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Fundamentals of Government Information: Mining, Finding, Evaluating, and Using Government Resources

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Government data and resources are uniquely useful to researchers and other library users. But without a roadmap, sifting through the sheer quantity of information to find the right answers is foolhardy. The first edition of this text is well established as an essential navigational tool for both LIS students and professionals; now this newly revised, peer-reviewed update is even more attuned to new sources and types of government information and how best to locate them. Unmatched in its scope, this book covers such key topics as
Exercises throughout the text support instruction, while the approachable and well-organized style make it ideal for day-to-day reference use.

424 pages, Paperback

First published April 30, 2011

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5 stars
19 (31%)
4 stars
23 (38%)
3 stars
16 (26%)
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
212 reviews
March 22, 2020
5 stars means "I'm going to read it again."[return]I think the thing that strikes me most is the dialogue - confusion, empathy and sarcastic humor all manage to come across mainly through what people say instead of through the brute force of character description. Even when we do get character description it's usually more about what else they do than a list of adjectives. I can identify with Elinborg's baking, Sigurder Oli's stress about getting home to his wife, and Erlender's solitairy reading habit. [return]The only thing that stuck me as off were the scenes with Marion Briem - probably because they are meant to be outside the normal flow of the investigation. They just feel like a running joke from the author that I'm not in on. [return]This has the true hallmark of a good mystery - I didn't figure out whodunit, but it made sense when revealed. (The previous book in the series seems more of a procedural - I didn't think I had enough clues to try to guess. That's fine too, but I do like a good mystery.)[return]I'm looking forward to the American edition of the next book!
Profile Image for Rob.
278 reviews8 followers
December 17, 2014
This book is quite lively for what may seem to be a dull subject. By the end of it, I found myself looking forward to the next reference question that could be answered by visiting a government website. The authors highlight and describe government documents and the structure and functions of the U.S. government. Along the way, they provide tips and strategies for finding and using government information. Some government resources have changed already (e.g., THOMAS is being replaced by Congress.gov; and the Statistical Abstract of the United States is no longer published by the U.S. government). Nevertheless, the book is still extremely useful and helpful for librarians of all kinds in showing how the government works and how one can tap into the vast array of information published by governments, even state, local, tribal, and international.
Profile Image for Matt Raymond.
244 reviews35 followers
February 20, 2013
I took this class, and bought this book, because I wanted to learn about government librarianship. This book certainly did that & then some! I think this was the most helpful & interesting of all my textbooks, which is saying something because library textbooks are usually boring & tend to repeat themselves. And it probably helped that this was the most recent text on the subject, at least according to my teacher. I could see myself reading an update of this, since much has changed in a short time.
Profile Image for Christopher.
526 reviews21 followers
May 17, 2012
This book yhas been the highlight of my Government Information class. It isn't perfect. Even being published last year, it already is inaccurate in references to GPOAccess (now all migrated to FDSys) and Google Uncle Sam (now retired). More immediately, large chunks of the Census Bureau have been defunded in the latest House budget so the much discussed American Community Survey (ACS) may be dead.

Even for all the time-relevant information, this one will be going on my work reference shelf.
Profile Image for Amy.
124 reviews12 followers
November 9, 2011
This gives a decent overview of how government activity relates to the documents that the government publishes. It also provides some good pointers to resources for information as well as ways of thinking about how to get to the information you need from a government agency. Though there is benefit to reading it cover to cover, I think I will value it even more as a point of reference.
Profile Image for Kellie.
299 reviews
August 2, 2011
More current as to 2011. Favorite section "Sources Mentioned in this Chapter" at the end of every chapter for quick reference.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
12 reviews2 followers
May 5, 2014
great overview to the fabulous world of government documents!
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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