CFP: The Functional Future of Bibliographic Control, special issue of Journal of Library Metadata

From: Karen Snow <Karen.Snow_at_nyob>
Date: Tue, 24 May 2011 11:34:19 -0400
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
CALL FOR PAPERS 

Special Issue of Journal of Library Metadata

“The Functional Future of Bibliographic Control”

Guest Editor: Dr. Shawne D. Miksa, Associate Professor, Dept. of Library and 
Information Sciences. The year 2010 was designated as the Year of 
Cataloging Research and we made progress on studying the challenges facing 
metadata and information organization practices.  However, one year of 
research is merely a drop in the bucket. This special issue of the Journal of 
Library Metadata intends to address the research and issues as it concerns 
the functional future of metadata and information organization. 

Topics will vary across a range of issues, including historical, practical, 
conceptual, educational 

·         Re-conceptualization of bibliographic control, past and future; 
historical analysis of the implementation of AACR1 and AACR2

·         Entity-relationship models and visualizing new cataloging workflows, 
both conceptual and practical

·         How functional requirement models impact information behavior (both 
user and information professional) and resource discovery across information 
environments

·         Bibliographic relationships, bibliographic families; how successfully are 
these relationships represented using RDA, etc.

·         Re-defining the library catalog system—what are the boundaries of the 
catalog, objectives of the catalog;  pros and cons of viewing the library 
catalog as a catalog or as new entity altogether 

·         How do user tasks (find, identify, select, obtain, contextualize, justify, 
explore/navigate)

drive description and encoding of bibliographic data? How are they supported 
in the library catalog? What does it actually mean to support these tasks?

·         Authority control in a FRBR-based system; find, identify, contextualize, 
and justify; both renewed and new authority control training

·         Social tagging and control: the impact on subject analysis, 
determination, and representation 

·         Addition of non-traditional data to bibliographic records (e.g., citation 
data, reviews, tag clouds, etc) whether embedded or linked

·          “mark it and park it” vs. functional requirements as outlined in FRBR, 
FRAD, and FRSAD

·         Interoperability between library systems, copy cataloging, outsourcing 
of records as impacted by choice of type of description (comprehensive, 
analytical, or hierarchical) in RDA

·         transitioning out of MARC or transitioning MARC? (e.g., see recent 
announcement by LC entitled “Transforming our Bibliographic Framework”)

·         Diffusion of new tools and resources and concepts (e.g., new 
metadata schema, rules, frameworks, and models), within the cataloging 
community;  methods of diffusion, rate of adoption and understanding by 
information organizational professionals

·         RDA Implementation issues, feasibility studies, training issues, usability 
studies involving catalogers, reference librarians, and the end-user as they 
work on creating and using RDA-based records, etc., across all types of 
libraries.

·         Increased complexity of cataloging and catalog systems, including 
increases in authority control work, subject representation, etc., and its 
impact on library administration and operation costs

·         Appropriate methodologies for analysis of functionality success or 
failure

·         Functional future and the school library, public library, etc. 

·         Education of information professionals for the functional future



Submission: 

Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit electronically a 1-2 page 
proposal with names of authors, affiliation, and emails addresses.  Final revised 
manuscripts (3000-7000 words) are expected to be submitted by December 
30, 2011. All submitted manuscripts will be reviewed on a double-blind review 
basis.



Important Dates:

Proposal submission date: June 30, 2011

Notification of acceptance: July 30, 2011

Completed papers due: December 30, 2011

Publication: June 2012




Inquiries and submissions can be forwarded electronically (Word document) to 
the guest editor at following addresses: Shawne.Miksa_at_unt.edu 



“The Journal of Library Metadata is the exclusive forum for the latest 
research, innovations, news, and expert views about all aspects of metadata 
applications in libraries and about the role of metadata in information retrieval. 
This focused journal comprehensively discusses practical, applicable 
information that libraries can effectively use in their own information discovery 
environments. Specialized knowledge, the latest technology, and top research 
are presented pertaining specifically to evolving metadata use in libraries.” 
More information about Journal of Library Metadata can be found online: 
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t792306902~link=cover



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Shawne D. Miksa, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Acting Associate Director, IISPhD Program
Department of Library and Information Sciences
College of Information 
University of North Texas
email: Shawne.Miksa_at_unt.edu 
http://courses.unt.edu/smiksa/index.htm 
office 940-565-3560 fax 940-565-3101
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Received on Tue May 24 2011 - 11:35:58 EDT