Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: National Bibliographies in the Digital Age: Guidance and New Directions: IFLA Working Group on Guidelines for National Bibliographies [De Gruyter e-raamatud]

Edited by
  • De Gruyter e-raamatud
  • Hind: 89,94 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks

The IFLA Series on Bibliographic Control was formerly known as the UBCIM series (Universal Bibliographic Control and International MARC ). It consists of reports reflecting the ongoing process towards International Cataloguing Principles, which began in 2003. Through the series of meetings represented by each volume the reader will be able to track the development and consultation taking place throughout different parts of the world that will culminate with the creation of a truly international set of principles to guide the development of cataloguing codes worldwide.

Introduction 9(2)
Members of the IFLA Working Group on Guidelines for National Bibliographies 11(2)
History and Background
13(6)
National bibliographies
13(1)
Legal deposit
13(1)
International recommendations
14(2)
New recommendations/guidelines
16(1)
Conclusion
17(2)
Value of National Bibliographies: Use and Users
19(10)
What is the mission of the national bibliography?
19(1)
Who are the users?
20(2)
What are the information needs and requirements?
22(4)
Common searching requirements
26(1)
Conclusion
27(2)
Selection Principles
29(8)
Introduction
29(1)
General selection criteria
29(1)
Electronic resources selection criteria
30(2)
Specific aspects of electronic resources for consideration
31(1)
Examples of electronic resources that are sometimes not selected
31(1)
Other issues related to selection
32(3)
Conclusion
35(1)
Selection criteria for inclusion in national bibliographies (including Web resources)
35(2)
Cataloguing
37(18)
Introduction
37(1)
Responsibilities of the national bibliographic agency
37(10)
Scope of cataloguing for the national bibliography
37(1)
Relationship of the national bibliography to the national library catalogue
38(1)
Changing context of the national bibliography
39(1)
Extensive bibliographic records
40(1)
Bibliographic control and bibliographic standards
41(1)
Content standards
41(1)
Descriptive standards
42(1)
Subject standards
43(1)
Standards for identification
43(1)
Linking ISSN (ISSN-L)
44(1)
ISTC or International Standard Text Code
44(1)
ISAN or International Standard Audiovisual Number
44(1)
ISWC or International Standard Musical Work Code
44(1)
ISRC or International Standard Recording Code
44(1)
ISNI/ISPI or International Standard Name/Party Identifier
44(1)
NBN or National Bibliography Number
45(1)
Authority control
45(1)
Bibliographic standards and the Semantic Web
46(1)
RDF (Resource Description Framework)
46(1)
OWL (Web Ontology Language)
47(1)
National bibliography and access
47(1)
Users and uses of the national bibliography: metadata elements
47(1)
Level of cataloguing
48(7)
Level of metadata associated with the resource
49(1)
Authoritative
50(1)
Comprehensive
50(1)
Enhanced
50(1)
Basic
51(1)
Significance of the electronic resource for the national bibliography
51(1)
Continuous improvement
52(3)
Functionality and Interface
55(24)
Introduction
55(1)
General recommendations
55(3)
Query formulation
56(1)
Examination of the results
57(1)
Saving or extraction of the results
57(1)
Help
58(1)
Common requirements
58(1)
Access points
58(5)
Subject access
59(2)
Presentation of results
61(1)
Functionality
62(1)
Interoperability
63(16)
Cataloguing rules compatibility
64(1)
International Standard Bibliographic Description (ISBD)
64(1)
International cataloguing principles
65(1)
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR)
65(1)
Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD)
66(1)
Resource Description and Access (RDA)
66(1)
Bibliographic format compatibility
67(1)
MARC formats
67(1)
UNIMARC
67(1)
MARC 21
68(1)
XML formats
68(1)
MARCXML
68(1)
MarcXchange
69(1)
ONIX (Online Information eXchange)
69(1)
Dublin Core
69(1)
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
70(1)
The DCMI Library Application Profile
70(1)
Character coding compatibility
71(1)
Protocol compatibility
71(1)
Z39.50 (ISO 23950)
72(1)
SRU/SRW
72(1)
OAI-PMH
73(1)
Persistent identifiers
73(1)
Uniform Resource Name (URN)
74(1)
The Handle System
74(1)
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
74(1)
Persistent URL (PURL)
74(1)
Archival Resource Key (ARK)
75(4)
Organisation and Management of National Bibliographies
79(24)
Introduction
79(1)
Responsibility for national bibliographic control
79(1)
Structures for administration of national bibliographic control
80(2)
National Library as national bibliographic agency
80(1)
National bibliographic agencies in other institutions
81(1)
Collaborative & distributed national bibliographic agencies
81(1)
Independent national bibliographic agencies
82(1)
National agencies for bibliographic standards
82(1)
Legal deposit legislation/voluntary deposit
82(4)
Legal deposit
82(2)
Voluntary deposit
84(1)
Mixed deposit
84(1)
Examples of national deposit models
84(2)
Business model
86(8)
Purpose and scope of the national bibliography
86(1)
Paying for the national bibliography
87(2)
Examples of different national business models
89(3)
Intellectual property and rights issues
92(1)
Promotion and marketing
93(1)
Organization of national bibliographic data
94(2)
Examples
95(1)
Currency of the national bibliography
96(1)
Overview
96(1)
Establishing a CIP programme
97(1)
Examples of CIP programmes
97(1)
Choice of media for delivery of the national bibliography
97(2)
Paper
98(1)
CD-ROM
98(1)
Online access
98(1)
Measuring the effectiveness of the national bibliography
99(1)
Coverage
99(1)
Currency
99(1)
Usage of the national bibliography
100(1)
Learning from others
100(3)
Cooperation with publishers: Integration and sharing of metadata
103(8)
Introduction
103(2)
Finnish National ONIX centre
105(1)
A Swedish model
106(5)
Glossary of terms and abbreviations
111(10)
Bibliography
121(8)
Useful links
129(10)
Appendix: National Bibliography Number (NBN)
139
Maja umer is the Chair of the Working Group that drafted these Guidelines. She works with the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.