Reference Services for Archives and Manuscripts

Reference Services for Archives and Manuscripts book cover

Reference Services for Archives and Manuscripts

Author(s): Laura B Cohen (Author)

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publication Date: April 1, 1997
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 224 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0789000423
  • ISBN-13: 9780789000422

Book Description

Like their librarian colleagues, reference archivists mediate between the user and the source material. However, given the nature of archival materials and of their holding repositories, unique issues arise. While such matters as provenance and original order and access and security continue to be vital underpinnings of their work, a myriad of other issues comes into play as reference archivists attempt to balance the competing demands of donors, researchers, the public, and the press. From the creation and dissemination of finding aids for electronic resources to the implementation of marketing strategies to increase support and strengthen service, Reference Services for Archives and Manuscripts shows you how to thrive in the changing world of archival reference. Intended to foster an appreciation of the issues both within and beyond the field of archives, Reference Services for Archives and Manuscripts reveals that today’s archivist is straddling the world of the traditional with the world of the new. The book establishes its value as it guides you through new concerns such as how to:

  • take advantage of technological developments in appraisal, accession, and preservation
  • address copyright, privacy, and funding issues for electronic resources
  • mount archival cataloging records on local and wide-area databases
  • create a publicly available site on the Internet
  • improve in-house access tools, professional abilities, and the caliber of public service
  • address security issues and respond to theftReference Services for Archives and Manuscripts also helps you by preparing you for changes in the relationship between archivist and researcher that will inevitably occur with further changes in technology. Other vital issues discussed are improved access for unserved and underserved groups, a revision in ethical codes, and the ability of archivists to become more customer-centered.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Ranging in topic from public services education to Internet access and the marketing of archives, here’s another repackaged issue of a Haworth journal (originally published as No. 56 of Reference Librarian, 1997) that has little new to recommend it. Indeed, one contributor notes that in the past ten years “the techniques and procedures of reference services have not changed dramatically.” If that is true, it unfortunately undercuts the energy that should drive a collection of essays such as these. The issues discussed here ought to be familiar to most practicing archivists. Still, there are excellent contributions on security in archives and on ethics in the archival profession. One interesting effort reports on reference service and electronic records in the National Archives. Recommended primarily for students of library and information sciences and their schools.?Barry Chad, Carnegie Lib. of Pittsburgh
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Laura B Cohen

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