Functional Future for Bibliographic Control

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advanced bibliographic metadata management
American Library Association
Anne Welsh
authority control
Authority Control Practices
Besiki Stvilia
Bibliographic Control
Bibliographic Metadata
Bibliographic Records
Bibliographic Relationships
Cataloging
Cataloging Department Heads
cataloguing education
Category=GLK
Celine Carty
communities of practice
Dean E. Cody
Diane Hillmann
Dong Joon Lee
Electronic Resources Management
Elyssa M. Sanner
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
FRBR Family
FRBR Group
FRBR Model
Functional Future
Gordon Dunsire
Gretchen L. Hoffman
Helen Williams
International Standard Bibliographic Description
Jean Harden
Jon Phipps
Laura Krier
library linked data
Marc Environment
Mary Z. Rose
Metadata Librarian
metadata standards
Nadine P. Ellero
Naomi Kietzke Young
National Libraries
non-MARC Metadata
Oksana L. Zavalina
Paraprofessional Catalogers
RDA implementation
RDA Record
RDA Rule
RDA Test
RDA Toolkit
RDA Training
RDF Graph
Resource Description and Access
Sarah Theimer
Semantic Web
semantic web integration
Shuheng Wu
Stacy Allison-Cassin
Teressa M. Keenan

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415716024
  • Weight: 635g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The quest to evolve bibliographic control to an equal or greater standing within the current information environment is on-going. As information organizers we are working in a time where information and communication technology (ICT) has pushed our status quo to its limits and where innovation often needs the pressure of do or die in order to get started. The year 2010 was designated as the Year of Cataloging Research and we made progress on studying the challenges facing metadata and information organization practices. However, one year of research is merely a drop in the bucket, especially given the results of the Resource and Description and Access (RDA) National Test and the Library of Congress’ decision to investigate the possibility of transitioning the MARC21 format. This book addresses how information professionals can create a functional environment in which we move beyond just representing information resources and into an environment that both represents and connects at a deeper level. Most importantly, it offers insight on transitioning into new communities of practice and awareness by reassessing our purpose, re-charting our efforts, reasserting our expertise in the areas that information organizer have traditionally claimed but are losing due to stagnation and lack of vision.

This book was published as a double special issue of the Journal of Library Metadata.

Shawne D. Miksa is an Associate Professor in the Department of Library and Information Sciences and Associate Director of the Interdisciplinary Information Science PhD Program in the College of Information (COI), University of North Texas, USA. She has published and taught in the areas of Information Organization, Cataloging and Classification.