The authors and their colleagues are engaged in a study of home inform
ation systems in the UK. The project will cover cable and satellite tr
ansmission (United Artists and BSkyB have invested heavily in Central
Scotland), multimedia CDs and paper-based systems. The project will wo
rk at several levels, addressing macro level national policy for inwar
d investment; the socio-cultural problem of media provision by foreign
multinationals and the role of local (in this case Scottish) identity
; and the local issue of resource management of potentially competing
media within the domestic space. The aim of the project is to derive,
by mapping the dynamics of production and consumption, a theory of hou
sehold information systems which will inform investors, producers and
consumers in a given region. The theoretical background to the project
draws on different disciplinary frameworks: economic policy for inwar
d investment, the moral and political economy of the household, theori
es of local identity, and information needs analysis. The paper will f
ocus on methodology: models of the household, gaining access, choice o
f protocols, selection of issues for structured interviews, and will r
eport on a pilot instrument which will be tested in ten households in
the Spring of 1995