Volume 9, Issue 2 (1995) The Information Superhighway and Communities of Color
This issue of the Trotter Review focuses on one of the most important set of challenges facing the Black community in the U.S., and that is, how to access, and manage, and control, significant facets and processes associated with the information superhighway. This current issue identifies the nature of the challenges, but also proposes some strategies that the Black community and its leadership might consider to ensure both access and control over information technology.
Front Matter
Articles
Introduction
James Jennings
Who Determines What Our Children See, Read, Do, or Learn on the Internet?
Sondlo Leonard Mhlaba
Quest to Own the Information Superhighway: How Much of It Can Blacks Realistically Expect to Own?
Matthew S. Scott
Creative Destruction in the Information Age: The Fallout on America's Latino Communities
Anthony G. Wilhelm
Empowering Communities of Color Through Computer Technology
Michael Roberts
The Power of Information and Communities of Color
Lana W. Jackman and Patricia C. Payne
Frameworks for Evaluating Technology Transfer
Saskia Wilhelms
Democracy, Technology and The Civil Rights Project
Caesar L. McDowell and Marianne S. Castano
Politics and the Information Superhighway
Bobby L. Rush
An Interview with E. David Ellington, President of NetNoir, Inc.
Harold W. Horton Jr.
Back Matter
Editors
- Editor
- James Jennings
- Associate Editor
- Harold Horton
- Managing Editor
- Kimberly R. Moffitt