![Library and information science](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi82LzY0L0FuY2llbnRsaWJyYXJ5YWxleC5qcGcvMTYwMHB4LUFuY2llbnRsaWJyYXJ5YWxleC5qcGc=.jpg )
Library and Information Science (LIS) are two interconnected disciplines that deal with information management. This includes organization, access, collection, and regulation of information, both in physical and digital forms.
Library science and information science are two original disciplines; however, they are within the same field of study. Library science is applied information science. Library science is both an application and a subfield of information science. Due to the strong connection, sometimes the two terms are used synonymously.
Definition
Library science (previously termed library studies and library economy) is an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary field that applies the practices, perspectives, and tools of management, information technology, education, and other areas to libraries; the collection, organization, preservation, and dissemination of information resources; and the political economy of information. Martin Schrettinger, a Bavarian librarian, coined the discipline within his work (1808–1828) Versuch eines vollständigen Lehrbuchs der Bibliothek-Wissenschaft oder Anleitung zur vollkommenen Geschäftsführung eines Bibliothekars. Rather than classifying information based on nature-oriented elements, as was previously done in his Bavarian library, Schrettinger organized books in alphabetical order. The first American school for library science was founded by Melvil Dewey at Columbia University in 1887.
Historically, library science has also included archival science. This includes: how information resources are organized to serve the needs of selected user groups; how people interact with classification systems and technology; how information is acquired, evaluated and applied by people in and outside libraries as well as cross-culturally; how people are trained and educated for careers in libraries; the ethics that guide library service and organization; the legal status of libraries and information resources; and the applied science of computer technology used in documentation and records management.
LIS should not be confused with information theory, the mathematical study of the concept of information. Library philosophy has been contrasted with library science as the study of the aims and justifications of librarianship as opposed to the development and refinement of techniques.
Education and training
Academic courses in library science include collection management, information systems and technology, research methods, user studies, information literacy, cataloging and classification, preservation, reference, statistics and management. Library science is constantly evolving, incorporating new topics like database management, information architecture and information management, among others.
With the mounting acceptance of Wikipedia as a valued and reliable reference source, many libraries, museums, and archives have introduced the role of Wikipedian in residence. As a result, some universities are including coursework relating to Wikipedia and Knowledge Management in their MLIS programs.
Becoming a library staff member does not always need a degree, and in some contexts the difference between being a library staff member and a librarian is the level of education. Most professional library jobs require a professional degree in library science or equivalent. In the United States and Canada the certification usually comes from a master's degree granted by an ALA-accredited institution. In Australia, a number of institutions offer degrees accepted by the ALIA (Australian Library and Information Association). Global standards of accreditation or certification in librarianship have yet to be developed.
United States and Canada
The Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) is the master's degree that is required for most professional librarian positions in the United States and Canada. The MLIS was created after the older Master of Library Science (MLS) was reformed to reflect the information science and technology needs of the field. According to the American Library Association (ALA), "ALA-accredited degrees have [had] various names such as Master of Arts, Master of Librarianship, Master of Library and Information Studies, or Master of Science. The degree name is determined by the program. The [ALA] Committee for Accreditation evaluates programs based on their adherence to the Standards for Accreditation of Master's Programs in Library and Information Studies, not based on the name of the degree."
Types of librarianship
Public
The study of librarianship for public libraries covers issues such as cataloging; collection development for a diverse community; information literacy; readers' advisory; community standards; public services-focused librarianship via community-centered programming; serving a diverse community of adults, children, and teens; intellectual freedom; censorship; and legal and budgeting issues. The public library as a commons or public sphere based on the work of Jürgen Habermas has become a central metaphor in the 21st century.
In the United States there are four different types of public libraries: association libraries, municipal public libraries, school district libraries, and special district public libraries. Each receives funding through different sources, each is established by a different set of voters, and not all are subject to municipal civil service governance.
School
The study of school librarianship covers library services for children in Nursery, primary through secondary school. In some regions, the local government may have stricter standards for the education and certification of school librarians (who are sometimes considered a special case of teacher), than for other librarians, and the educational program will include those local criteria. School librarianship may also include issues of intellectual freedom, pedagogy, information literacy, and how to build a cooperative curriculum with the teaching staff.
Academic
The study of academic librarianship covers library services for colleges and universities. Issues of special importance to the field may include copyright; technology; digital libraries and digital repositories; academic freedom; open access to scholarly works; and specialized knowledge of subject areas important to the institution and the relevant reference works. Librarians often divide focus individually as liaisons on particular schools within a college or university. Academic librarians may be subject specific librarians.
Some academic librarians are considered faculty, and hold similar academic ranks to those of professors, while others are not. In either case, the minimal qualification is a Master of Arts in Library Studies or a Master of Arts in Library Science. Some academic libraries may only require a master's degree in a specific academic field or a related field, such as educational technology.
Archival
The study of archives includes the training of archivists, librarians specially trained to maintain and build archives of records intended for historical preservation. Special issues include physical preservation, conservation, and restoration of materials and mass deacidification; specialist catalogs; solo work; access; and appraisal. Many archivists are also trained historians specializing in the period covered by the archive. There have been attempts to revive the concept of documentation and to speak of Library, information and documentation studies (or science).
The archival mission includes three major goals: To identify papers and records with enduring value, preserve the identified papers, and make the papers available to others. While libraries receive items individually, archival items will usually become part of the archive's collection as a cohesive group. Major difference in collections is that library collections typically comprise published items (books, magazines, etc.), while archival collections are usually unpublished works (letters, diaries, etc.). Library collections are created by many individuals, as each author and illustrator create their own publication; in contrast, an archive usually collects the records of one person, family, institution, or organization, so the archival items will have fewer sources of authors.
Behavior in an archive differs from behavior in other libraries. In most libraries, items are openly available to the public. Archival items almost never circulate, and someone interested in viewing documents must request them of the archivist and may only be able view them in a closed reading room.
Special
Special libraries are libraries established to meet the highly specialized requirements of professional or business groups. A library is special depending on whether it covers a specialized collection, a special subject, or a particular group of users, or even the type of parent organization, such as medical libraries or law libraries.
The issues at these libraries are specific to their industries but may include solo work, corporate financing, specialized collection development, and extensive self-promotion to potential patrons. Special librarians have their own professional organization, the Special Libraries Association (SLA).
Some special libraries, such as the CIA Library, may contain classified works. It is a resource to employees of the Central Intelligence Agency, containing over 125,000 written materials, subscribes to around 1,700 periodicals, and had collections in three areas: Historical Intelligence, Circulating, and Reference. In February 1997, three librarians working at the institution spoke to Information Outlook, a publication of the SLA, revealing that the library had been created in 1947, the importance of the library in disseminating information to employees, even with a small staff, and how the library organizes its materials.
Preservation
Preservation librarians most often work in academic libraries. Their focus is on the management of preservation activities that seek to maintain access to content within books, manuscripts, archival materials, and other library resources. Examples of activities managed by preservation librarians include binding, conservation, digital and analog reformatting, digital preservation, and environmental monitoring.
History
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODJMelkwTDBGdVkybGxiblJzYVdKeVlYSjVZV3hsZUM1cWNHY3ZNall5Y0hndFFXNWphV1Z1ZEd4cFluSmhjbmxoYkdWNExtcHdadz09LmpwZw==.jpg)
Libraries have existed for many centuries but library science is a more recent phenomenon, as early libraries were managed primarily by academics.
17th and 18th century
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJoTDBkaFluSnBaV3hmVG1GMVpHVXVhbkJuTHpJeU1IQjRMVWRoWW5KcFpXeGZUbUYxWkdVdWFuQm4uanBn.jpg)
The earliest text on "library operations", Advice on Establishing a Library was published in 1627 by French librarian and scholar Gabriel Naudé. Naudé wrote on many subjects including politics, religion, history, and the supernatural. He put into practice all the ideas put forth in Advice when given the opportunity to build and maintain the library of Cardinal Jules Mazarin.
In 1726 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz wrote Idea of Arranging a Narrower Library.
19th century
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJrTDBSbGQyVjVYM0psYkdGMGRsOXBibVJsZUM1d2JtY3ZNakl3Y0hndFJHVjNaWGxmY21Wc1lYUjJYMmx1WkdWNExuQnVadz09LnBuZw==.png)
Martin Schrettinger wrote the second textbook (the first in Germany) on the subject from 1808 to 1829.
Some of the main tools used by LIS to provide access to the resources originated in 19th century to make information accessible by recording, identifying, and providing bibliographic control of printed knowledge. The origin for some of these tools were even earlier. In the 17th century, during the 'golden age of libraries', publishers and sellers seeking to take advantage of the burgeoning book trade developed descriptive catalogs of their wares for distribution – a practice was adopted and further extrapolated by many libraries of the time to cover areas like philosophy, sciences, linguistics, and medicine
Thomas Jefferson, whose library at Monticello consisted of thousands of books, devised a classification system inspired by the Baconian method, which grouped books more or less by subject rather than alphabetically, as it was previously done. The Jefferson collection provided the start of what became the Library of Congress.
The first American school of librarianship opened at Columbia University under the leadership of Melvil Dewey, noted for his 1876 decimal classification, on January 5, 1887, as the School of Library Economy. The term library economy was common in the U.S. until 1942, with the term, library science, predominant through much of the 20th century.
20th century
In the English-speaking world the term "library science" seems to have been used for the first time in India in the 1916 book Punjab Library Primer, written by Asa Don Dickinson and published by the University of Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan. This university was the first in Asia to begin teaching "library science". The Punjab Library Primer was the first textbook on library science published in English anywhere in the world. The first textbook in the United States was the Manual of Library Economy by James Duff Brown, published in 1903.
Later, the term was used in the title of S. R. Ranganathan's The Five Laws of Library Science, published in 1931, which contains Ranganathan's titular theory. Ranganathan is also credited with the development of the first major analytical-synthetic classification system, the colon classification.
In the United States, Lee Pierce Butler published his 1933 book An Introduction to Library Science (University of Chicago Press), where he advocated for research using quantitative methods and ideas in the social sciences with the aim of using librarianship to address society's information needs. He was one of the first faculty at the University of Chicago Graduate Library School, which changed the structure and focus of education for librarianship in the twentieth century. This research agenda went against the more procedure-based approach of the "library economy", which was mostly confined to practical problems in the administration of libraries.
In 1923, Charles C. Williamson, who was appointed by the Carnegie Corporation, published an assessment of library science education entitled "The Williamson Report", which designated that universities should provide library science training. This report had a significant impact on library science training and education. Library research and practical work, in the area of information science, have remained largely distinct both in training and in research interests.
William Stetson Merrill's A Code for Classifiers, released in several editions from 1914 to 1939, is an example of a more pragmatic approach, where arguments stemming from in-depth knowledge about each field of study are employed to recommend a system of classification. While Ranganathan's approach was philosophical, it was also tied more to the day-to-day business of running a library. A reworking of Ranganathan's laws was published in 1995 which removes the constant references to books. Michael Gorman's Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century features the eight principles necessary by library professionals and incorporates knowledge and information in all their forms, allowing for digital information to be considered.
From Library Science to LIS
By the late 1960s, mainly due to the meteoric rise of human computing power and the new academic disciplines formed therefrom, academic institutions began to add the term "information science" to their names. The first school to do this was at the University of Pittsburgh in 1964. More schools followed during the 1970s and 1980s. By the 1990s almost all library schools in the US had added information science to their names. Although there are exceptions, similar developments have taken place in other parts of the world. In India, the Dept of Library Science,University of Madras (southern state of TamiilNadu, India) became the Dept. of Library and Information Science in 1976. In Denmark, for example, the 'Royal School of Librarianship' changed its English name to The Royal School of Library and Information Science in 1997.
21st century
The digital age has transformed how information is accessed and retrieved. "The library is now a part of a complex and dynamic educational, recreational, and informational infrastructure."Mobile devices and applications with wireless networking, high-speed computers and networks, and the computing cloud have deeply impacted and developed information science and information services. The evolution of the library sciences maintains its mission of access equity and community space, as well as the new means for information retrieval called information literacy skills. All catalogs, databases, and a growing number of books are available on the Internet. In addition, the expanding free access to open access journals and sources such as Wikipedia has fundamentally impacted how information is accessed.
Information literacy is the ability to "determine the extent of information needed, access the needed information effectively and efficiently, evaluate information and its sources critically, incorporate selected information into one's knowledge base, use information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose, and understand the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information, and access and use information ethically and legally."
In the early 2000s, dLIST, Digital Library for Information Sciences and Technology was established. It was the first open access archive for the multidisciplinary 'library and information sciences' building a global scholarly communication consortium and the LIS Commons in order to increase the visibility of research literature, bridge the divide between practice, teaching, and research communities, and improve visibility, uncitedness, and integrate scholarly work in the critical information infrastructures of archives, libraries, and museums.
Social justice, an important ethical value in librarianship and in the 21st century has become an important research area, if not subdiscipline of LIS.
Journals
See also
- List of Library and Information Science Journals
- Category:Library science journals
- Journal Citation Reports for listing according to Impact factor)
Some core journals in LIS are:
- Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) (1966–2011)
- (es) (EPI) (1992–) (Formerly Information World en Español)
- Information Processing and Management
- Information Research: An International Electronic Journal (IR) (1995–)
- Italian Journal of Library and Information Studies (JLIS.it)
- Journal of Documentation (JDoc) (1945–)
- Journal of Information Science (JIS) (1979–)
- Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (Formerly Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology) (JASIST) (1950–)
- Knowledge Organization (journal)
- Library Literature and Information Science Retrospective
- Library Trends (1952–)
- Scientometrics (journal) (1978–)
- The Library Quarterly (LQ) (1931–)
- Grandhalaya Sarvaswam (1915–)
Important bibliographical databases in LIS are, among others, Social Sciences Citation Index and Library and Information Science Abstracts
Conferences
This is a list of some of the major conferences in the field.
- Annual meetings of the American Library Association.
- Annual meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
- Conceptions of Library and Information Science
- i-Schools' iConferences
- The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA): World Library and Information Congress
- African Library and Information Associations and Institutions (AfLIA) Conference
Subfields
Information science grew out of documentation science and therefore has a tradition for considering scientific and scholarly communication, bibliographic databases, subject knowledge and terminology etc.
An advertisement for a full Professor in information science at the Royal School of Library and Information Science, spring 2011, provides one view of which sub-disciplines are well-established: "The research and teaching/supervision must be within some (and at least one) of these well-established information science areas
- Knowledge organization
- Library studies
- Information architecture
- Information behavior
- Interactive information retrieval
- Information systems
- Scholarly communication
- Digital literacy (cf information literacy)
- Bibliometrics or scientometrics
- Interaction design and user experience"
- Digital library
A curriculum study by Kajberg & Lørring in 2005 reported a "degree of overlap of the ten curricular themes with subject areas in the current curricula of responding LIS schools".
- Information seeking and Information retrieval 100%
- Library management and promotion 96%
- Knowledge management 86%
- Knowledge organization 82%
- Information literacy and learning 76%
- Library and society in a historical perspective (Library history) 66%
- The Information society: Barriers to the free access to information 64%
- Cultural heritage and digitisation of the cultural heritage (Digital preservation) 62%
- The library in the multi-cultural information society: International and intercultural communication 42%
- Mediation of culture in a special European context 26% "
There is often an overlap between these subfields of LIS and other fields of study. Most information retrieval research, for example, belongs to computer science. Knowledge management is considered a subfield of management or organizational studies.
Metadata
Pre-Internet classification systems and cataloging systems were mainly concerned with two objectives:
- To provide rich bibliographic descriptions and relations between information objects, and
- To facilitate sharing of this bibliographic information across library boundaries.
The development of the Internet and the information explosion that followed found many communities needing mechanisms for the description, authentication and management of their information. These communities developed taxonomies and controlled vocabularies to describe their knowledge, as well as unique information architectures to communicate these classifications and libraries found themselves as liaison or translator between these metadata systems. The concerns of cataloging in the Internet era have gone beyond simple bibliographic descriptions and the need for descriptive information about the ownership and copyright of a digital product – a publishing concern – and description for the different formats and accessibility features of a resource – a sociological concern – show the continued development and cross discipline necessity of resource description.
In the 21st century, the usage of open data, open source and open protocols like OAI-PMH has allowed thousands of libraries and institutions to collaborate on the production of global metadata services previously offered only by increasingly expensive commercial proprietary products. Tools like BASE and Unpaywall automate the search of an academic paper across thousands of repositories by libraries and research institutions.
Knowledge organization
Library science is very closely related to issues of knowledge organization; however, the latter is a broader term that covers how knowledge is represented and stored (computer science/linguistics), how it might be automatically processed (artificial intelligence), and how it is organized outside the library in global systems such as the internet. In addition, library science typically refers to a specific community engaged in managing holdings as they are found in university and government libraries, while knowledge organization, in general, refers to this and also to other communities (such as publishers) and other systems (such as the Internet). The library system is thus one socio-technical structure for knowledge organization.[citation needed]
The terms 'information organization' and 'knowledge organization' are often used synonymously.: 106 The fundamentals of their study - particularly theory relating to indexing and classification - and many of the main tools used by the disciplines in modern times to provide access to digital resources such as abstracting, metadata, resource description, systematic and alphabetic subject description, and terminology, originated in the 19th century and were developed, in part, to assist in making humanity's intellectual output accessible by recording, identifying, and providing bibliographic control of printed knowledge.: 105
Information has been published that analyses the relations between the philosophy of information (PI), library and information science (LIS), and social epistemology (SE).
Ethics
Practicing library professionals and members of the American Library Association recognize and abide by the ALA Code of Ethics. According to the American Library Association, "In a political system grounded in an informed citizenry, we are members of a profession explicitly committed to intellectual freedom and freedom of access to information. We have a special obligation to ensure the free flow of information and ideas to present and future generations." The ALA Code of Ethics was adopted in the winter of 1939, and updated on June 29, 2021.
See also
- Authority control – Unique headings used for bibliographic information
- Bibliography – Organized listing of books and the systematic description of them as objects
- Digital Asset Management – Cloud management system (DAM)
- Diversity in librarianship
- Glossary of library and information science
- Information history – academic discipline
- Internet search engines and libraries – Organized collection of books or other information resources
- List of library and information science journals
- Libraries and the LGBTQ community – Library services to the LGBT community
- Library portal
- List of library associations
- Museology – Study of museums
- Museum informatics
- Outline of library science – Overview of and topical guide to library science
- Subject indexing – Classifying a document by index terms
- Timeline of women in library science
Notes
- Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) used the term "library economy" for class 19 in its first edition from 1876. In the second edition (and all subsequent editions) it was moved to class 20. The term "library economy" was used until (and including) the 14th edition (1942). From the 15th edition (1951) class 20 was termed library science, which was used until (and including) 17th edition (1965) when it was replaced by "library and information sciences" (LIS) from the 18th edition (1971) and forward.
References
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- Library and Information Sciences is the name used in the Dewey Decimal Classification for class 20 from the 18th edition (1971) to the 22nd edition (2003)
- Coleman, A. (2002). Interdisciplinarity: The Road Ahead for Education in Digital Libraries.D-Lib Magazine, 8:8/9 (July/August).https://www.dlib.org/dlib/july02/coleman/07coleman.html
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- Coleman, A and Roback, J. (2005). Open Access Federation for Library and Information Science: dLIST and DL-Harvest. D-Lib Magazine 11 (12). December https://www.dlib.org/dlib/december05/coleman/12coleman.html
- Mehra, B., Rioux, K., and Albright, K. S. (2010). Social Justice in Library and Information Science. In M. J. Bates and M. N. Maack (eds.), Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences (pp. 4820-4836). New York: Taylor & Francis Group.
- "Library Literature & Information Science Retrospective: 1905–1983 | EBSCO". Archived from the original on April 1, 2023. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- "Journal of Librarianship and Information Science". SAGE Journals. Archived from the original on April 1, 2023. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- "World Library and Information Congress – IFLA General Conference and Assembly". July 6, 2015. Archived from the original on July 6, 2015.
- "Conferences". African Library & Information Associations & Institutions. Archived from the original on April 1, 2023. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
- Kunz, Werner; Rittel, Horst W. J. (April 1, 1972). "Information science: On the structure of its problems". Information Storage and Retrieval. 8 (2): 95–98. doi:10.1016/0020-0271(72)90011-3. ISSN 0020-0271.
- "Jobnet forside". Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
- Leif, Kajberg; Leif, Lørring (January 1, 2005). "European Curriculum Reflections on Library and Information Science Education" (PDF). The Royal School of Library and Information Science. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 25, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- Clegg, Stewart; Bailey, James R., eds. (2008). International Encyclopedia of Organizational Studies. Los Angeles: Sage Publications Inc. pp. 758–762. ISBN 978-1412953900.
- Zeng, Marcia Lei; Qin, Jian (2016). Metadata. Facet Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78330-052-5.
- Chawla, Dalmeet Singh (2017). "Unpaywall finds free versions of paywalled papers". Nature News. doi:10.1038/nature.2017.21765. S2CID 86694031. Archived from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- Floridi, Luciano (January 1, 2002). "On defining library and information science as applied philosophy of information". Social Epistemology. 16 (1): 37–49. doi:10.1080/02691720210132789. ISSN 0269-1728. S2CID 12243183.
- American Library Association (May 19, 2017). "Professional Ethics". Tools, Publications & Resources. Archived from the original on October 29, 2021. Retrieved October 29, 2021.
Further reading
Library cataloging and classification | |
---|---|
Dewey Decimal | 020 |
- Åström, Fredrik (September 5, 2008). "Formalizing a discipline: The institutionalization of library and information science research in the Nordic countries". Journal of Documentation. 64 (5): 721–737. doi:10.1108/00220410810899736.
- Bawden, David; Robinson, Lyn (August 20, 2012). Introduction to Information Science. American Library Association. ISBN 978-1555708610.
- Hjørland, Birger (2000). "Library and information science: practice, theory, and philosophical basis". Information Processing & Management. 36 (3): 501–531. doi:10.1016/S0306-4573(99)00038-2.
- Järvelin, Kalervo; Vakkari, Pertti (January 1993). "The evolution of library and information science 1965–1985: A content analysis of journal articles". Information Processing & Management. 29 (1): 129–144. doi:10.1016/0306-4573(93)90028-C.
- McNicol, Sarah (March 2003). "LIS: the interdisciplinary research landscape". Journal of Librarianship and Information Science. 35 (1): 23–30. doi:10.1177/096100060303500103. S2CID 220912521.
- Dick, Archie L. (1995). "Library and Information Science as a Social Science: Neutral and Normative Conceptions". The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy. 65 (2): 216–235. doi:10.1086/602777. JSTOR 4309022. S2CID 142825177.
- Foundational Books in Library Services.1976-2024. LHRT News & Notes. October, 2024.
- International Journal of Library Science (ISSN 0975-7546)
- Lafontaine, Gerard S. (1958). Dictionary of Terms Used in the Paper, Printing, and Allied Industries. Toronto: H. Smith Paper Mills. 110 p.
- The Oxford Guide to Library Research (2005) – ISBN 0195189981
- Taşkın, Zehra (2021). "Forecasting the future of library and information science and its sub-fields". Scientometrics. 126 (2): 1527–1551. doi:10.1007/s11192-020-03800-2. PMC 7745590. PMID 33353991.
- Thompson, Elizabeth H. (1943). A.L.A. Glossary of Library Terms, with a Selection of Terms in Related Fields, prepared under the direction of the Committee on Library Terminology of the American Library Association. Chicago, Ill.: American Library Association. viii, 189 p. ISBN 978-0838900000
- V-LIB 1.2 (2008 Vartavan Library Classification, over 700 fields of sciences & arts classified according to a relational philosophy, currently sold under license in the UK by Rosecastle Ltd. (see Vartavan-Frame)
External links
Media related to Library and information science at Wikimedia Commons
- LISNews.org – librarian and information science news
- LISWire.com – librarian and information science wire
Library and Information Science LIS are two interconnected disciplines that deal with information management This includes organization access collection and regulation of information both in physical and digital forms Library science and information science are two original disciplines however they are within the same field of study Library science is applied information science Library science is both an application and a subfield of information science Due to the strong connection sometimes the two terms are used synonymously DefinitionLibrary science previously termed library studies and library economy is an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary field that applies the practices perspectives and tools of management information technology education and other areas to libraries the collection organization preservation and dissemination of information resources and the political economy of information Martin Schrettinger a Bavarian librarian coined the discipline within his work 1808 1828 Versuch eines vollstandigen Lehrbuchs der Bibliothek Wissenschaft oder Anleitung zur vollkommenen Geschaftsfuhrung eines Bibliothekars Rather than classifying information based on nature oriented elements as was previously done in his Bavarian library Schrettinger organized books in alphabetical order The first American school for library science was founded by Melvil Dewey at Columbia University in 1887 Historically library science has also included archival science This includes how information resources are organized to serve the needs of selected user groups how people interact with classification systems and technology how information is acquired evaluated and applied by people in and outside libraries as well as cross culturally how people are trained and educated for careers in libraries the ethics that guide library service and organization the legal status of libraries and information resources and the applied science of computer technology used in documentation and records management LIS should not be confused with information theory the mathematical study of the concept of information Library philosophy has been contrasted with library science as the study of the aims and justifications of librarianship as opposed to the development and refinement of techniques Education and trainingAcademic courses in library science include collection management information systems and technology research methods user studies information literacy cataloging and classification preservation reference statistics and management Library science is constantly evolving incorporating new topics like database management information architecture and information management among others With the mounting acceptance of Wikipedia as a valued and reliable reference source many libraries museums and archives have introduced the role of Wikipedian in residence As a result some universities are including coursework relating to Wikipedia and Knowledge Management in their MLIS programs Becoming a library staff member does not always need a degree and in some contexts the difference between being a library staff member and a librarian is the level of education Most professional library jobs require a professional degree in library science or equivalent In the United States and Canada the certification usually comes from a master s degree granted by an ALA accredited institution In Australia a number of institutions offer degrees accepted by the ALIA Australian Library and Information Association Global standards of accreditation or certification in librarianship have yet to be developed United States and Canada The Master of Library and Information Science MLIS is the master s degree that is required for most professional librarian positions in the United States and Canada The MLIS was created after the older Master of Library Science MLS was reformed to reflect the information science and technology needs of the field According to the American Library Association ALA ALA accredited degrees have had various names such as Master of Arts Master of Librarianship Master of Library and Information Studies or Master of Science The degree name is determined by the program The ALA Committee for Accreditation evaluates programs based on their adherence to the Standards for Accreditation of Master s Programs in Library and Information Studies not based on the name of the degree Types of librarianshipPublic The study of librarianship for public libraries covers issues such as cataloging collection development for a diverse community information literacy readers advisory community standards public services focused librarianship via community centered programming serving a diverse community of adults children and teens intellectual freedom censorship and legal and budgeting issues The public library as a commons or public sphere based on the work of Jurgen Habermas has become a central metaphor in the 21st century In the United States there are four different types of public libraries association libraries municipal public libraries school district libraries and special district public libraries Each receives funding through different sources each is established by a different set of voters and not all are subject to municipal civil service governance School The study of school librarianship covers library services for children in Nursery primary through secondary school In some regions the local government may have stricter standards for the education and certification of school librarians who are sometimes considered a special case of teacher than for other librarians and the educational program will include those local criteria School librarianship may also include issues of intellectual freedom pedagogy information literacy and how to build a cooperative curriculum with the teaching staff Academic The study of academic librarianship covers library services for colleges and universities Issues of special importance to the field may include copyright technology digital libraries and digital repositories academic freedom open access to scholarly works and specialized knowledge of subject areas important to the institution and the relevant reference works Librarians often divide focus individually as liaisons on particular schools within a college or university Academic librarians may be subject specific librarians Some academic librarians are considered faculty and hold similar academic ranks to those of professors while others are not In either case the minimal qualification is a Master of Arts in Library Studies or a Master of Arts in Library Science Some academic libraries may only require a master s degree in a specific academic field or a related field such as educational technology Archival The study of archives includes the training of archivists librarians specially trained to maintain and build archives of records intended for historical preservation Special issues include physical preservation conservation and restoration of materials and mass deacidification specialist catalogs solo work access and appraisal Many archivists are also trained historians specializing in the period covered by the archive There have been attempts to revive the concept of documentation and to speak of Library information and documentation studies or science The archival mission includes three major goals To identify papers and records with enduring value preserve the identified papers and make the papers available to others While libraries receive items individually archival items will usually become part of the archive s collection as a cohesive group Major difference in collections is that library collections typically comprise published items books magazines etc while archival collections are usually unpublished works letters diaries etc Library collections are created by many individuals as each author and illustrator create their own publication in contrast an archive usually collects the records of one person family institution or organization so the archival items will have fewer sources of authors Behavior in an archive differs from behavior in other libraries In most libraries items are openly available to the public Archival items almost never circulate and someone interested in viewing documents must request them of the archivist and may only be able view them in a closed reading room Special Special libraries are libraries established to meet the highly specialized requirements of professional or business groups A library is special depending on whether it covers a specialized collection a special subject or a particular group of users or even the type of parent organization such as medical libraries or law libraries The issues at these libraries are specific to their industries but may include solo work corporate financing specialized collection development and extensive self promotion to potential patrons Special librarians have their own professional organization the Special Libraries Association SLA Some special libraries such as the CIA Library may contain classified works It is a resource to employees of the Central Intelligence Agency containing over 125 000 written materials subscribes to around 1 700 periodicals and had collections in three areas Historical Intelligence Circulating and Reference In February 1997 three librarians working at the institution spoke to Information Outlook a publication of the SLA revealing that the library had been created in 1947 the importance of the library in disseminating information to employees even with a small staff and how the library organizes its materials Preservation Preservation librarians most often work in academic libraries Their focus is on the management of preservation activities that seek to maintain access to content within books manuscripts archival materials and other library resources Examples of activities managed by preservation librarians include binding conservation digital and analog reformatting digital preservation and environmental monitoring HistoryThe Library of Alexandria an early library Libraries have existed for many centuries but library science is a more recent phenomenon as early libraries were managed primarily by academics 17th and 18th century Portrait of Gabriel Naude author of Advis pour dresser une bibliotheque 1627 later translated into English in 1661 The earliest text on library operations Advice on Establishing a Library was published in 1627 by French librarian and scholar Gabriel Naude Naude wrote on many subjects including politics religion history and the supernatural He put into practice all the ideas put forth in Advice when given the opportunity to build and maintain the library of Cardinal Jules Mazarin In 1726 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz wrote Idea of Arranging a Narrower Library 19th century Martin Schrettinger wrote the second textbook the first in Germany on the subject from 1808 to 1829 Some of the main tools used by LIS to provide access to the resources originated in 19th century to make information accessible by recording identifying and providing bibliographic control of printed knowledge The origin for some of these tools were even earlier In the 17th century during the golden age of libraries publishers and sellers seeking to take advantage of the burgeoning book trade developed descriptive catalogs of their wares for distribution a practice was adopted and further extrapolated by many libraries of the time to cover areas like philosophy sciences linguistics and medicine Thomas Jefferson whose library at Monticello consisted of thousands of books devised a classification system inspired by the Baconian method which grouped books more or less by subject rather than alphabetically as it was previously done The Jefferson collection provided the start of what became the Library of Congress The first American school of librarianship opened at Columbia University under the leadership of Melvil Dewey noted for his 1876 decimal classification on January 5 1887 as the School of Library Economy The term library economy was common in the U S until 1942 with the term library science predominant through much of the 20th century 20th century In the English speaking world the term library science seems to have been used for the first time in India in the 1916 book Punjab Library Primer written by Asa Don Dickinson and published by the University of Punjab Lahore Pakistan This university was the first in Asia to begin teaching library science The Punjab Library Primer was the first textbook on library science published in English anywhere in the world The first textbook in the United States was the Manual of Library Economy by James Duff Brown published in 1903 Later the term was used in the title of S R Ranganathan s The Five Laws of Library Science published in 1931 which contains Ranganathan s titular theory Ranganathan is also credited with the development of the first major analytical synthetic classification system the colon classification In the United States Lee Pierce Butler published his 1933 book An Introduction to Library Science University of Chicago Press where he advocated for research using quantitative methods and ideas in the social sciences with the aim of using librarianship to address society s information needs He was one of the first faculty at the University of Chicago Graduate Library School which changed the structure and focus of education for librarianship in the twentieth century This research agenda went against the more procedure based approach of the library economy which was mostly confined to practical problems in the administration of libraries In 1923 Charles C Williamson who was appointed by the Carnegie Corporation published an assessment of library science education entitled The Williamson Report which designated that universities should provide library science training This report had a significant impact on library science training and education Library research and practical work in the area of information science have remained largely distinct both in training and in research interests William Stetson Merrill s A Code for Classifiers released in several editions from 1914 to 1939 is an example of a more pragmatic approach where arguments stemming from in depth knowledge about each field of study are employed to recommend a system of classification While Ranganathan s approach was philosophical it was also tied more to the day to day business of running a library A reworking of Ranganathan s laws was published in 1995 which removes the constant references to books Michael Gorman s Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century features the eight principles necessary by library professionals and incorporates knowledge and information in all their forms allowing for digital information to be considered From Library Science to LIS By the late 1960s mainly due to the meteoric rise of human computing power and the new academic disciplines formed therefrom academic institutions began to add the term information science to their names The first school to do this was at the University of Pittsburgh in 1964 More schools followed during the 1970s and 1980s By the 1990s almost all library schools in the US had added information science to their names Although there are exceptions similar developments have taken place in other parts of the world In India the Dept of Library Science University of Madras southern state of TamiilNadu India became the Dept of Library and Information Science in 1976 In Denmark for example the Royal School of Librarianship changed its English name to The Royal School of Library and Information Science in 1997 21st century The digital age has transformed how information is accessed and retrieved The library is now a part of a complex and dynamic educational recreational and informational infrastructure Mobile devices and applications with wireless networking high speed computers and networks and the computing cloud have deeply impacted and developed information science and information services The evolution of the library sciences maintains its mission of access equity and community space as well as the new means for information retrieval called information literacy skills All catalogs databases and a growing number of books are available on the Internet In addition the expanding free access to open access journals and sources such as Wikipedia has fundamentally impacted how information is accessed Information literacy is the ability to determine the extent of information needed access the needed information effectively and efficiently evaluate information and its sources critically incorporate selected information into one s knowledge base use information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose and understand the economic legal and social issues surrounding the use of information and access and use information ethically and legally In the early 2000s dLIST Digital Library for Information Sciences and Technology was established It was the first open access archive for the multidisciplinary library and information sciences building a global scholarly communication consortium and the LIS Commons in order to increase the visibility of research literature bridge the divide between practice teaching and research communities and improve visibility uncitedness and integrate scholarly work in the critical information infrastructures of archives libraries and museums Social justice an important ethical value in librarianship and in the 21st century has become an important research area if not subdiscipline of LIS JournalsSee also List of Library and Information Science Journals Category Library science journals Journal Citation Reports for listing according to Impact factor Some core journals in LIS are Annual Review of Information Science and Technology ARIST 1966 2011 es EPI 1992 Formerly Information World en Espanol Information Processing and Management Information Research An International Electronic Journal IR 1995 Italian Journal of Library and Information Studies JLIS it Journal of Documentation JDoc 1945 Journal of Information Science JIS 1979 Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology Formerly Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology JASIST 1950 Knowledge Organization journal Library Literature and Information Science Retrospective Library Trends 1952 Scientometrics journal 1978 The Library Quarterly LQ 1931 Grandhalaya Sarvaswam 1915 Important bibliographical databases in LIS are among others Social Sciences Citation Index and Library and Information Science AbstractsConferencesThis is a list of some of the major conferences in the field Annual meetings of the American Library Association Annual meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology Conceptions of Library and Information Science i Schools iConferences The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA World Library and Information Congress African Library and Information Associations and Institutions AfLIA ConferenceSubfieldsInformation science grew out of documentation science and therefore has a tradition for considering scientific and scholarly communication bibliographic databases subject knowledge and terminology etc An advertisement for a full Professor in information science at the Royal School of Library and Information Science spring 2011 provides one view of which sub disciplines are well established The research and teaching supervision must be within some and at least one of these well established information science areasKnowledge organizationLibrary studiesInformation architectureInformation behaviorInteractive information retrievalInformation systemsScholarly communicationDigital literacy cf information literacy Bibliometrics or scientometricsInteraction design and user experience Digital library A curriculum study by Kajberg amp Lorring in 2005 reported a degree of overlap of the ten curricular themes with subject areas in the current curricula of responding LIS schools Information seeking and Information retrieval 100 Library management and promotion 96 Knowledge management 86 Knowledge organization 82 Information literacy and learning 76 Library and society in a historical perspective Library history 66 The Information society Barriers to the free access to information 64 Cultural heritage and digitisation of the cultural heritage Digital preservation 62 The library in the multi cultural information society International and intercultural communication 42 Mediation of culture in a special European context 26 There is often an overlap between these subfields of LIS and other fields of study Most information retrieval research for example belongs to computer science Knowledge management is considered a subfield of management or organizational studies Metadata Pre Internet classification systems and cataloging systems were mainly concerned with two objectives To provide rich bibliographic descriptions and relations between information objects and To facilitate sharing of this bibliographic information across library boundaries The development of the Internet and the information explosion that followed found many communities needing mechanisms for the description authentication and management of their information These communities developed taxonomies and controlled vocabularies to describe their knowledge as well as unique information architectures to communicate these classifications and libraries found themselves as liaison or translator between these metadata systems The concerns of cataloging in the Internet era have gone beyond simple bibliographic descriptions and the need for descriptive information about the ownership and copyright of a digital product a publishing concern and description for the different formats and accessibility features of a resource a sociological concern show the continued development and cross discipline necessity of resource description In the 21st century the usage of open data open source and open protocols like OAI PMH has allowed thousands of libraries and institutions to collaborate on the production of global metadata services previously offered only by increasingly expensive commercial proprietary products Tools like BASE and Unpaywall automate the search of an academic paper across thousands of repositories by libraries and research institutions Knowledge organization Library science is very closely related to issues of knowledge organization however the latter is a broader term that covers how knowledge is represented and stored computer science linguistics how it might be automatically processed artificial intelligence and how it is organized outside the library in global systems such as the internet In addition library science typically refers to a specific community engaged in managing holdings as they are found in university and government libraries while knowledge organization in general refers to this and also to other communities such as publishers and other systems such as the Internet The library system is thus one socio technical structure for knowledge organization citation needed The terms information organization and knowledge organization are often used synonymously 106 The fundamentals of their study particularly theory relating to indexing and classification and many of the main tools used by the disciplines in modern times to provide access to digital resources such as abstracting metadata resource description systematic and alphabetic subject description and terminology originated in the 19th century and were developed in part to assist in making humanity s intellectual output accessible by recording identifying and providing bibliographic control of printed knowledge 105 Information has been published that analyses the relations between the philosophy of information PI library and information science LIS and social epistemology SE Ethics Practicing library professionals and members of the American Library Association recognize and abide by the ALA Code of Ethics According to the American Library Association In a political system grounded in an informed citizenry we are members of a profession explicitly committed to intellectual freedom and freedom of access to information We have a special obligation to ensure the free flow of information and ideas to present and future generations The ALA Code of Ethics was adopted in the winter of 1939 and updated on June 29 2021 See alsoAuthority control Unique headings used for bibliographic information Bibliography Organized listing of books and the systematic description of them as objects Digital Asset Management Cloud management systemPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets DAM Diversity in librarianship Glossary of library and information science Information history academic disciplinePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Internet search engines and libraries Organized collection of books or other information resourcesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets List of library and information science journals Libraries and the LGBTQ community Library services to the LGBT community Library portal List of library associations Museology Study of museums Museum informatics Outline of library science Overview of and topical guide to library sciencePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Subject indexing Classifying a document by index terms Timeline of women in library scienceNotesDewey Decimal Classification DDC used the term library economy for class 19 in its first edition from 1876 In the second edition and all subsequent editions it was moved to class 20 The term library economy was used until and including the 14th edition 1942 From the 15th edition 1951 class 20 was termed library science which was used until and including 17th edition 1965 when it was replaced by library and information sciences LIS from the 18th edition 1971 and forward ReferencesBates M J Maack M N 2010 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences Vol 1 7 Boca Raton US CRC Press Library and Information Sciences is the name used in the Dewey Decimal Classification for class 20 from the 18th edition 1971 to the 22nd edition 2003 Coleman A 2002 Interdisciplinarity The Road Ahead for Education in Digital Libraries D Lib Magazine 8 8 9 July August https www dlib org dlib july02 coleman 07coleman html Higgins Susan 2017 Chapter 3 Library and Information Science as a Discipline Managing Academic Libraries 19 28 doi 10 1016 B978 1 84334 621 0 00003 0 ISBN 978 1 84334 621 0 Saracevic Tefko 1992 Information science origin evolution and relations In Conceptions of library and information science Historical empirical and theoretical perspectives Edited by Pertti Vakkari amp Blaise Cronin London Taylor Graham pp 5 27 Miksa Francis L 1992 Library and information science two paradigms In Conceptions of library and information science Historical empirical and theoretical perspectives Edited by Pertti Vakkari amp Blaise Cronin London Taylor Graham pp 229 252 Borko H 1968 Information science What is it American Documentation 19 1 3 5 https doi org 10 1002 asi 5090190103 Schrettinger Martin Deutsche Biographie in German Retrieved September 14 2023 Buckland Michael December 31 2005 Information Schools A Monk Library Science and the Information Age In Hauke Petra ed Bibliothekswissenschaft quo vadis Library Science quo vadis DE GRUYTER SAUR pp 19 32 doi 10 1515 9783110929225 19 ISBN 978 3 598 11734 3 Dewey Services Resources OCLC April 18 2022 Retrieved September 14 2023 Johnson Elmer D Harris Michael H 1976 History of Libraries in the Western World Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 0949 9 Cossette Andre 2009 Humanism and Libraries An Essay on the Philosophy of Librarianship Library Juice Press LLC ISBN 978 1 936117 31 4 Librarian Collins Dictionary Librarian Cambridge dictionary admin July 26 2006 ALA Accredited Programs Education amp Careers Retrieved September 14 2023 ALIA Accredited Courses alia org au Retrieved September 14 2023 Evans Kenneth D Woody Librarians Need Global Credentials Backtalk Library Journal Retrieved September 14 2023 Accreditation Frequently Asked Questions ALA www ala org Retrieved May 18 2024 McCook Kathleen de la Pena 2004 Introduction to Public Librarianship Neal Schuman Publishers ISBN 978 1 55570 475 9 Types of Public Libraries a Comparison Library Development New York State Library www nysl nysed gov Retrieved September 14 2023 Rayward W Boyd 2004 Aware and Responsible Papers of the Nordic International Colloquium on Social and Cultural Awareness and Responsibility in Library Information and Documentation Studies SCARLID Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 4954 9 Hunter Gregory S 2003 Developing and maintaining practical archives a how to do it manual Internet Archive New York Neal Schuman Publishers ISBN 978 1 55570 467 4 CIA Library CIA Retrieved September 14 2023 Information Outlook Special Libraries Association February 1997 Archived from the original on September 22 2021 via SJSU ScholarWorks Feather John Sturges Paul September 2 2003 International Encyclopedia of Information and Library Science Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 51320 8 Suominen Vesa April 1 2019 Gabriel Naude Informaatiotutkimus 38 1 doi 10 23978 inf 79889 ISSN 1797 9129 Archived from the original on July 12 2022 Retrieved March 25 2022 Schulte Albert H G 1971 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification The Journal of Library History 6 2 133 152 JSTOR 25540286 Bawden David Robinson Lyn June 10 2015 Introduction to Information Science Facet Publishing ISBN 978 1 85604 810 1 Murray Stuart A P March 1 2012 The Library An Illustrated History Skyhorse ISBN 978 1 61608 453 0 Emblidge David 2014 Bibliomany Has Possessed Me International Journal of the Book 12 2 17 42 doi 10 18848 1447 9516 CGP v12i02 37034 ISSN 1447 9516 Richardson John 2010 History of American Library Science Its Origins and Early Development In Maack Mary Niles Bates Marcia eds Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science 3rd ed New York CRC Press pp 3440 3448 World Libraries The Pioneers Asa Don Dickinson January 18 2015 Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved September 14 2023 Dickinson Asa Don 1916 The Punjab library primer Robarts University of Toronto Lahore University of the Panjab Ranganathan S R 1987 Colon Classification Revised and expanded by M A Gopinath 7th ed Rubin Richard E Rubin Rachel G September 14 2020 Foundations of Library and Information Science American Library Association ISBN 978 0 8389 4757 9 Merrill William Stetson Association American Library 1939 Code for Classifiers Principles Governing the Consistent Placing of Books in a System of Classification American library association ISBN 978 0 8389 0027 7 Levine Clark Michael John D McDonald eds July 17 2019 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science 4 ed Boca Raton CRC Press doi 10 1081 E ELIS4 ISBN 978 1 315 11614 3 Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education American Library Association January 1 2000 Coleman A and Bracke P 2003 DLIST Building An International Scholarly Communication Consortium for Library and Information Science In Murthy T A V Editor in chief Mapping Technology on Libraries and People Proceedings of the 10th National Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutes INFLIBNET 13 15 February 2003 Ahmedabad India https repository arizona edu bitstream handle 10150 105826 6 htm sequence 14 amp isAllowed y Kraft Donald Rasmussen Edie Hastings Samantha Coleman Anita January 2006 Competing information realities Digital libraries repositories and the commons Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 43 1 1 8 doi 10 1002 meet 14504301134 hdl 10150 105213 ISSN 0044 7870 via ASIST Digital Library a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint date and year link Coleman A Bracke P and Karthik S 2004 Integration of Non OAI Resources for Federated Searching in dLIST an ePrints Repository dLIST Magazine 10 7 8 July August https www dlib org dlib july04 coleman 07coleman html Coleman A and Roback J 2005 Open Access Federation for Library and Information Science dLIST and DL Harvest D Lib Magazine 11 12 December https www dlib org dlib december05 coleman 12coleman html Mehra B Rioux K and Albright K S 2010 Social Justice in Library and Information Science In M J Bates and M N Maack eds Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences pp 4820 4836 New York Taylor amp Francis Group Library Literature amp Information Science Retrospective 1905 1983 EBSCO Archived from the original on April 1 2023 Retrieved April 1 2023 Journal of Librarianship and Information Science SAGE Journals Archived from the original on April 1 2023 Retrieved April 1 2023 World Library and Information Congress IFLA General Conference and Assembly July 6 2015 Archived from the original on July 6 2015 Conferences African Library amp Information Associations amp Institutions Archived from the original on April 1 2023 Retrieved June 14 2022 Kunz Werner Rittel Horst W J April 1 1972 Information science On the structure of its problems Information Storage and Retrieval 8 2 95 98 doi 10 1016 0020 0271 72 90011 3 ISSN 0020 0271 Jobnet forside Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved November 2 2011 Leif Kajberg Leif Lorring January 1 2005 European Curriculum Reflections on Library and Information Science Education PDF The Royal School of Library and Information Science Archived from the original PDF on April 25 2012 Retrieved April 1 2023 Clegg Stewart Bailey James R eds 2008 International Encyclopedia of Organizational Studies Los Angeles Sage Publications Inc pp 758 762 ISBN 978 1412953900 Zeng Marcia Lei Qin Jian 2016 Metadata Facet Publishing ISBN 978 1 78330 052 5 Chawla Dalmeet Singh 2017 Unpaywall finds free versions of paywalled papers Nature News doi 10 1038 nature 2017 21765 S2CID 86694031 Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved April 1 2023 Floridi Luciano January 1 2002 On defining library and information science as applied philosophy of information Social Epistemology 16 1 37 49 doi 10 1080 02691720210132789 ISSN 0269 1728 S2CID 12243183 American Library Association May 19 2017 Professional Ethics Tools Publications amp Resources Archived from the original on October 29 2021 Retrieved October 29 2021 Further readingLibrary cataloging and classificationDewey Decimal020Astrom Fredrik September 5 2008 Formalizing a discipline The institutionalization of library and information science research in the Nordic countries Journal of Documentation 64 5 721 737 doi 10 1108 00220410810899736 Bawden David Robinson Lyn August 20 2012 Introduction to Information Science American Library Association ISBN 978 1555708610 Hjorland Birger 2000 Library and information science practice theory and philosophical basis Information Processing amp Management 36 3 501 531 doi 10 1016 S0306 4573 99 00038 2 Jarvelin Kalervo Vakkari Pertti January 1993 The evolution of library and information science 1965 1985 A content analysis of journal articles Information Processing amp Management 29 1 129 144 doi 10 1016 0306 4573 93 90028 C McNicol Sarah March 2003 LIS the interdisciplinary research landscape Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 35 1 23 30 doi 10 1177 096100060303500103 S2CID 220912521 Dick Archie L 1995 Library and Information Science as a Social Science Neutral and Normative Conceptions The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 65 2 216 235 doi 10 1086 602777 JSTOR 4309022 S2CID 142825177 Foundational Books in Library Services 1976 2024 LHRT News amp Notes October 2024 International Journal of Library Science ISSN 0975 7546 Lafontaine Gerard S 1958 Dictionary of Terms Used in the Paper Printing and Allied Industries Toronto H Smith Paper Mills 110 p The Oxford Guide to Library Research 2005 ISBN 0195189981 Taskin Zehra 2021 Forecasting the future of library and information science and its sub fields Scientometrics 126 2 1527 1551 doi 10 1007 s11192 020 03800 2 PMC 7745590 PMID 33353991 Thompson Elizabeth H 1943 A L A Glossary of Library Terms with a Selection of Terms in Related Fields prepared under the direction of the Committee on Library Terminology of the American Library Association Chicago Ill American Library Association viii 189 p ISBN 978 0838900000 V LIB 1 2 2008 Vartavan Library Classification over 700 fields of sciences amp arts classified according to a relational philosophy currently sold under license in the UK by Rosecastle Ltd see Vartavan Frame External linksLibrary resources about Library and information science Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Media related to Library and information 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