Print

Print


Marcia J. Bates wrote :

> -->Yet only half of the US and Canadian LIS programs have
> bought the encyclopedia, according to OCLC's WorldCat.
> Most of the British, Scandinavian, or other European schools
> have not bought it, . . .

This does indeed seem noteworthy.

There is not a single copy present in this country ( according to
our union catalogue ). There appears, on a quick check, to be for
example only one copy in Spain ( at the national library ), only
one in France ( at the national library ), only one in Italy ( Torino ),
only one in Austria ( Graz ), only ( ! ) two in the UK ( BL and
Liverpool ).  And hardly any evidence of online subscriptions.

How is one to explain this ?  For a "comprehensive state-of-the-art
review" ?  Why should one have ultimately to resort to a "special
appeal" by the editor ? 

Any suggestions ?

 
- Laval Hunsucker
  Breukelen, Nederland



From: Marcia J. Bates <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Fri, April 1, 2011 1:39:18 AM
Subject: A special appeal

Dear Folks,

I'm sending a special appeal to the field regarding the Third Edition of the 
Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences (CRC Press, 2010).  My 
Co-Editor Mary N. Maack and I did our very best to bring the highest quality 
encyclopedia to the field.

This was a monster project--a huge commitment by many people.  Over 700 
authors--including many of you--and a 50-person advisory panel were involved in 
writing the many brand-new and updated article-length entries in the 7-volume,  
5,742-page encyclopedia (also available in online form).  Some of the best-known 
researchers and professional leaders from many countries contributed.

After retiring, I worked full time for 4 years as Editor-in-Chief, and Mary 
worked on overload for the same time while still working full time at UCLA.  No 
fewer than 13,000 email messages were exchanged on my portion of the work alone.

We worked and re-worked the contents so as to create as comprehensive, balanced, 
and up-to-date coverage as possible of several information disciplines, 
including LIS, archives, museum studies, informatics, knowledge management, and 
social studies of information.

-->Yet only half of the US and Canadian LIS programs have bought the 
encyclopedia, according to OCLC's WorldCat.  Most of the British, Scandinavian, 
or other European schools have not bought it, despite the many authors--over 30% 
of the total--that we were able to attract from outside the U.S.  I know these 
have been unusually hard times economically, but if we are not able to recognize 
and take up such a huge communal project so central to our field--then what does 
matter to us as a professional community?

Rather than an encyclopedia to be consulted only occasionally, it should be 
thought of as a comprehensive state-of-the-art review of all the specialties in 
the information disciplines--a review that can be consulted frequently, with the 
articles widely used in classrooms.  ASIST members were kind enough to award it 
the "Best Information Science Publication of the Year" award for 2010. (See a 
recent review in: Tony Chalcraft, (2011) Reference Reviews, 25(1): 9-11.)

Please see the full Introduction, Topical Table of Contents, and Alphabetical 
Table of Contents on my website:  http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/bates/ .  
The Topical Table of Contents best presents the underlying structure of the 
encyclopedia, being grouped by the major categories of topics covered.

-->Remember, you as faculty can recommend the purchase of items by your library; 
don't assume that the purchase will happen otherwise.

Thanks for your attention, Marcia

-- 

Marcia J. Bates, Ph.D.
Professor Emerita
Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science
Editor, Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences, 3rd Ed.
Department of Information Studies
Graduate School of Education and Information Studies
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1520 USA
Tel: 310-206-9353
Fax: 310-206-4460
Web: http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/bates/