The ASIST 75th Anniversary History Preconference
The History of ASIST and Information Science and Technology Worldwide
Saturday, October 27, 8:15 am - 6:30 pm
Schedule
Registration and Fees details at:
http://www.asis.org/asist2012/historyofASIST.html
8:15-8:30 Introduction to the History Preconference
Toni Carbo (Drexel University) and Robert Williams (University of South Carolina) Co-Chairs, 75th
Anniversary Celebration Task Force
8:30-10:00 Theme 1: Development of ASIST
The Fortuitous Confluence of the National Science Foundation, the American Society for Information Science & Technology, and Information Science
Trudi Bellardo Hahn (Drexel University) and Diane L. Barlow (University of Maryland)
“Speaking Volumes”: Cuadra, Williams, Cronin and the Evolution of the Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
Linda C. Smith (University of Illinois-Urbana-Champagne)
Remixing ADI/ASIST Conference History: Some Panels SIG-DL Wishes We Could Have Convened (And Some That We Did!), 1937–2012
Betsy Van der Veer Martens and June Abbas (University of Oklahoma)
10:00-10:30 Coffee Break
10:30-12:30 Theme 2: Evolution of the Field of Information Science and Technology
Where is Archival Science in the History of Information Science? A Speculative Framework
Richard J. Cox (University of Pittsburgh)
Tefko Saracevic (Rutgers University)
Making Sense of Sense-Making: Tracing the History and Development of Dervin’s Sense-Making Methodology
Naresh Kumar Agarwal (Simmons College)
On the Origins and Development of Information Sciences as an Academic and Research Field in Croatia
Franjo Pehar and Tatjana Aparac-Jelusic (University of Zadar, Croatia)
Whither Information Science in France?
Fidelia Ibekwe-SanJuan (Jean Moulin University - Lyon3, France)
12:30-1:30 Lunch and Keynote Presentation
(Title to be announced)
W. Boyd Rayward (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
Presentation Sponsored by ASIS&T Special Group on International Information Issues (SIG III)
1:30-3:30 Theme 3: Historical Contexts of Technology Innovations and Impacts
Lodewyk Bendikson and Photographic Techniques in Documentation, 1910 – 1943
Michael Buckland (University of California-Berkeley)
The rise and fall of Information Science at Lehigh University, 1962-1973
Donald Hillman (Lehigh University)
How Binary Became Ubiquitous
Karen Miller (University of South Carolina)
Bancroft Gherardi and the Monopoly Bell System: Pioneers in Information Technology Standardization
Andrew L. Russell (Stevens Institute of Technology)
The Evolution of Access Rights to Digital Legal Information: A Case Study
Xiaohua Zhu (University of Tennessee)
3:30-5:30 Theme 4: Development of Foundational Ideas and Theories in Information Science
Pioneers of Information Science in Europe: The Œuvre of Norbert Henrichs
Katherina Hauk and Wolfgang G. Stock (Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf,
Germany)
The ‘Term’ in the Classifier’s Garden Or: Dog, Man, Bites and Dollars
Colin Burke (University of Maryland, Baltimore)
The Dutch Connection: Donker Duyvis and Perceptions of American and European Decimal Classification Systems in the First Half of the Twentieth Century
Charles van den Heuvel( Huygens ING – Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences)
Second Wind: The Two-Stage Citation History of “Networks of Science” (Price, 1965)
Katherine W. McCain (Drexel University)
Constructing Documentary Meaning: French Approach to Documentation Theory
Caroline Courbieres (Université de Toulouse, France),
5:30-6:30 The History Pre-Conference Post Conference Reception