By Kenneth C. Laudon
Communications of the ACM,
January 1986,
Vol. 29 No. 1, Pages 4-11
10.1145/5465.5466
Comments
As societies have become more dependent on information systems to conduct and record transactions between organizations and individuals, interorganizational computer systems have become a widely used method of coordinating the actions of independent organizations. This article examines the quality of data in one important interorganizational system—the criminal-record system of the United States.
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