GAO-02-586, June 2002, 77 pp. http: //www.gao.gov/new.items/d02586.pdf
119 -- 121Charles D. Bernholz. The United States Department of the Interior Web site: Visited July 2003 http: //www.doi.gov/
121 -- 122Suzanne L. Holcombe. A Statistical History of the American Electorate: Jerrold G. Rusk. Washington, DC: CQ Press, a division of Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 2001, 708 pp. $75.00, ISBN 1-56802-364-2 (cloth), ISBN 1-56802-363-4 (paper)