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A workbook on descriptive and subject cataloguing featuring practical examples and suggested solutions to reinforce theoretical concepts and practical application in descriptive cataloguing (using Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd ed., 1998 rev.), bibliographic classification (using Dewey Decimal Classification, 21st ed.) and assigning subject headings (using Sears List of Subject Headings, 17th ed.).Includes examples for both manual and computerised creation of bibliographic records, thus preparing students for both automated and manual library and information service (LIS
Descriptive cataloging. --- Descriptive cataloging --- Subject cataloging. --- Subject cataloging
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Cataloging --- Archivists
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Alphabetical cataloguing --- Descriptive cataloging --- Research libraries --- Rules
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This new and extensively revised second edition offers an international perspective on archives management, providing authoritative guidance relevant to collections-based repositories and to organizations responsible for managing their own institutional archives. Written in clear language with lively examples, Archives: Principles and practices introduces core archival concepts, explains best-practice approaches and discusses the central activities that archivists need to know to ensure the documentary materials in their charge are cared for as effectively as possible. Topics addressed include: core archival principles and concepts archival history and the evolution of archival theories the nature and diversity of archival materials and institutions the responsibilities and duties of the archivist issues in the management of archival institutions the challenges of balancing access and privacy in archival service best practice principles and strategic approaches to central archival tasks such as acquisition, preservation, reference and access detailed comparison of custodial, fonds-oriented approaches and post-custodial, functional approaches to arrangement and description. Discussion of digital archives is woven throughout the book, including consideration of the changing role of the archivist in the digital age. In recasting her book to address the impact of digital technologies on records and archives, Millar offers us an archival manual for the twenty-first century. This book will be essential reading for archival practitioners, archival studies students and professors, librarians, museum curators, local authorities, small governments, public libraries, community museums, corporations, associations and other agencies with archival responsibility.|This new and extensively revised second edition offers an international perspective on archives management, providing authoritative guidance relevant to collections-based repositories and to organizations responsible for managing their own institutional archives.
Archivistics --- Archives --- Management. --- Gestion --- Archival materials --- Materials, Archival --- Manuscripts --- Administration. --- Management --- Archival administration --- Cataloging of archival materials. --- Conservation and restoration. --- Conservation and restoration --- Archival description (Cataloging) --- Cataloging of archival material --- Cataloging of archives --- Conservation of archival materials --- Preservation of archival materials --- Preservation
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Mystified by main entry? Confused by corporate bodies? Can't tell a description from an access point? Then this is the book for you. Cataloguing is important, despite what some people may tell you. Because it is hardly taught nowadays, there is all the more likelihood that you will find yourself having to catalogue without having been taught anything about it. This book covers descriptive cataloguing, and is designed as a simple companion to the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (revised 2002 edition). Dealing primarily with printed books, but including many references to other formats, the author leads you step by step through the cataloguing process, covering: description; access points; multipart works; headings for persons; headings for corporate bodies; authority control and uniform titles.
#A0403A --- Cataloguing --- Descriptive cataloging --- MARC formats --- 025.3 --- 025.32 --- 611 Bibliotheken --- 025.3 Catalogustechniek. Catalogiseren --- Catalogustechniek. Catalogiseren --- APIN (Information retrieval system) --- CATS System --- Formats, MARC --- Machine-Readable Cataloging formats --- MARC System --- Machine-readable bibliographic data formats --- Cataloging --- Format --- Anglo-American cataloguing rules --- AACR 2 --- Anglo-American cataloging rules --- AACR2 --- Alphabetical cataloguing --- Description bibliographique --- Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- Guides, manuels, etc
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"The second edition of Medical Ethics deals accessibly with a broad range of significant issues in bioethics, and presents the reader with the latest developments. This new edition has been greatly revised and updated, with half of the sections written specifically for this new volume. An accessible introduction for beginners, offering a combination of important established essays and new essays commissioned especially for this volume. Greatly revised - half of the selections are new to this edition, including two essays on genetic enhancement and a section on gender, race and culture. Includes new material on ethical theory as a grounding for understanding the ethical dimensions of medicine and healthcare. Now includes a short story on organ allocation, providing a vivid approach to the issue for readers. Provides students with the tools to write their own case study essays. An original section on health provides a theoretical context for the succeeding essays. Presents a carefully selected set of readings designed to progressively move the reader to competency in subject comprehension and essay writing"--Provided by publisher.
Library automation --- Alphabetical cataloguing --- Descriptive cataloging --- FRBR (Conceptual model) --- MARC formats --- Catalogage --- FRBR (Modèle conceptuel) --- Description bibliographique --- MARC, Formats --- Rules. --- Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- Règles --- Guides, manuels, etc --- Resource description & access --- Anglo-American cataloguing rules --- Rules --- -025.32 --- Cataloging --- FRBR (Conceptual model). --- FRBR (Modèle conceptuel) --- Règles --- APIN (Information retrieval system) --- CATS System --- Formats, MARC --- Machine-Readable Cataloging formats --- MARC System --- Machine-readable bibliographic data formats --- Format --- AACR 2 --- Anglo-American cataloging rules --- AACR2 --- RDA --- RDA: resource description & access --- RDA: resource description and access --- Resource description and access --- Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (Conceptual model) --- Entity-relationship modeling --- Cataloging codes for descriptive cataloging --- Rules for descriptive cataloging --- Descriptive cataloging - Rules --- Descriptive cataloging - Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- MARC formats - Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- Medical ethics.
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Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) are increasingly seen as 'the' English language controlled vocabulary, despite their lack of a theoretical foundation, and their evident US bias. In mapping exercises between national subject heading lists, and in exercises in digital resource organization and management, LCSH are often chosen because of the lack of any other widely accepted English language standard for subject cataloguing. It is therefore important that the basic nature of LCSH, their advantages, and their limitations, are well understood both by LIS practitioners and those in the wider information community. Information professionals who attended library school before 1995 - and many more recent library school graduates - are unlikely to have had a formal introduction to LCSH. Paraprofessionals who undertake cataloguing are similarly unlikely to have enjoyed an induction to the broad principles of LCSH. This is the first compact guide to LCSH written from a UK viewpoint.
Subject cataloging. --- Subject headings, Library of Congress. --- 025.4 --- LC subject headings --- LCSH (Library of Congress subject headings) --- Library of Congress subject headings --- Subject headings --- Subject analysis --- Cataloging --- Content analysis (Communication) --- Indexing --- 025.4 Ontsluitings- en terugzoektalen. Classificaties. Thesauri. Metadata voor information retrieval --- Ontsluitings- en terugzoektalen. Classificaties. Thesauri. Metadata voor information retrieval --- Subject indexing --- Subject cataloging --- Subject headings, Library of Congress --- Library of Congress.
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Subject indexing --- Book conservation --- Library automation --- conservation [discipline] --- cataloging --- digitizing --- Flanders --- Documentation and information --- Folklore --- Conservation. Restoration --- Archivistics --- conservatie --- bibliotheken --- archieven
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What was a book in early modern England? By combining book history, bibliography and literary criticism, Material Texts in Early Modern England explores how sixteenth- and seventeenth-century books were stranger, richer things than scholars have imagined. Adam Smyth examines important aspects of bibliographical culture which have been under-examined by critics: the cutting up of books as a form of careful reading; book destruction and its relation to canon formation; the prevalence of printed errors and the literary richness of mistakes; and the recycling of older texts in the bodies of new books, as printed waste. How did authors, including Herbert, Jonson, Milton, Nashe and Cavendish, respond to this sense of the book as patched, transient, flawed, and palimpsestic? Material Texts in Early Modern England recovers these traits and practices, and so crucially revises our sense of what a book was, and what a book might be.
Books --- Authors, English --- Library materials --- Publications --- Bibliography --- Cataloging --- International Standard Book Numbers --- History --- Recycling&delete& --- Book history --- Psychological study of literature --- History of the United Kingdom and Ireland --- literary criticism --- book history --- anno 1500-1599 --- anno 1600-1699 --- Recycling --- History.
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Cataloguing has always produced a catalogue, while the creation of metadata has produced the metadata of given resources. However, in this digital age, the two are more connected than ever. A catalogue is made up of metadata that can be searched, identified, structured and selected. This then means the metadata creation process is adopted as a part of cataloguing. 0'From Cataloguing to Metadata Creation' is a cultural and methodological introduction to the evolution of cataloguing towards metadata creation process in the digital era. It is a journey through the founding principles and the objectives of the 'information organisation' service that libraries offer. The book aims to outline the new library context, highlighting continuities and innovations compared to traditional cataloguing and intends to trace the path from traditional cataloguing to the new metadata creation process
Cataloging. --- Metadata. --- Catalogage --- Métadonnées. --- Catalogage. --- Bibliothèques --- Innovations bibliothéconomiques. --- Catalogues de bibliothèques en ligne. --- Description bibliographique. --- Informatique. --- Alphabetical cataloguing --- Subject indexing --- Library automation --- Information systems
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