Chapter 14. Ethics


What we'll cover:
The politics of categories and classification
Issues of intellectual and physical access to information
The ethical responsibilities of information architects

You've almost finished the book. You understand the concepts. You're familiar with the methods. But before you move onward and upward, consider the following questions:

Are you aware that the practice of information architecture is riddled with powerful moral dilemmas?

Do you realize that decisions about labeling and granularity can save or destroy lives?

Will you be designing ethical information architectures?[*]

[*] This chapter is based on a Strange Connections article written by Peter Morville (http://argus-acia.com/strange_connections/strange008.html).

If you've never considered these questions, don't worry. It's not your fault. Blame your parents. Did they ever take the time when you were a small child to clarify that the story of Hansel and Gretel is really a metaphor for the horrors of ineffective breadcrumb navigation? Did they ever explain that Spiderman symbolizes the virtuous hypertextual power of the Web? Without information architect superheroes and archvillains to serve as role models, how you could be expected to recognize your own potential for good or evil?




Information Architecture for the World Wide Web
Information Architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites
ISBN: 0596527349
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 194

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