György Rózsa: Information: from claims to needs (Joint edition published by the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Kultura Hungarian Foreign Trading Company. Budapest, 1988)
I. The socio-professional aspects of the development of the scientific information with special regard to social sciences
59 networking have been eliminated since there are and will always be hotly debated questions, not infrequently of prestige nature, but the basic consent and the willingness are given. In one or two fields the branch-specific SSID networking shows somewhat more marked outlines as in the fields of legal and political sciences, economic policy or statistics. Not insignificant preparatory works have been done in sociology. Initial steps have been taken in the field of pedagogy. In some of the other fields demands have come from the research community (history is a case in point). It can be expected that organized into network, computerized SSID in Hungary will go on along this line, and its automated services - combined with the related international services - will be able to provide more and more help to research and practice. * • * This is, then, the picture - or rather its sketch - that seems realistic of the state of SSID and its networking in Hungary. In: FID studies in social science information and documentation. Networks and networking in social science information. FID Publ. 606. Budapest, 1984. 77-86.p.