Enveloping such subjects as media studies, popular music and culture, journalism, health information sciences and, library and information science, the FIMS presentations offer a variety of subjects. Presentation topics include research in privacy, internet and media accuracy, copyright, and public education and assistance.
Submissions from 2014
Licence Agreements and Copyright: An Examination of the Issues, Lisa Di Valentino
Highs and Lows: An Examination of Academic Librarians’ Collective Agreements., Marni Harrington and Natasha Gerolami
Interviews with Lifelong Readers: Preliminary Findings from the EDITS (Effects of Digital Information Technology on Seniors) Project, Anabel Quan-Haase, Kathleen Schreurs, and Kim Martin
Submissions from 2013
Access Copyright & Technology: Legal and Policy Issues in Education, Lisa Di Valentino
FIPPA Requests : A How-To Workshop, Lisa Di Valentino
Open Access: Historical Highlights, Issues and Policies, Paul St-Pierre, Lisa Di Valentino, and Samuel Trosow
Submissions from 2012
Who's in Charge Here? Information Privacy in a Social Networking World, Lisa Di Valentino
Observing Graduate Students' Use of Library Space, Marni R. Harrington and Amanda Humphreys
Access Copyright: What does it mean for Western? A Librarian’s Guide, Alan Kilpatrick
A Discourse Analysis of the Representation of Librarians and Formal Educators in the Professional Literature for Public, Academic, and School Librarians, Pam McKenzie, Cameron Hoffman, and Rosamund K. Stooke
Democratizing Access to Knowledge: Find Out What Open Educational Resources (OER) Have to Offer, Michael B. McNally
Intellectual Property and Its Alternatives: Incentives, Innovation and Ideology, Michael B. McNally
Rethinking Tradition: The Impact of Technology & the Loss of Serendipity on the Historical Research Process, Anabel Quan-Haase and Kim Martin
Because I Am Not Here: Second Life Based Artists, Four Selected Case Studies, Francisco Gerardo Toledo Ramírez
Technology Transfer and Innovation Policy at Canadian Universities: Opportunities and Social Costs, Samuel E. Trosow, Laura Briggs, and Michael B. McNally
The Rhetoric and Reality of “Knowledge Mobilization”: Perspectives from the Research Front, Nadine Wathen, Shannon Sibbald, Siobhan Stevenson, and Pam McKenzie
Submissions from 2011
Making Connections: Using Citation Analysis to Map the Literature of Migration & Ethnic Relations, Bruce Fyfe, Marni Harrington, Courtney Waugh, and Stacey Wilson
Mentoring in English Canadian Academic Libraries, Marni R. Harrington and Elizabeth Marshall
Identifying Strengths and Challenges in Interdisciplinary Graduate Supervision, Kathryn Hibbert, Lorelei Lingard, Allan Pitman, Anne Kinsella, Tim Wilson, Pam McKenzie, Meredith Vanstone, and Alfred Masinire
“It's about Helping People”: Co‐op Experiences of LIS Students in Academic Libraries, Kristin Hoffmann and Selinda A. Berg
Mentoring in Academic Libraries: A Canadian Perspective, Elizabeth Marshall and Marni Harrington
Seeking Knowledge: The Role of Social Networks in the Adoption of Ebooksby Historians, Kim Martin and Anabel Quan-Haase
Exploring Interactions of People, Places and Information. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of CAIS / Actes du congrès annuel de l'ACSI 2011, Pam McKenzie, Catherine A. Johnson Dr, and Sarah Stevenson
Mobilizing User-Generated Content for Canada’s Digital Content Advantage, Michael McNally, Caroline Whippey, and Lola Wong
Online Mental Health Information Behaviours of Emerging Adults: A Web Usability and User Experience Study, Diane M. Rasmussen Neal, Cameron Hoffman, and Ye Liu