This book, first published in 1983, stresses the need for libraries to weed out expenditures which do not contribute to their basic role - the collection and organization of information - when planning where and when to spend money. It illustrates how priorities and goals must change in accordance with changes in libraries’ roles in the information world.
1. Financial Planning: Introductory Thoughts Murray S. Martin Part
1.
General Financial Principles
2. Issues in the Financial Management of
Research Libraries Duane E. Webster
3. Financial Planning Needs of
Publicly-Supported Academic Libraries in the 1980s: Politics as Usual Edward
R. Johnson
4. Planning and Finance: A Strategic Level Model of the University
Library Jerome Yavarkovsky
5. Academic Library Decision Support Systems
Michael Bommer and Ronald Chorba
6. Returning to the Unified Theory of
Budgeting: An Umbrella Concept for Public Libraries Harold R. Jenkins Part
2.
Issues in Specific Budget Categories
7. Salary Planning Paul M. Gherman
8.
Interlibrary Loan and Resource Sharing: New Approaches Noelene P. Martin
9.
Financial Planning for Collection Management Frederick C. Lynden
10.
Budgeting for and Controlling the Cost of Other in Library Expenditures: The
Distant Relative in the Budgetary Process Sherman Hayes
Murray S. Martin