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Information economics and policy: In the United States edited by Michael Rubin Libraries Unlimited, Littleton, CO 1983, 340 pp

Christopher Podmore
- 01 Sep 1984 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 3, pp 260-261
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This article is published in Telecommunications Policy.The article was published on 1984-09-01. It has received 496 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Information economics.

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Research Approaches to Mobile Use in the Developing World: A Review of the Literature

TL;DR: This paper reviews roughly 200 recent studies of mobile (cellular) phone use in the developing world, and identifies major concentrations of research, and categorizes studies along two dimensions.
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Innovation in the public sector: a systematic review and future research agenda

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate 181 articles and books on public sector innovation, published between 1990 and 2014, and develop an empirically based framework of potentially important antecedents and effects of public-sector innovation.
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An Empirical Examination of the Antecedents and Consequences of Contribution Patterns in Crowd-Funded Markets

TL;DR: It is found that the duration of funding and the degree of exposure that a pitch receives over the course of the funding process, are positively associated with readership upon the story’s publication, which appears to validate the widely held belief that a key benefit of the crowdfunding model is the potential it offers for awareness and attention-building around causes and ventures.
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The Digital Divide: Current and Future Research Directions

TL;DR: This paper examines both first and second order effects of the digital divide at three levels of analysis at the individual level, the organizational level, and the global level and suggests a series of research questions at each level of analysis to guide researchers seeking to further examine the digital Divide.
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The Digital Divide: The Role of Political Institutions in Technology Diffusion

TL;DR: This article found that the spread of the Internet has been driven by neither technological nor economic factors alone, but rather, political factors exert a powerful influence, such as groups that believe they will lose from the Internet using political institutions to enact policies that block the spread.