Resources of the Week: One of These Things Is Not Like the Others
Resources of the Week: One of These Things Is Not Like the Others
By Shirl Kennedy, Senior Editor
Regarding the public availability of Congressional Research Service reports...maybe the situation will be different in the new administration. Maybe these valuable, taxpayer-funded documents will finally be posted online BY the Congressional Research Service AS THEY ARE ISSUED. In our opinion, there is no logical reason for the hoop-jumping necessary to pry these things loose from the CRS.
Granted, access is a lot better than it used to be, thanks to the tireless efforts of various academic and nonprofit organizations to corral as many of these reports as possible and make them freely available online. The Center for Democracy and Technology's OpenCRS, for example, is a great place to start searching; not only is it a huge archive of these reports, but it links to other key report collections, such as:
Archive-It.org, in partnership with the Social Sciences Resource Group at Stanford University, links to a large number of CRS report collections, including the venerable archive at the University of North Texas Libraries. And the Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library at the University of Washington School of Law offers an excellent CRS pathfinder. If you can't find the report online, you can always request it from your congressional representative's office. Or you can buy it from a private company that obtains and sells them -- which annoys us so much that we won't identify it or link to it here.
The sheer volume of government information now available online is amazing, and has made life infinitely easier not only for researchers, but for the average citizen. We have not yet heard a compelling reason why the Congressional Research Service -- a division of the Library of Congress -- remains a black hole. This Washington Post story, from February 2007, blames "a wall erected by lawmakers" who regard the agency "as an extension of" their own staff.
We're not buying that excuse. Equivalent agencies in other countries routinely place their reports online:
The Parliamentary Information and Research Service (PIRS) provides a consulting service for individual parliamentarians, responding to questions that require research and analysis on legal, economic, scientific, or social science matters. Researchers obtain and analyze material, and write letters, short notes and longer research papers at the request of Senators and Members of the House of Commons. In some cases, responses are provided to clients by telephone briefings or by meetings with individual parliamentarians and/or their staff.
Electorate profiles for each of the seven M?ori electorates and 63 general electorates in New Zealand are published here. Electorate profiles are produced by the Parliamentary Library. Each profile includes election results, statistics about people, households and industries, and maps.
A selection of research papers and standard notes produced by the House of Commons Library on subjects such as: central government, constitution, Crown, devolution, elections, Parliament, and political parties.
A family of resources to help information workers be more effective, raise the value of information in their organisations and contribute to success. Read more »
Recently I have found myself cooing over visualisation maps (and heat maps) of health and well being resources. The content rich data is overlayed with mapping technologies, and some interesting themes and patterns are emerging.
A lot of the talk around social media in the last year has been around information overload. Social media has provided us with new and exciting ways to create content. But it has also meant learning new ways to manage and engage with social media tools. Are we teetering on the edge of an information overload precipice?
Information overload is a figment of your imagination. Or a failure of your filter. Or a symptom of your technological submissiveness. Depends on who you ask.
What if you had to sort through 3.5 million articles and social media posts a day and try to pull out the most relevant items for your organisation? What if you then had to cobble it all together into something readable for your top groups and executives in your organisation?
Alacra Compliance saves time by aggregating information from both free and fee-based sources and enabling users to conduct an accurate federated search across these sources (coined “simultaneous search” by Alacra).