University at Albany - State University of New York
https://www.albany.edu/news/8813.xmlUAlbany Twitter Feedhttps://www.albany.edu/news/2684.xmlUniversity at Albany Newshttps://www.albany.edu/news/videos_listing.phpVideoshttps://www.albany.edu/news/search_results_news.phpNews Search Resultshttps://www.albany.edu/news/media_files.phpNews - Media Fileshttps://www.albany.edu/news/search_results_experts.phpSearch for Experts - Results
Search News:
Bookmark and Share

CTG and Department of Communication Joint Paper Earns Top Information Sciences Prize

November 3, 2008

Share   

 

The CTG and Dept. of Communication Paper on the World Trade Center Crisis won top Paper from the American Society for Information Science and Technology

A joint paper from CTG and the Department of Communication on the World Trade Center crisis earned top honors from the American Society for Information Science and Technology.

A joint paper from the Center for Technology in Government and Department of Communication has been selected for the Best JASIST Paper award from the American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T).

The paper, Geographic information technologies, structuration theory, and the world trade center crisis was coauthored by Teresa M. Harrison, chair, Department of Communication, and CTG's Theresa Pardo, deputy director, J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, research fellow, Fiona Thompson, former senior program associate, and Dubravka Juraga, former research associate. The purpose of this award is to recognize the best refereed paper published in the volume year of the Journal of the American Society for Information Science (JASIST). According to ASIS&T's Web site, "The coveted and prestigious ASIS&T awards represent the greatest recognition and respect professionals may afford their colleagues."

The paper was based on data from a CTG research project that explored how government used information and information technology in the response to the World Trade Center crisis. The paper focused on what advocates of geographic information technologies (GIT) have long claimed as significant advantages to bringing a spatially oriented perspective to bear on organizational and policy decision making, which have been more difficult to realize in practice than might be supposed. In the article, the authors argued that awareness and appreciation of the potential value of GIT changed dramatically as a result of the World Trade Center (WTC) attacks on September 11, 2001. They used a structurationist theoretical perspective to show that GITs were enacted in a variety of novel ways by social actors thrust together by the demands of the crisis to form interorganizational systems, illustrating this process through three extended examples of GIT adaptation and innovation during the crisis.

The authors found that one lasting consequence of this episode was that GITs have moved from serving as a relatively static reference tool to a dynamic decision-making tool for emergency situations. They concluded by suggesting that the crisis was a catalyst for change in the use of GIT and, reciprocally, in the social structures in which GIT will be deployed in the future.

The paper was selected for the award by ASIS&T based on several criteria. The Awards & Honors Committee looked at its professional merit, which included creativity and originality, the scientific and professional quality of the research, and the scholarship embodied in the presentation. The award committee also equally took into account its contribution in terms of societal, scientific and technical significance, usefulness to practicing professionals, and its relevance to the interests of information science and technology, and to a lesser degree the professional quality of the paper.

ASIS&T has been the society for information professionals, leading the search for new and better theories, techniques, and technologies to improve access to information. The mission of the ASIS&T is to advance the information sciences and related applications of information technology by providing focus, opportunity, and support to information professionals and organizations. ASIS&T has existed for over 70 years and has members in over 50 countries worldwide.

For more news, subscribe to UAlbany's RSS headline feeds