“…The papers on digital document genres demonstrate the variety of ways research issues in electronic document management, organizational communication, document production and use, Web structuring, information retrieval, human-computer interaction, and e-democracy can benefit from and be informed by a genre approach (e.g., Bergquist & Ljungberg, 1999;Goldstein & Sabin, 2006;Karjalainen et al, 2000;Rehm, 2002;Roussinov, Crowston, Nilan, Kwasnik, Liu, & Cai, 2001;Saebø & Päivärinta, 2005;Shepherd & Watters, 1998;Toms & Campbell, 1999;Tyrväinen & Päivärinta, 1999;Watters & Shepherd, 1997;Yates, Orlikowski, & Rennecker, 1997;Yates & Sumner, 1997). Many of these studies are helpful because they illustrate the depth and social and humanistic rationale with which classic LIS research topics can be approached, a depth and rationale some topics may not yet have had but nevertheless have strongly needed.…”