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Heather Hill

Researcher at University of Western Ontario

Publications -  28
Citations -  323

Heather Hill is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Collection development & Critical realism (philosophy of perception). The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 26 publications receiving 299 citations. Previous affiliations of Heather Hill include University of Missouri.

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Disability and accessibility in the library and information science literature: A content analysis

TL;DR: The authors identified the major issues and trends in the research about accessibility and disability in the LIS literature throughout a 10-year period, 2000-2010, and found that the strongest theme in the literature is accessibility as it relates to web, database, and software, while the prevailing disability of focus is visual disabilities.
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Critical Theory for Library and Information Science Exploring the Social from Across the Disciplines

TL;DR: This critical theory for library and information science exploring the social from across the disciplines library and Information science text tends to be the representative book in this website.
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Beyond traditional publishing models: An examination of the relationships between authors, readers, and publishers

TL;DR: The structure of this process is compared with Robert Darnton’s communications circuit in order to propose a new model for the publication of Fifty Shades of Grey.
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Inquiring into the Real: A Realist Phenomenological Approach

TL;DR: The ontology underlying the realist phenomenological approach recognizes, following Bhaskar, intransitive and transitive objects of knowledge (mind-independent reality and individual and social perceptions of that reality) as discussed by the authors.
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Ontario Public Libraries, Accessibility, and Justice: A Capability Approach / Les bibliothèques publiques en Ontario : une approche de l'accessibilité et de la justice selon les capacités

TL;DR: The Access for Ontarians with Disabilities Act is developing standards for accessibility across the province of Ontario as discussed by the authors and the Canadian Library Association has had service standards in place since 1997, so addressing accessibility in Ontario libraries is nothing new.