Restricted accessBook reviewFirst published online 2010-1
Book Reviews: Professional Communication in Engineering,the Internet Imaginaire,Content Management: Bridging the Gap between Theory and Practice,Outsourcing Technical Communication: Issues,Policies and Practices,Questioning Library Neutrality: Essays from Progressive Librarian
EdgellJ.MeisterG. E., and StampN., Global Sourcing Trends in 2008, Strategic Outsourcing, 1, pp. 173–180, 2008.
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DasG., The India Model, Foreign Affairs, 85, pp. 2–16, 2006.
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CollierM. J., Intercultural Alliances: Critical Transformation, Sage, New York, 2003.
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PanY.ScollonS. W., and ScollonR., Professional Communication in International Settings, Blackwell, Oxford, 2002.
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GobyV. P., Business Communication Needs: A Multicultural Perspective, Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 21, pp. 425–437, 2007.
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ReichmanJ. H., The TRIPS Agreement Comes of Age: Conflict or Cooperation with the Developing Countries?Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 32, pp. 441–470, 2000.
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McElhinneyS., Exposing the Interests: Decoding the Promise of the Global Knowledge Society, New Media & Society, 7, pp. 748–769, 2005.
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TebeauxE., Let's Not Ruin Technical Writing, Too: A Comment on the Essays of Carolyn Miller and Elizabeth Harris, College English, 41, pp. 822–825, 1980.
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MillerC. R., A Humanist Rationale for Technical Writing, College English, 40, pp. 610–624, 1979.
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FahnestockJ., Accommodating Science: The Rhetorical Life of Scientific Facts, Written Communication, 15, pp. 330–350, 1998.
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BhatiaV. K., Analysing Genre: Language Use in Professional Settings, Longman, New York, 1993.
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KnievelM. L., Technology, Artifacts, Instrumentalism and the Humanist Manifestos: Toward an Integrated Humanistic Profile for Technical Communication, Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 20, pp. 65–86, 2006.
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AskehaveI. and SwalesJ. M., Genre Identification and Communicative Purpose: A Problem and a Possible Solution, Applied Linguistics, 22, pp. 195–212, 2001.