Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLilian Bell Modified over 9 years ago
2
Asian Collections Reading Room, National Library of Australia
3
Australien [cartographic material] / zu finden bey Ioh. Walch in Augsburg. [182-]
4
The development of CJK collections in Australia: problems and prospects Amelia McKenzie Director, Asian Collections
5
Overview Australia – 20M population Land mass of 4.8 million square miles 85% of population in urban areas 45 universities 20 universities have Asian studies programs High level of Asia research (but enrolments trending down)
6
Libraries supporting Asia research Main collections in Canberra, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane High level of cooperation National Library has always been part of the picture Collecting strengths in CJK and Southeast Asia, especially Indonesia
7
Access Single National Bibliographic Database since 1981 (1300 members) – hosted by NLA National CJK Service – shared cataloguing on Innopac platform (23 members) A modest success – 1.5M records, 490,000 holdings
8
Access NCJKS soon to be integrated into National Bibliographic Database on OCLC Pica platform (Unicode-compliant) Implementation late 2005 Improved access for all non-Roman scripts (we hope!) Access to NBD is through Libraries Australia (to be free from Jan 2006) including ‘get’ option – ILL, copies
9
Access Distant collections and declining resources mean cooperation is essential Models are Collecting agreements, eg NLA and ANU Consortium purchasing Local networks, eg ‘Asian Libraries in Melbourne’
10
Electronic resources Database products only at major libraries Standalone CD-ROMs common But difficulties with IT platforms for some products
11
Licensing Typical difficulties encountered in negotiations - permissions Downloading, printing, unlimited viewing Saving, emailing Document supply
12
Prospects – what’s coming next? Use of print collections is declining Use of online services is increasing But university collecting is declining, matching trends in Asian studies NLA collections provide stability at national level
13
From print to online to what? What new formats should we be collecting? Films, VCDs, images Ephemera – posters, brochures, leaflets Web sites – who is archiving significant research level sites?
14
Unexpected surprises Deterioration of cellulose acetate microform collections Mainly pre-1984 collections Deterioration has already begun
15
Thank you!
16
www.nla.gov.au www.librariesaustralia.nla.gov.au amckenzie@nla.gov.au
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.