Contains scholarly evaluations of books and book chapters as well as conference papers and articles published worldwide in the field of Latin American studies. Covers social sciences and the humanities in alternate years.
February issue includes Appendix entitled Directory of United States Government periodicals and subscription publications; September issue includes List of depository libraries; June and December issues include semiannual index
Will there be a library catalogue in the future and, if so, what will it look like? In the last 25 years, the library catalogue has undergone an evolution, from card catalogues to OPACs, discovery systems and even linked data applications making library bibliographic data accessible on the web. At the same time, users expectations of what catalogues will be able to offer in the way of discovery have never been higher. This groundbreaking edited collection brings together some of the foremost international cataloguing practitioners and thought leaders, including Lorcan Dempsey, Emmanuelle Bermès, Marshall Breeding and Karen Calhoun, to provide an overview of the current state of the art of the library catalogue and look ahead to see what the library catalogue might become. Practical projects and cutting edge concepts are showcased in discussions of: - linked data and the Semantic Web - user expectations and needs - bibliographic control - the FRBRization of the catalogue - innovations in search and retrieval - next-generation discovery products and mobile catalogues. Readership: Cataloguers and metadata specialists, library adminstrators and managers responsible for planning and strategy, systems librarians, user services managers, electronic resources librarians, and digital library project managers, students on cataloguing, information management and digital library courses.
Classified listing of publications. "If an item is not found in this publication it was not published within the catalog time span or was not sent to the Superintendent of Documents for cataloging within the time span." Also contains HHS regional offices, agency organizational chart, general information, major sources of HHS publications and information, and explanatory sample entries. Each entry gives such information as bibliographical details, price, either LC or NLM subject headings, agency number, and OCLC number. Author, title, subject, series/report, and stock number indexes.
This is the third edition of this comprehensive exposition of cataloguing and indexing which has been a standard international text for the past decade. The work has been revised, updated and expanded to take account of the many significant developments in this rapidly evolving field of librarianship over recent years: the 1988 revision of AACR2; the publication of new ISBDs such as that for computer files; the changed format of Library of Congress subject headings; and progress in computer applications (networks and distributed systems, OPACs, integration and the advent of CD-ROM).
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