Academic literature on the topic 'State Library of Victoria Catalogs'

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Journal articles on the topic "State Library of Victoria Catalogs"

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Hider, Philip. "Catalogue Use at the State Library of Victoria." Australian Academic & Research Libraries 39, no. 1 (March 2008): 14–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00048623.2008.10721321.

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Waller, Vivienne. "What do the Public Search for on the Catalogue of the State Library of Victoria?" Australian Academic & Research Libraries 40, no. 4 (December 2009): 266–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00048623.2009.10721417.

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Morozov, Alexey N., Natalya V. Vaganova, Evgeniya V. Shakhova, Yana V. Konechnaya, Vladimir E. Asming, Galina N. Antonovskaya, and Zinaida A. Evtyugina. "Seismicity of the Arctic in the Early Twentieth Century: Relocation of the 1904–1920 Earthquakes." Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 109, no. 5 (July 23, 2019): 2000–2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1785/0120190018.

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Abstract The parameters of earthquake hypocenters in the Arctic at the beginning of the twentieth century, published by researchers in the first half of the twentieth century, are still used today for building maps of epicenters of instrumental earthquakes. However, they are based on bulletins that did not use data from all seismic stations operating during that period, and on approximate ideas about the propagation of seismic waves in the Earth. We relocated earthquakes recorded within the Arctic region beginning from the early twentieth century with a view to creating a relocated catalog. For the relocation, we collected all available seismic bulletins from the global network using data acquired for the International Seismological Centre–Global Earthquake Model (ISC‐GEM) catalog, the EuroSeismos project, the Geophysical Survey of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and the Russian State Library. The relocation was performed using a modified method of generalized beamforming and the ak135 velocity model. The relocation procedure was applied to 18 of 25 earthquakes in the Arctic region. The new coordinates of some earthquakes turned out to be significantly different from those that were determined previously. As a result, this may have a significant impact on the final seismic hazard assessment of the territory of the Severnaya Zemlya and Franz Josef Land archipelagoes, which are characterized by weak seismicity. Most of the relocated earthquake epicenters are confined to major seismic zones in the Arctic, namely, mid‐ocean ridges, the Svalbard Archipelago, and the Laptev Sea shelf. One earthquake, that of 14 October 1914 with magnitude Mw(ISC‐GEM)=6.6, occurred in the shelf of the Barents Sea in the “continent–ocean” transition zone near the Franz Victoria graben.
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Stukalova, A. A. "Library e-catalogs: The current state and modes." Scientific and Technical Libraries, no. 4 (April 26, 2022): 105–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/1027-3689-2022-4-105-125.

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Modern functionality of library e-catalogs and union catalogs is discussed. The e-catalogs are examined for the features of new generation. However, many features are lacking in e-catalogs. Almost all e-catalogs under examinations are comfortable for use and feature facet navigation, several search modes, instructions and search guides. On the other hand, not many e-catalogs cover the library collection completely, and have to be checked for spelling. Just few ecatalogs offer fonts for visually impaired people, recommendations orthe possibility to add information to bibliographic records. Definitely, e-catalog bibliographic records comprise additional information, i. e. book cover images, annotations, and less frequently – lists of contents. However, as a rule, this data is included into blbliographic records of modern publications. Many e-catalogs comprise full texts or links to full texts. The study findings evidence on the need to improve ecatalog functionality to offer users more powerful and attractive search tools.
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Stukalova, A. A. "Library e-catalogs: The current state and modes." Scientific and Technical Libraries, no. 4 (April 26, 2022): 105–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/1027-3689-2022-4-105-125.

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Modern functionality of library e-catalogs and union catalogs is discussed. The e-catalogs are examined for the features of new generation. However, many features are lacking in e-catalogs. Almost all e-catalogs under examinations are comfortable for use and feature facet navigation, several search modes, instructions and search guides. On the other hand, not many e-catalogs cover the library collection completely, and have to be checked for spelling. Just few ecatalogs offer fonts for visually impaired people, recommendations orthe possibility to add information to bibliographic records. Definitely, e-catalog bibliographic records comprise additional information, i. e. book cover images, annotations, and less frequently – lists of contents. However, as a rule, this data is included into blbliographic records of modern publications. Many e-catalogs comprise full texts or links to full texts. The study findings evidence on the need to improve ecatalog functionality to offer users more powerful and attractive search tools.
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Pryor, Lynn. "The State Library of Victoria." ANZTLA EJournal, no. 42 (April 18, 2019): 17–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.31046/anztla.v0i42.1128.

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Stolyarov, Yury. "Office for People’s Education at the Lenin Library (USSR State Library) (1926-1930)." Scientific and Technical Libraries, no. 2 (February 1, 2017): 132–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/1027-3689-2017-2-132-145.

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The history of establishment and dissolution of the Office for People’s Education - that succeeded the Russian State Library for People’s Education established on the initiative of prominent pedagogue and bibliographer V. I. Charnolusky - is discussed. The shady role of People’s Commissariat of Education (Narkompros) and the Lenin Library that undertook the Office’ staff, collections and card catalogs, is revealed.
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Cuthbert, Sheena. "Library industry competency standards: state of the art—State Library of Victoria." Australian Library Journal 46, no. 3 (January 1997): 322–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049670.1997.10755812.

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Van De Velde, Janice. "The State Library of Victoria Foundation: A Perspective." Australian Academic & Research Libraries 34, no. 4 (January 2003): 243–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00048623.2003.10755244.

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Meshechak, Natalia, and Alexander Karaush. "Improving friendliness on Web-IRBIS interface." Scientific and Technical Libraries, no. 4 (April 1, 2016): 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/1027-3689-2016-4-43-55.

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Main vectors of improving friendliness of using search interface of digital and full-text catalogs at Siberian State Medical University Research Medical Library are discussed. Main tasks and solutions to increase attractiveness of the bibliographic sources for users are defined. The design technology for medical researchers’ personal pages with computerized publications list-building with IRBIS and technologies of their linking to digital and full-text catalogs are introduced.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "State Library of Victoria Catalogs"

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Carman, Nicholas. "LibraryThing tags and Library of Congress Subject Headings a comparison of science fiction and fantasy works : submitted to the School of Information Management, Victoria University of Wellington in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Library and Information Studies /." ResearchArchive@Victoria e-Thesis, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10063/1272.

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Wenn, Andrew. "The Library and the Internet: An Interpretive Study of the State Library of Victoria." Thesis, 2005. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/424/.

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Libraries have been with us for almost as long as writing; their role, purpose and means of operation have changed greatly over the thousands of years of their existence. Technology simpliciter can be understood as humans at work. The way we work shapes the technologies we use just as technologies shape the way we work. That is, there is a mutual shaping or coconstruction of society and technology. This thesis is a study of libraries and the introduction of Internet technologies. Employing the notion of an open system that is, one which is undergoing constant change, has indeterminate boundaries and means of control, it examines from a sociotechnical viewpoint, informed by Actor-Network Theory, the way the mutual interaction between technologies, society and culture shape the evolution of the system. Data were collected in 1998-9 and 2005 utilizing techniques from both ethnographic and case study research, to capture and illustrate this fluidity. Three libraries in Melbourne, Australia, were objects of this exploratory study with both library staff and users being interviewed and observed as they engaged with Internet technologies as part of their working, studying, communicating or recreational lives. The thesis report seeks to make the reader aware, through a process of reflexive or confessional reporting, the interrelatedness of all the actors (including the researcher), both human and nonhuman, in the evolution and shaping of the system of Internet use in the organizations that were the objects of this study. The resulting study reveals uncertainty, resistance, accommodation, enthusiasm and even failure in the sociotechnical system and serves to illustrate the fallibility of theories that assume society and technology are essentially static categories -especially when applied at the micro level, as here.
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Wenn, Andrew. "The Library and the Internet: An Interpretive Study of the State Library of Victoria." 2005. http://eprints.vu.edu.au/424/1/424contents.pdf.

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Libraries have been with us for almost as long as writing; their role, purpose and means of operation have changed greatly over the thousands of years of their existence. Technology simpliciter can be understood as humans at work. The way we work shapes the technologies we use just as technologies shape the way we work. That is, there is a mutual shaping or coconstruction of society and technology. This thesis is a study of libraries and the introduction of Internet technologies. Employing the notion of an open system that is, one which is undergoing constant change, has indeterminate boundaries and means of control, it examines from a sociotechnical viewpoint, informed by Actor-Network Theory, the way the mutual interaction between technologies, society and culture shape the evolution of the system. Data were collected in 1998-9 and 2005 utilizing techniques from both ethnographic and case study research, to capture and illustrate this fluidity. Three libraries in Melbourne, Australia, were objects of this exploratory study with both library staff and users being interviewed and observed as they engaged with Internet technologies as part of their working, studying, communicating or recreational lives. The thesis report seeks to make the reader aware, through a process of reflexive or confessional reporting, the interrelatedness of all the actors (including the researcher), both human and nonhuman, in the evolution and shaping of the system of Internet use in the organizations that were the objects of this study. The resulting study reveals uncertainty, resistance, accommodation, enthusiasm and even failure in the sociotechnical system and serves to illustrate the fallibility of theories that assume society and technology are essentially static categories -especially when applied at the micro level, as here.
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Books on the topic "State Library of Victoria Catalogs"

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Victoria, State Library of. The Aboriginal people of Victoria. Melbourne: State Library of Victoria, 1993.

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Victoria, State Library of. Raoul Wallenberg Holocaust Collection: Supported by Raoul Wallenberg Unit of B'nai B'rith : Catalogue. Melbourne: The Library, 1996.

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Rudd, Edwina. Sources of information in the State Library of New South Wales on births, deaths, and marriages in Victoria. Sydney: State Library of New South Wales, 1991.

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Victoria, State Library of. The art of the collection. Melbourne, Victoria: Miegunyah Press, State Library of Victoria, 2007.

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Library, La Trobe. Having a lively time: Australians at Gallipoli in 1915 : a catalogue of material held in the Australian manuscripts collection, La Trobe Library, State Library of Victoria. Melbourne: Council of the State Library of Victoria, 1990.

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Victoria, State Library of. Selection policy: State Library of Victoria. Melbourne: Library Council of Victoria, 1986.

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Roberts, Bev. Treasures of the State Library of Victoria. Bondi Junction, NSW: Focus Pub., 2003.

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Victoria. Victorian Ministry for the Arts. Policy directions for library services in Victoria. [East Melbourne]: Victorian Ministry for the Arts, 1992.

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Victoria, State Library of. The changing face of Victoria. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: State LIbrary of Victoria, 2004.

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Victoria. State Library Development Study Steering Committee. The state library development study, 1987. [Melbourne: G.P.O., 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "State Library of Victoria Catalogs"

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Henson, Rebecca. "Reading and Literacy Development Manager, State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia." In Literacy and Reading Programmes for Children and Young People: Case Studies from Around the Globe, 157–63. New York: Apple Academic Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003189275-15.

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Henson, Rebecca. "Reading and Literacy Development Manager, State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia." In Literacy and Reading Programmes for Children and Young People: Case Studies from Around the Globe, 157–63. New York: Apple Academic Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003189275-15.

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Leone, Grace, and Jan van Schaik. "State Library of Victoria Becomes a Giant Canvas for RMIT Students." In Transformations in Tertiary Education, 187–97. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-9957-2_15.

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Nann, John B., and Morris L. Cohen. "Nonlaw Research." In The Yale Law School Guide to Research in American Legal History, 302–22. Yale University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300118537.003.0012.

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This concluding chapter explores several types of nonlaw resources for legal history research. Since the law defines the relationships that people have with the state and, frequently, with each other, it is intimately related to many other areas of scholarship and inquiry. Legal researchers will often have to expand their research beyond the law and delve into politics, sociology, economics, psychology, current or historical events, and many other areas. The list of nonlaw resources offered in the chapter is not exhaustive but includes the most important and frequently used sources: newspapers; periodical literature, monographs and dissertations; statistical resources; and public records. There are many guides to research in each of these areas. Indeed, many academic libraries provide topical research guides for free on their websites. For more in-depth guidance, researchers should use library catalogs.
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Yon, Angela, and Eric Willey. "Learning from each other: Reciprocity in description between Wikipedians and librarians." In Wikipedia and Academic Libraries. Michigan Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3998/mpub.11778416.ch19.en.

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Librarians, archivists, and museum professionals are increasingly realizing the value of using and contributing information to Wikipedia through projects such as edit-a-thons and the 1Lib1Ref project. As the amount of knowledge in Wikipedia and Wikidata grows, the benefits to libraries in partnering with Wikimedia projects to enhance their own bibliographic records and catalog search results also increase. Conversely, librarians have created an immense number of bibliographic and authority records that Wikipedia and Wikidata editors can use both as resources in and of themselves and as examples of various approaches to metadata and knowledge creation. Despite some challenges there are numerous benefits for working to integrate library data with Wikipedia more closely. This chapter will serve to highlight differences between Wikipedia resources and library catalog records, and how librarians and Wikipedians can learn from each other to improve description and discoverability in both Wikipedia and library catalogs for their respective users. It will also illustrate differences between these two systems in order to reduce confusion and errors when data are merged uncritically. The discussion draws on experience gained from a previous Illinois State University Research Grant-funded project that used the Wikipedia List of African-American writers to enhance library catalog records.
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Wenn, Andrew. "Topological Transformations." In Human Centered Methods in Information Systems, 14–38. IGI Global, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-878289-64-3.ch002.

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This chapter describes some aspects of the development of VICNET, an assemblage of computers, cables, modems, people, texts, libraries, buildings, dreams and images. It is a system that is difficult to characterise, it is dynamic both in geographical and ontological scope, size and usage. I have attempted to capture some of its nature through the use of several vignettes that may give the reader a small insight into parts of its being, then using some of the techniques and explanatory and exploratory mechanisms available from the field of science studies such as heterogeneous engineering and Actor Network Theory (ANT), I reveal some of the ways that VICNET came into existence. Many computer systems are undergoing continual evolution and it is extremely difficult to discern their configuration and what objects have agency at any given point in time; they can be thought of as open systems as described by Hewitt and de Jong (1984). VICNET, an Internet information provider established in 1994 as a joint venture between the State Library of Victoria and Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, is one such system; it is being used by a large number of people and public libraries, yet simultaneously it is evolving and being shaped by the technology, the users and the environment of which it is part. Consider the system, VICNET as it is called, as a node of a much larger network. I have attempted to unfold this node to reveal the social and technical worlds contained therein, but I also fold the VICNET node in itself so that it becomes part of a much larger sociotechnical system – the Internet. This process of folding I refer to as a topological transformation and it is by studying transformations of this type that may help us understand how open systems come into being and evolve. In what follows, I provide a brief background to VICNET and the data collection method I used. Next, I discuss some the analytical techniques that are available for those who wish to study the development of technological systems. Following this all-too-brief comment I then present a selection of vignettes that show the varied nature of this socio-technical system. Presenting these then allows me to develop further the idea of social topologies introduced in the section on analytical techniques. In the final section there is some discussion as to why this way of looking at socio-technical systems may be useful.
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Conference papers on the topic "State Library of Victoria Catalogs"

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Raisbeck, Peter. "Reworlding the Archive: Robin Boyd, Gregory Burgess and Indigenous Knowledge in the Architectural Archive.” between Architecture and Engineering." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a3985p56dc.

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In her book Decolonising Solidarity: Dilemmas and Directions for Supporters of Indigenous Struggles, Clare Land suggest how non-Indigenous people might develop new frameworks supporting Indigenous struggles. Land argues research is deeply implicated with processes of colonisation and the appropriation of indigenous knowledge. Given that architectural archives are central to the research of architectural history, how might these archives be decolonised? This paper employs two disparate archives to develop a framework of how architectural archivists might begin to decolonise these archives. Firstly, these archives are the Grounds Romberg and Boyd Archive (GRB) at the State Library of Victoria (SLV). Secondly, the Greg Burgess Archive is now located at Avington, Sidonia in Victoria. The materials from each of these archives will be discussed in relation to two frameworks. These are the Tandanya-Adelaide Declaration endorsed by The Australian Society of Archivists (ASA) and the Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) framework developed by Janke (2019). These archival frameworks suggest how interconnected architectural histories and historiographies might be read, reframed and restored. Decolonising architectural archives will require a continuous process of reflection and political engagement with collections and archives. In pursuing these actions, archivists and architectural historians can begin to participate in the indigenous Reworlding of the archive.
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