Information ecology

It considers the dynamics and properties of the increasingly dense, complex and important digital informational environment.

Eddy et al. (2014) use information ecology for science-policy integration in ecosystems-based management (EBM).

In The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, a book published in 2006 and available under a Creative Commons license on its own wikispace,[1] Yochai Benkler provides an analytic framework for the emergence of the networked information economy that draws deeply on the language and perspectives of information ecology together with observations and analyses of high-visibility examples of successful peer production processes, citing Wikipedia as a prime example.

Bonnie Nardi and Vicki O'Day in their book "Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart," (Nardi & O’Day 1999) apply the ecology metaphor to local environments, such as libraries and schools, in preference to the more common metaphors for technology as tool, text, or system.

Casagrande and Peters[3] use information ecology for an anthropological critique of Southwest US water policy.