000 01895nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c26629
_d26629
020 _a9780081018668
082 _a027.7
_bBOL-2
100 _aBolin,Mary K.
245 _a21st Century Academic Library:
_bGlobal Patterns of Organization and Discourse
260 _aCambridge
_bChandos Publishing
_c2017
300 _axvi,160p
520 _aThe 21st Century Academic Library: Organizational Patterns and Librarian Status in North America and other Anglophone Countries discusses the organization of academic libraries and how little has changed in the last 50 or even 100 years. The organization of the library follows the path of a print book or journal: acquisitions, cataloguing, circulation, reference, instruction, preservation and general administration. Most libraries still have public services and technical services (using those names or others), and are still very print-based in their organization while their collections and services are increasingly electronic and virtual. This book gathers information on organizational patterns of large academic libraries in the US and Europe, providing data that could motivate libraries to adopt innovative organizational structures or assess the effectiveness of their current organizational patterns. While there is a fair amount of research on topics like new competencies for librarians (using vacancy announcements as data), there is much less data on library organizational patterns. Contributes to the literature on the globalization of information and of library and information science Analyzes and presents data in a way that allows librarians and library administrators to consider what organizational patterns are the most effective for the goals they are pursuing Includes emerging patterns that are not widely seen in the academic library population
650 _aLibrary Science
_vAcademic libraries
_vManagement
942 _2ddc
_cBK