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- Title
Information, Intelligence, and Trade: The Library and the Commercial Intelligence Branch of the British Board of Trade, 1834-1914.
- Authors
Black, Alistair; Murphy, Christopher
- Abstract
Business intelligence, broadly conceived, has always been an ingredient of economic life. However, the planned and systematic collection, organization, and dissemination of information for commercial purposes did not appear until the abrupt escalation of trade and the massive extension of imperial reach in the nineteenth century. In Britain, investment in sources and systems of commercial information was made by the Board of Trade in the form of a departmental library placed at the disposal of government officials, from 1834; and a publicly accessible Commercial Intelligence Branch, established in 1899, which employed the new modes of information work emerging around this time in private companies. With the outbreak of war in 1914, the Commercial Intelligence Branch experienced a considerable increase in demand for its services, confirming the perceived importance of commercial information to national survival and post-war recovery.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; GREAT Britain. Board of Trade; GOVERNMENT libraries; AIMS &; objectives of information services; BUSINESS intelligence; INTELLIGENCE service; HISTORY of information services; HISTORY of British commerce; 19TH century British history; BRITISH history, 1901-1914; HISTORY
- Publication
Library & Information History, 2012, Vol 28, Issue 3, p186
- ISSN
1758-3489
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1179/1758348912Z.00000000015