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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Maruyama, Lenore S.
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 1985
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED264880
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author Maruyama, Lenore S.
author_facet Maruyama, Lenore S.
Maruyama, Lenore S.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Transborder Flow of Bibliographic Data. IFLA Professional Reports, No. 7. Maruyama, Lenore S. Citations (References) Databases Developed Nations Developing Nations Information Networks Information Science Information Systems International Cooperation Library Associations National Libraries Position Papers Technological Advancement Transborder data flow has become a topic of much discussion and concern among the governments of the industrialized world, developing countries, international organizations, and many multinational corporations. Of late, the implications to the library community have been acknowledged. In 1983, the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) Section on Information Technology initiated this study to investigate any barriers to the flow of bibliographic information, and to make proposals for solutions and actions. To introduce a framework for studying the problems concerning transborder flow of bibliographic data, this paper describes several categories of organizations or institutions that play a major role in this process. These include: national libraries or national bibliographic agencies; bibliographic utilities; commercial database vendors; a publicly-supported, international online network service; international bibliographic information systems; and abstracting and indexing services. Following an introduction, this document is divided into three sections. The first, "Flow of Bibliographic Data," covers major participants, the present flow of bibliographic data, estimates of future flow of bibliographic data, and comparison with international circulation of other types of data. The section on "Barriers to the Flow of Bibliographic Information" describes such barriers and their consequences. A final section includes recommendations and proposals for action. The appendix is a chart outlining certain trade restrictions and showing some at their potential effects on telecommunications, data, and information services. (THC)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED264880
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1985
record_format eric
spellingShingle Transborder Flow of Bibliographic Data. IFLA Professional Reports, No. 7.
Maruyama, Lenore S.
Citations (References)
Databases
Developed Nations
Developing Nations
Information Networks
Information Science
Information Systems
International Cooperation
Library Associations
National Libraries
Position Papers
Technological Advancement
Transborder Flow of Bibliographic Data. IFLA Professional Reports, No. 7. Maruyama, Lenore S. Citations (References) Databases Developed Nations Developing Nations Information Networks Information Science Information Systems International Cooperation Library Associations National Libraries Position Papers Technological Advancement Transborder data flow has become a topic of much discussion and concern among the governments of the industrialized world, developing countries, international organizations, and many multinational corporations. Of late, the implications to the library community have been acknowledged. In 1983, the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) Section on Information Technology initiated this study to investigate any barriers to the flow of bibliographic information, and to make proposals for solutions and actions. To introduce a framework for studying the problems concerning transborder flow of bibliographic data, this paper describes several categories of organizations or institutions that play a major role in this process. These include: national libraries or national bibliographic agencies; bibliographic utilities; commercial database vendors; a publicly-supported, international online network service; international bibliographic information systems; and abstracting and indexing services. Following an introduction, this document is divided into three sections. The first, "Flow of Bibliographic Data," covers major participants, the present flow of bibliographic data, estimates of future flow of bibliographic data, and comparison with international circulation of other types of data. The section on "Barriers to the Flow of Bibliographic Information" describes such barriers and their consequences. A final section includes recommendations and proposals for action. The appendix is a chart outlining certain trade restrictions and showing some at their potential effects on telecommunications, data, and information services. (THC)
title Transborder Flow of Bibliographic Data. IFLA Professional Reports, No. 7.
topic Citations (References)
Databases
Developed Nations
Developing Nations
Information Networks
Information Science
Information Systems
International Cooperation
Library Associations
National Libraries
Position Papers
Technological Advancement
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED264880