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Collection Management for the 21st Century - (Libraries Unlimited Library Management Collection) by Gary Gorman & Ruth Miller (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Collection management is becoming increasingly complex due to electronic access to information, the growth of the Internet, greater reliance on document delivery and resource sharing, and changes in scholarly communication.
- About the Author: G.E. GORMAN is Director of the Centre for Information Studies at Charles Sturt University-Riverina.
- 360 Pages
- Language + Art + Disciplines, Library & Information Science
- Series Name: Libraries Unlimited Library Management Collection
Description
About the Book
Collection management is becoming increasingly complex due to electronic access to information, the growth of the Internet, greater reliance on document delivery and resource sharing, and changes in scholarly communication. This professional reference shows how changes in all aspects of collection management will affect future activities in this area and examines the likely value of these changes in the next century. Chapters are written by leading practitioners and academics from around the world, and the volume concludes with a bibliographical essay.
Collection management has always been more difficult to define and more varied in organization and procedures than other library operations, such as acquisitions or automation. Current shifts in emphasis only make this more apparent. The electronic access to catalogs, databases, and full text materials, the increasing importance of the Internet, greater reliance on interlibrary loan and document delivery, and the changing world of scholarly communication all influence how library collections are acquired and managed. Faculty research and academic disciplines are not easily contained within clearly defined boundaries, acquisitions on-demand is on the increase, and document delivery has made patrons less dependent on local collections.
These changes influence policies, but not in any clear or uniform manner, and sometimes against organizational constraints. If local collections are being emphasized less, and access and connectivity more, then selection, evaluation, and preservation are greatly affected. And while cooperative efforts may relieve a library from collecting exhaustively in all areas, needed materials must still be collected and stored somewhere. This professional reference shows how changes in all aspects of collection management will affect future activities in this area and examines the likely value of these changes in the next century. Chapters are written by leading practitioners and academics from around the world, and the volume concludes with a bibliographical essay.
Book Synopsis
Collection management is becoming increasingly complex due to electronic access to information, the growth of the Internet, greater reliance on document delivery and resource sharing, and changes in scholarly communication. This professional reference shows how changes in all aspects of collection management will affect future activities in this area and examines the likely value of these changes in the next century. Chapters are written by leading practitioners and academics from around the world, and the volume concludes with a bibliographical essay.
Collection management has always been more difficult to define and more varied in organization and procedures than other library operations, such as acquisitions or automation. Current shifts in emphasis only make this more apparent. The electronic access to catalogs, databases, and full text materials, the increasing importance of the Internet, greater reliance on interlibrary loan and document delivery, and the changing world of scholarly communication all influence how library collections are acquired and managed. Faculty research and academic disciplines are not easily contained within clearly defined boundaries, acquisitions on-demand is on the increase, and document delivery has made patrons less dependent on local collections. These changes influence policies, but not in any clear or uniform manner, and sometimes against organizational constraints. If local collections are being emphasized less, and access and connectivity more, then selection, evaluation, and preservation are greatly affected. And while cooperative efforts may relieve a library from collecting exhaustively in all areas, needed materials must still be collected and stored somewhere. This professional reference shows how changes in all aspects of collection management will affect future activities in this area and examines the likely value of these changes in the next century. Chapters are written by leading practitioners and academics from around the world, and the volume concludes with a bibliographical essay.From the Back Cover
Collection management is becoming increasingly complex due to electronic access to information, the growth of the Internet, greater reliance on document delivery and resource sharing, and changes in scholarly communication. This professional reference shows how changes in all aspects of collection management will affect future activities in this area and examines the likely value of these changes in the next century. Chapters are written by leading practitioners and academics from around the world, and the volume concludes with a bibliographical essay.Review Quotes
.,."[P]rovides a comprehensive overview of the development of collection management....[S]erves as a valuable staring point for introducing the multiplicity of important issues of the field."-Technical Services Quarterly
"This is a well-organized handbook that accomplishes the editors' intent to "serve as a benchmark for future thinking in collection management." Eighteen leading authors offer a full range of relevant topics....[W]ith the results a forward-looking, significant work that encompasses the major trends and challenges for the profession....Many texts in collection development focus on the basics and this worthy addition to the literature considers in depth collection management issues for the future....[H]ighly recommended and most useful for librarians in academic settings."-Technicalities
?...[P]rovides a comprehensive overview of the development of collection management....[S]erves as a valuable staring point for introducing the multiplicity of important issues of the field.?-Technical Services Quarterly
?[W]ritten by a well-known cadre of librarians, library administrators, and library science professionals, these essays are thorough, thoughtful, and well researched. A convenient resource for practicing librarians, this handbook has a wonderful potential as a textbook...Recommended for purchase....?-Library Journal
?Gorman and Miller have produced an excellent forum for discussion of the issues related to the future of collection development and management....If you are seeking answers to collection management problems to come, this is not the book for you. If you are seeking a clear statement of the questions to be faced and some discussion of potential solutions, this is it!?-Collection Management
?This is a useful book, which contains information that will be of value to all collection management practitioners...?-The Serials Librarian
?This is a well-organized handbook that accomplishes the editors' intent to "serve as a benchmark for future thinking in collection management." Eighteen leading authors offer a full range of relevant topics....[W]ith the results a forward-looking, significant work that encompasses the major trends and challenges for the profession....Many texts in collection development focus on the basics and this worthy addition to the literature considers in depth collection management issues for the future....[H]ighly recommended and most useful for librarians in academic settings.?-Technicalities
..."ÝP¨rovides a comprehensive overview of the development of collection management....ÝS¨erves as a valuable staring point for introducing the multiplicity of important issues of the field."-Technical Services Quarterly
"ÝW¨ritten by a well-known cadre of librarians, library administrators, and library science professionals, these essays are thorough, thoughtful, and well researched. A convenient resource for practicing librarians, this handbook has a wonderful potential as a textbook...Recommended for purchase...."-Library Journal
..."[P]rovides a comprehensive overview of the development of collection management....[S]erves as a valuable staring point for introducing the multiplicity of important issues of the field."-Technical Services Quarterly
"[W]ritten by a well-known cadre of librarians, library administrators, and library science professionals, these essays are thorough, thoughtful, and well researched. A convenient resource for practicing librarians, this handbook has a wonderful potential as a textbook...Recommended for purchase...."-Library Journal
"Gorman and Miller have produced an excellent forum for discussion of the issues related to the future of collection development and management....If you are seeking answers to collection management problems to come, this is not the book for you. If you are seeking a clear statement of the questions to be faced and some discussion of potential solutions, this is it!"-Collection Management
"This is a useful book, which contains information that will be of value to all collection management practitioners..."-The Serials Librarian
About the Author
G.E. GORMAN is Director of the Centre for Information Studies at Charles Sturt University-Riverina. His special interest is in the areas of collection development, collection management, and research methods. He is the author of several textbooks in these areas, and of more than 70 articles in such journals as Library Acquisitions: Practice and Theory, Libri, Serials Librarian, Asian Libraries, Australian Library Review, and Australian Academic and Research Libraries. He is also the author of Theological and Religious Reference Materials: General Resources and Biblical Studies (1984), Theological and Religious Reference Materials: Systematic Theology and Church History (1985), and Theological and Religious Reference Materials: Practical Theology (1986), all published by Greenwood Press.
RUTH H. MILLER is Coordinator for Collection Development and Access in the Library at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. She was previously Head of the Department of Collection Development and Preservation at Cunningham Memorial Library, Indiana State University. Her articles have appeared in Library Acquisitions: Practice and Theory, College and Research Libraries, Library Resources and Technical Services, and other professional journals.