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Walter Maner
Sandra Braman, “Information and Socioeconomic Class in U. S. Constitutional Law,” Journal of Communication, Vol. 39, Summer 1989, pp. 163 – 179. Stewart Brand, The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at M I T, Penguin Books, New York, 1987. Jean Brunet and Serge Proulx, “Formal versus Grass-Roots Training: Women, Work and Computers,” Journal of Communication, Vol. 39, Summer 1989, pp. 77 – 84. F. J. Buckley, “Knowledge Access Issues,” Inf. Soc., Vol. 5, 1987, pp. 45 – 50. S. M. Chambers and V. A. Clarke, “Is Inequity Cumulative? The Relationship between Disadvantaged Group Membership and Students’ Computing Experience, Knowledge, Attitudes and Intentions,” J. Educ. Comput. Res., Vol. 3, 1987, pp. 495 – 518. B. Collis, H. Kass, and T. E. Kieren, “National Trends in Computer Use among Canadian Secondary School Students: Implications for Cross-cultural Analyses,” J. Res. Comput. Educ., Vol. 22, Fall 1989, pp. 77 – 89. Ronald Doctor, “Information Technologies and Social Equity: Confronting the Revolution,” Journal of the American Society for Information Science, May 1990. To appear. William H. Dutton, Everett M. Rogers, and Suk-Ho Jun, “Diffusion and Social Impacts of Personal Computers,” Communications Research, Vol. 14, pp 219 – 250. H. Tristram Englehardt, “Rights to Health Care,” The Foundations of Bioethics, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1986, pp. 336 – 374. K. E. Fleenor, “Computer (Technology) Equity for the Handicapped,” Computer Technology for the Handicapped: Applications T85, Closing the Gap, Minneapolis, MN, 1986. Andrew Gillespie and Kevin Robins, “Geographical Inequalities: The Spatial Bias of the New Communication Technologies,” Journal of Communication, Vol. 39, Summer 1989, pp. 7 – 18. C. M. Gray, “Information Technocracy: Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy,” Inf. Technol. and Libr., Vol. 6, March 1987, pp. 3 – 9. K. M. Heim, “Information Policy and the Information Professions,” Inf. Soc., Vol. 5, 1987, pp. 25 – 33. Robert Kominski, “Computer Use in the United States: 1984,” Current Population Reports, Special Studies, Series P-23, No. 155, U. S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1988. Kathy Krendl, Mary C. Broihier, and Cynthia Fleetwood, “Children and Computers: Do Sex-Related Differences Persist?” Journal of Communication, Vol. 39, Summer 1989, pp. 85 – 93. J. C. Marshall and S. Bannon, “Race and Sex Equity in Computer Advertising,” J. Res. Comput. Educ., Vol. 21, Fall 1988, pp. 15 – 27. Michael E. Martinez and Nancy A. Mead, The Nation’s Report Card, Computer Competence: The First National Assessment, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N. J., 1988. John Rawls, A Theory of Justice, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1971. I. Reinecke, “Wealth and Poverty in the Information Society,” Challenges and Change: Australia’s Information Society, ed. T. Barr, Wollongong University Press, NSW, Australia, 1987. Frank Webster and Kevin Robins, Information Technology: A Luddite Analysis, Ablex Publishing, Norwood, N. J., 1986. Bernard Williams, “The Idea of Equality,” in Justice and Equality, ed. by Hugo Bedau, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1971, pp. 125 – 127 Go to: Overcoming the Barriers to Computer Use by Individuals Who Have Disabilities Home > Research Resources > Adaptive Technology > Equity and Access > Computer Access Equity |
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