reviews 398 College & Research Libraries starting the move-planning process. Even with this minor omission, Habich’s book is essential reading for the staff of any academic library that might move into whole new quarters, an addi­ tion, or renovation in the foreseeable fu­ ture. Those who follow Habich’s planning and implementation guidelines will save time, stress, and money. I wish I had had this volume at my disposal several years ago. I strongly recommend it. —Diane J. Graves, Hollins University. The Knowledge Economy. Ed. Dale Neef. Boston: Butterworth-Heinemann (Re­ sources for the Knowledge-Based Economy), 1998. 278p. $21.95, alk. pa­ per (ISBN 0750699361). LC 97-34241. Most readers of College & Research Librar­ ies are keenly aware of the impact of changes in the global infosphere on our own institutions. Every workday, we deal with new developments in information technology and cope with the limitations of our budgets as we labor to provide in­ formation better, faster, and cheaper to those on whose behalf we work. Keep­ ing on top of these continuing changes is a challenge that may fully occupy us, leaving us with no leisure time to explore the even wider implications of the “knowledge revolution.” Dale Neef has provided a partial remedy to this situa­ tion with the publication of this selection of readings on the political economy of knowledge. Just as economic wealth has begun to be measured in terms of intel­ lectual capital instead of tangible re­ sources, Neef (of Ernst & Young’s Center for Business Innovation) has assembled a collection of readings from a variety of sources and points of view. Some of the sixteen contributions are authored by people whose names are familiar, such as Peter F. Drucker, Robert B. Reich, Lester C. Thurow, and Hedrick Smith; others are probably less well known. With the ex­ ception of his excellent introductory es­ say, all the items have been previously published, but only recently—sometimes as chapters in books, as journal articles, or in less broadly circulated papers of the July 1999 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The essays are organized into five broad areas: The Changing Economic Landscape; Knowledge as the Economic Force of Growth and Change; Measuring and Managing the Intangibles of Knowl­ edge; Learning Organizations in the Glo­ bal Knowledge-Based Economy and So­ ciety; and Public Policy: Government, Education, and Training in the Knowl­ edge-Based Economy. The most striking revelation is the subtle, but escalating, shift in the relative importance of univer­ sities, in their traditional roles, to busi­ ness, which is seen to be taking a more direct and directive place in the transmis­ sion of information and economically pro­ ductive technical skills. A comparative study of secondary education in Japan and Germany to the failing system in the United States should be of special concern to college and university library admin­ istrators. “Partnerships” between busi­ nesses and research universities result in our becoming dependent on nongovern­ mental funding and the subsequent privatization of information that would, in an earlier time, have been placed in the public domain. The commercialization of educational services once regarded as the intellectual property of their creators, but now coming to be regarded as “works made for hire,” and similar changes in the making are reshaping the nature of higher education. In conclusion, this may not be an easy book to read, but it is a necessary one. —Charles Wm. Conaway, Florida State University. Nolan, Christopher W. Managing the Ref­ erence Collection. Chicago: ALA, 1999. 231p. $30, acid-free paper (ISBN 0­ 8389-0748-2). LC 98-037178. If your reference collection is typical, it harbors a lot of deadwood. Studies have shown that more than half of reference materials see no use in any one-year pe­ riod, and one-fourth of the collection will not be used over a five-year span. Man­ aging the Reference Collection will be a valu­ able resource for helping you to transform