Wallace links current and historical works to the development of knowledge management concepts across domains and disciplines, demystifying this area of increasing intellectual import.
Chapter 1: The Nature Of Knowledge Chapter 2: Communities Of Practice Chapter 3: Organizational Learning And Learning Organizations Chapter 4: Intellectual Captial Chapter 5: Knowledge Sharing Chapter 6: Knowledge Represenatiion Chapter 7: Content Management Chapter 8: Taxonomies And Ontologies Chapter 9: Informatics And Information Technology Chapter 10: The Future Of Knowledge Management
Danny P. Wallace was professor, School of Library and Information Studies, University of Oklahoma, Norman. He was coeditor of RUSA Quarterly, coauthor of Library Evaluation (Libraries Unlimited, 1999), and served on ALA's accreditation committee.
"The strength of this book lies in the author's ability to pull
together diverse philosophies and multiple theories as they relate
to this new field called knowledge management. Wallace includes a
fair representation of philosophies and highlights the
contributions of each, using a writing style that is as simplified
as advanced academic-level material permits. Collapsed biographies
of philosophers are presented throughout the chapters, permitting
readers insight into events that may have influenced their lives
and thinking....This work recommends itself to library and
information science faculty, students, and practitioners, and is
considered required reading for courses in knowledge management. It
is also useful for people in the computer sciences and
human-computer interaction fields. Recommended. Upper-division
undergraduates through professionals." - Choice
"Wallace makes an important contribution to the knowledge
management (KM) literature by explicating KM within a rich
historical and multidisciplinary context. Organized by thematic
chapters ranging from epistemology to systems thinking and learning
organizations to taxonomies to KM itself, the book relies on key
papers for each. While some papers, like Adrianna Kezars work on
organizational learning, are omitted, overall Wallace is thorough.
Wallaces carefully detailed discussions and numerous references to
the primary KM literature in many disciplines make the book well
suited for a library science and/or KM textbook....Highly
recommended for library science, organizational development,
knowledge management, and related academic library collections." -
Library Journal
"Beginning with a discussion on the history of the use of the term
knowledge management, the author proceeds in great detail to
examine the literature of epistemology, especially as it relates to
organizing and disseminating knowledge for use. Each chapter begins
with key term definitions and is divided into easily digestible
chunks. This is for those interested in the theory of knowledge and
knowledge management." - Library Media Connection
"This collection of easy-to-understand essays on previously
published complex works from 1928 through 1999 is presented by a
professor in the School of Library and Information Studies at the
University of Oklahoma, making the field approachable for novices.
This work is intended for all students of knowledge management and
closely related fields as well as knowledge management
practitioners who want to place the field in context. . . . An
extremely useful addition to any collection serving a population
that studies or uses knowledge management, this work brings the
often dry and hard-to-understand original writings to life with
commentary and interpretation by an instructor of the field." -
ARBA
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