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General directors who have all made their marks in the field of
librarianship report from a variety of perspectives, including
economic, social, educational, cultural developmental, and
political. This information could increase the understanding of the
managerial decisions, and other factors that affect the decisions
and determine the library's overall policy and operations.
The Marketing of Academic, National and Public Libraries Worldwide:
Marketing, Branding, Community Engagement enables readers to learn
about the most up-to-date trends, as well as hands-on practices and
marketing tactics taken directly from 48 highly seasoned marketing
and community engagement librarians around the world, namely in
Africa, Australia, Canada, Croatia, Germany, Hong Kong, Latvia and
Qatar. Via a series of in-depth and semi-structured interviews,
this book provides insights into successful marketing strategies
librarians can use to encourage donors and patrons to understand
that their libraries are a great choice for fulfilling information
needs, recreational interests, intellectual pursuits, and more.
As a branch of International and Area Studies Librarianship (IASL),
East Asian Librarianship has become increasingly important in an
age of globalization as scholars engage in interdisciplinary
research and study. Volume 2 of Inside Major East Asian Library
Collections in North America presents an extensive collection of
interviews that give key insights into Chinese, Korean, and Asian
American librarianship. East Asian Studies librarianship requires a
variety of technical skills, combining deep subject background with
knowledge of library processes/workflows, an awareness of research
trends, and digital developments in their respective fields.
Professionalism, tradition, standards, respected bodies of
knowledge and individual practicing professionals’ personality
traits are closely examined over both volumes. Inside Major East
Asian Library Collections in North America promotes shared
understanding of subject area librarians’ work and contribution
to society and will enable further collaborations and new services,
utilizing the unique and distributed nature of their expertise.
As a branch of International and Area Studies Librarianship (IASL),
East Asian Librarianship has become increasingly important in an
age of globalization as scholars engage in interdisciplinary
research and study. Volume 1 of Inside Major East Asian Library
Collections in North America presents an extensive collection of
interviews that give key insights into Japanese and Korean
librarianship. East Asian Studies librarianship requires a variety
of technical skills, combining deep subject background with
knowledge of library processes/workflows, an awareness of research
trends, and digital developments in their respective fields.
Professionalism, tradition, standards, respected bodies of
knowledge and individual practicing professionals' personality
traits are closely examined over both volumes. Inside Major East
Asian Library Collections in North America promotes shared
understanding of librarians' work and contribution to society and
will enable further collaborations and new services, utilizing the
unique and distributed nature of their expertise.
Conversations with Leading Academic and Research Library Directors:
International Perspectives on Library Management presents a series
of conversations with the directors of major academic and research
libraries. The book offers insight, analysis, and personal anecdote
from leaders in the library field, giving a unique perspective on
how the modern library operates. Readers will learn about the most
up-to-date trends and practices in the LIS profession from the
directors of 24 internationally acclaimed academic and research
libraries in Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, The Netherlands, New
Zealand, Russia, Singapore, and the UK and USA. This is the first
book focusing on leaders and managers of library institutions to
offer a global outlook. Facing the need to respond to the
expectations of changing populations that librarians strive to
serve, this book aims to develop a new understanding of the core
values of academic and research libraries, and asks how librarians
can innovate, adapt, and flourish in a rapidly shifting
professional landscape.
Literacy and Reading Programmes for Children and Young People: Case
Studies from Around the Globe presents interviews with over 40
librarians from around the world who tell of their library
programs. The volumes are arranged geographically with Volume 1
offering interviews from library professionals from the USA and
Europe, and with Volume 2 sharing programs from Asia, Africa,
Australia, and the Middle East. The volumes highlight the diversity
of the types of programs catering to the varying needs of children
and young adults throughout the world. Case studies featured in
this book outline the details of programs, events, and activities
provided by over 40 organizations in the context of social capital
and social inclusion. Each interview chapter discusses the
contributions made to literacy development and community building
of children and teens. With the many variations and examples of
best practice, librarians and educators can glean new ideas for
their own programs. The interviews reveal the challenges and issues
faced and the work being achieved in vastly different environments,
in many geographic areas, and in diverse economic, social, and
cultural contexts. The programs include those of national and state
libraries, public libraries, and mobile libraries carried out by
public libraries, NGOs, and commercial organizations in both
developed and developing countries. They also feature programs of
multicultural libraries, libraries for indigenous people, and
libraries for refugees. This publication complements the range of
initiatives and activities carried out by IFLA's Libraries for
Children and Young Adults Section that supports library services
and reading promotion initiatives catering to children and young
adults around the world. These volumes are rich in variety and will
provide much food for thought for creating unique and successful
library programs.
Literacy and Reading Programmes for Children and Young People: Case
Studies from Around the Globe presents interviews with over 40
librarians from around the world who tell of their library
programs. The volumes are arranged geographically with Volume 1
offering interviews from library professionals from the USA and
Europe, and with Volume 2 sharing programs from Asia, Africa,
Australia, and the Middle East. The volumes highlight the diversity
of the types of programs catering to the varying needs of children
and young adults throughout the world. Case studies featured in
this book outline the details of programs, events, and activities
provided by over 40 organizations in the context of social capital
and social inclusion. Each interview chapter discusses the
contributions made to literacy development and community building
of children and teens. With the many variations and examples of
best practice, librarians and educators can glean new ideas for
their own programs. The interviews reveal the challenges and issues
faced and the work being achieved in vastly different environments,
in many geographic areas, and in diverse economic, social, and
cultural contexts. The programs include those of national and state
libraries, public libraries, and mobile libraries carried out by
public libraries, NGOs, and commercial organizations in both
developed and developing countries. They also feature programs of
multicultural libraries, libraries for indigenous people, and
libraries for refugees. This publication complements the range of
initiatives and activities carried out by IFLA's Libraries for
Children and Young Adults Section that supports library services
and reading promotion initiatives catering to children and young
adults around the world. These volumes are rich in variety and will
provide much food for thought for creating unique and successful
library programs.
Inside the World's Major East Asian Collections examines the rise
of the "LAM," an acronym that stands for libraries, archives and
museums. In doing so, this book profiles leading
experts-librarians, archivists and museum curators-who specialise
in East Asian collections from across the world. In examining the
dynamically shifting role of the cultural institution in the
context of managing information and collections, this book provides
important themes offered by these cultural experts in understanding
the necessary professional skills, knowledge and personalities that
are required for working in such environments of varying size,
scope and composition in LAMs. As galleries, LAMs manage
preservation and access of history and culture, and their missions
and goals as cultural institutions continue to converge. As
collecting institutions, LAMs share the common mandate to preserve
and make accessible primary resources valuable for researchers and
professionals, as well as the public. LAMs are mostly publicly
funded, publicly accountable institutions collecting cultural
heritage materials. Another aim of this book is to enhance the
visibility and recognise the efforts of the LAM professionals as
cultural institution leaders, since much of their great
contributions in the respective fields to preserving our cultural
and documentary heritages have gone unnoticed outside their parent
institutions.
This book is based on a series of informative interviews with a
number of music librarians working for different leading symphony
orchestras and opera companies throughout the world. In these
interviews, librarians share with the readers what kind of
professional skills, knowledge and personality that are required to
supply music to the performers onstage, as well as information to
these world-famous performing arts organizations. Interviewees also
discuss in details about their professional lives, i.e., including
their personal stories and working relationships with various
legendary conductors and star soloists, e.g., Claudio Abbado, Simon
Rattle, James Levine, Donald Runnicles, Bernard Haitink, Zubin
Mehta, Sir Colin Davis, etc. Via the interviewees' stories, one can
also get a glimpse of the different inside operations and the
unique management styles behind the backstage of these
internationally renowned performing arts organizations. There are
fourteen conversations including interviews with the Chief
Librarian at the Metropolitan Opera and the Orchestra Librarians at
the San Francisco Ballet, the Berlin Philharmonic, and Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra.
Volume 2 of the two part collection Stories and Lessons from the
World's Leading Opera, Orchestra Librarians, and Music Archivists,
explores the current trends and practices in the field of music
performance librarianship. Featuring interviews and conversations
from over twenty orchestra, opera, and ballet librarians and
archivists working for some of the world's leading performing arts
and educational institutions from Europe and Asia, this book is a
helpful resource to librarians, and archivists who need to manage
artifacts in a variety of situations in the world of performing
arts. For music and library science professors, this serves as a
useful teaching tool or reference material by allowing students to
gain a glimpse into the profession of music performance
librarianship. Finally, this book functions as a unique and
important reference tool for all students who are considering a
career in music performance librarianship or a profession in
archives in the world of performing arts.
This volume contains two Open Access Chapters Volume 1 of the two
part collection Stories and Lessons from the World's Leading Opera,
Orchestra Librarians, and Music Archivists, explores the current
trends and practices in the field of music performance
librarianship. Featuring interviews and conversations from over
twenty orchestra, opera, and ballet librarians and archivists
working for some of the world's leading performing arts and
educational institutions from North and South America, this book is
a helpful resource to librarians, and archivists who need to manage
artifacts in a variety of situations in the world of performing
arts. For music and library science professors, this serves as a
useful teaching tool or reference material by allowing students to
gain a glimpse into the profession of music performance
librarianship. Finally, this book functions as a unique and
important reference tool for all students who are considering a
career in music performance librarianship or a profession in
archives in the world of performing arts.
General directors who have all made their marks in the field of
librarianship report from a variety of perspectives, including
economic, social, educational, cultural developmental, and
political. This information could increase the understanding of the
managerial decisions, and other factors that affect the decisions
and determine the library's overall policy and operations.
These volumes provide a series of informative interviews with
school/teacher librarians practicing in different parts of the
world. The 2-volume set showcases the resilience, creativity, and
best practices from successful school librarians from Europe, Asia,
Africa, Australia, and North and South America. The librarians
interviewed come from all different schools and schools systems,
from a tiny recently built school library in a rural village in
Africa to an ultra-modern library in Sweden. Featuring 37
interviews with successful school librarians from across the globe,
the volumes let us hear the stories from countries around the
world. They tell about their creative and innovative school library
projects, their unconventional reading programs, and their best
practices and experiences in addressing the challenges of
supporting basic literacy. A wide selection of methodologies and
approaches are discussed, offering a global "voyage" through topics
important in school librarianship. The 2-volume set also addresses
recent advancements in information and communication technologies
(ICTs) and the shift toward inquiry-based learning that impacts
school libraries worldwide. The books are packed with information
that can be used by school librarians, teachers, school
administrators and others in a variety of ways. Readers can borrow
best practices from the experiences presented in the book, and the
volumes can also serve as a strong voice for practicing school
librarians and the profession, through expanding the opportunities
for professional sharing in the international school library
community.
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