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World Library and Information Congress:
74th IFLA General Conference and Council
"Libraries without borders: Navigating
towards global understanding"
10-14 August 2008, Québec, Canada
Programme and Proceedings
Abbreviations
CB |
Coordinating Board |
Off-site |
Not in the QCCC but elsewhere, location will be added when
known |
SC |
Standing Committee |
SI |
Simultaneous Interpretation (English, Arabic, Chinese,
French, German, Russian and Spanish) |
SI-F |
Simultaneous Interpretation English-French and French-English
only |
TBA |
To Be Announced |
Friday 08 August 2008
08.30-11.00
11.30-14.30
15.00-18.00
3
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CB I General Research Libraries (Div I)
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4
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CB I Special Libraries (Div II)
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5
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CB I Libraries Serving the General Public (Div III)
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6
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CB I Bibliographic Control (Div IV)
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7
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CB I Collections and Services (Div V)
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8
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CB I Management and Technology (Div VI)
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9
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CB I Education and Research (Div VII)
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10
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CB I Regional Activities (Div VIII)
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Saturday 09 August 2008
08.30-11.20
11
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SC I National Libraries
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12
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SC I Classification and Indexing
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13
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SC I Geography and Map Libraries
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14
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SC I Management of Library Associations
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15
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SC I Reference and Information Services
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16
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SC I Newspapers
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17
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SC I Information Literacy
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18
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SC I Metropolitan Libraries
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19
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SC I Library Buildings and Equipment
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20
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SC I Law Libraries
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21
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SC I Academic and Research Libraries
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22
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SC I Knowledge Management
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23
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SC I Government Libraries
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24
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SC I Health and Biosciences Libraries
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11.30-14.20
25
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SC I Serial Publications and other continuing Resources
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26
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SC I Acquisition and Collection Development
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27
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SC I Education and Training
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28
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SC I Libraries for the Blind
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29
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SC I Cataloguing
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30
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SC I Statistics and Evaluation
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31
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SC I Library Theory and Research
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32
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SC I Management and Marketing
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33
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SC I Social Science Libraries
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34
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SC I Rare Books and Manuscripts
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35
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SC I School Libraries and Resource Centers
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36
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SC I Preservation and Conservation
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37
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SC I Genealogy and Local History
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38
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SC I Libraries for Children and Young Adults
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39
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FAIFE Committee Meeting
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14.30-17.20
40
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SC I Science and Technology Libraries
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41
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SC I Public Libraries
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42
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SC I Art Libraries
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43
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SC I Bibliography
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44
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SC I Audiovisual and Multimedia
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45
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SC I Document Delivery and Resource Sharing
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46
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SC I Government Information and Official Publications
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47
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SC I Information Technology
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48a
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SC I Library History
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48b
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SC I Libraries Serving Disadvantaged Persons
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49
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SC I Library Services to Multicultural Populations
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50
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SC I Literacy and Reading
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51
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Off-site –SC I Library and Research
Services for Parliaments
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52
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SC I Continuing Professional Development & Workplace
Learning
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53
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CLM Business Meeting
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18.00-19.00 – Caucus
Meetings
54
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Caucus: Canada
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55
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Caucus: French Speaking Participants
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56
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Caucus: German Speaking Participants
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57
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Caucus: Netherlands Speaking Participants
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58
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Caucus: Portuguese Speaking Participants
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59
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Caucus: CIS
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60
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Caucus: Nordic Countries
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61
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Caucus: UK
|
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62
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Caucus: USA
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63
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Caucus: Africa, Asia & Oceania and Latin America &
Caribbean
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64
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Caucus: Spanish Speaking Participants
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65
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Caucus: Chinese Speaking Participants
|
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66
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Caucus: Italian Speaking Participants
|
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66a
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Caucus: Arab Librarians
|
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Sunday 10 August 2008
09.30-11.30
12.45-13.45
68
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SI – Question and Answer Session on
Statutes Revision
|
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13.45-15.45
69
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SI – Newcomers Session
|
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13.45-15.45
13.45-15.45
71
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SI-F – Art Libraries
Advancing cultural and social diversity through global
partnerships: the art library’s role in a world without
borders
Libraries without
Borders: Navigating Towards Global Understanding
Don’t fence me in! Reconsidering the role of the
librarian in a global age of art and design
research
HEATHER GENDRON (Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, USA)
Artist as
activist: The Ohio State University Libraries and the
Columbus Museum of Art project to promote collections,
outreach, and community learning
AMANDA GLUIBIZZI (The Ohio State University, Ohio, USA)
Creating visibility: discovering artists archives and
ephemera at the National Gallery of Australia Research
Library
JENNIFER COOMBES and JOYCE VOLKER (National Gallery of
Australia Research Library, Canberra, Australia)
Cultural
heritage – the art library cuts across borders in
Sweden
KERSTIN ASSARSSON-RIZZI (The National Heritage Board,
Stockholm, Sweden)
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13.45-15.45
72
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Libraries Serving Disadvantaged
Persons
The world is greying: model library programs serving
‘Baby Boomers and older adults
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13.45-15.45
73
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Academic and Research Libraries
Hot topics in academic and research libraries –
discussions with experts
There will be no speakers per se, it will be a cabaret style
event where attendees will sit at topic tables and discuss
professional issues with experts.
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13.45-15.45
74
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Document Delivery and Resource Sharing
Global resource sharing across borders: crossing
geographical, language and conceptual boundaries in
interlibrary loan and document delivery services
New directions in
digital information delivery in the Web environment at the
NRC Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical
Information
MICHAEL IRELAND (CISTI, Ottawa, Canada)
Libraries without
borders: document delivery, Singapore style
CHAN PING WAH (Research and Innovation Services, Singapore)
and NGIAN LEK CHOH (National Library, Singapore,
Singapore)
Document delivery
services enhance access to information resources in remote
Uganda
MARIA G. N. MUSOKE (Makerere University, Kampala,
Uganda)
eBooks on
Demand (EOD). A European Digitisation Service
GÜNTER MÜHLBERGER and SILVIA GSTREIN (University of
Innsbruck Library, Inssbruck, Austria)
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13.45-15.45
13.45-15.45
13.45-15.45
77
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Latin America and the Caribbean SC I
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16.00-18.00
18.00
Monday 11 August 2008
08.30-10.30
80
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SI – Libraries Serving
Disadvantaged Persons
Going beyond borders – new ways of using ICT to
enable greater access to all persons
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08.30-10.30
81
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SI – Rare Books and
Manuscripts
Expanding frontiers of knowledge: documents of
exploration, discovery and travel
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08.30-10.30
08.30-12.45
83
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SI-F – Management of Library
Associations, Continuing Professional Development and Workplace
learning with ALP
Leadership skills and advocacy for libraries: Best
practices in library association management
Introductions and overview of session
SYLVIA PIGGOTT (Global Information Solutions Group,
Montreal, Canada)
The MLAS Global
Library Associaton Development (GLAD) program: What it is
and why you should get involved!
KEITH FIELS (American Library Association ALA, Chicago,
USA)
Using cool technologies for your Library Association's
Advocacy Plan
STEPHEN ABRAHMS (SirsiDynix, Canada)
Leadership issues
for building resilient Library Associations
BARRIE HOWARD (Digital Library Federation, USA)
Leadership skills and
Advocacy for Libraries: Best Practices in Library
Association Management, the Singapore Experience
NGIAN LEK CHOH (National Library of Singapore,
Singapore)
[Time for Questions and Answers]
Introductions and overview of session
SINIKKA SIPILÄ (Finnish Library Association, Helsinki,
Finland)
From Asian Federation
of Library Associations (AFLA) to Regional Federation of
South Asian Library Associations (REFSALA) and beyond: a
journey incomplete
TRISHANJIT KAUR (Punjabi University, India)
Best practices:
advocacy and leadership skills in the management of Library
Associations: Experiences from West African Library
Association
JAMES O. DANIEL (West African Library Association WALA,
Nigeria)
La
Cooperación Estratégica entre Bibliotecas y Bibliotecarios
en Centroamérica
NITIDA CARRANZA (Universidad Pedagógica Nacional Francisco
Morazán, Honduras) and OLINDA ESTELA GOMEZ MORAN
(Biblioteca, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, El
Salvador)
[Time for Questions and Answers]
This session continues at 13.45 in room 205abc, see Session 93. |
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08.30-12.45
84
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Preservation and Conservation, (PAC), Information
Technology, IFLA-CDNL Alliance for Bibliographic Standards
(ICABS) and Law Libraries
Session 1: Digital objects on physical
carriers
Moderator: Michele Cloonan, Graduate School of
Library & Information Science, Simmons College
Interactive
multimedia on CD-ROM: experiments with risk
assessment
MONA JIMENEZ (New York University, New York, USA)
Risk carriers
– The risks faced to hand held media
RORY McLEOD (British Library, London, UK)
Media Matters:
developing processes for preserving digital objects on
physical carriers at the National Library of
Australia
DOUGLAS ELFORD, NICHOLAS DEL POZO, SNEZANA MIHAJLOVIC,
DAVID PEARSON, GERARD CLIFTON and COLIN WEBB (National
Library of Australia, Canberra, Australia)
Ingest
strategies of digital libraries: the challenges of handling
portable objects
ADAM RUSBRIDGE and SEAMUS ROSS (University of Glasgow,
Glasgow, Scotland)
Session 2: Preservation
Infrastructures
Moderator: Hilde van Wijngaarden, National
Library of the Netherlands
Implementing a
cooperative long-term preservation infrastructure solution
for heterogeneous institutions – report from ongoing
activities in Germany
REINHART ALTENHONER (Deutsche NationalBibliothek, Frankfurt
am Main, Deutschland)
Infrastructure models
used by California Digital Library's Preservation
Projects
MARGARET LOW (California Digital Library, Oakland, USA)
A model of digital
preservation infrastructures that connects individuals to
libraries
ANDREA JAPZON (Drexel University, Philadephia, USA)
Digital
preservation at the National Library of France: a technical
and organisational overview
EMMANUELLE BERMES, ISABELLE DUSSERT CARBONE, THOMAS LEDOUX
and CHRISTIAN LUPOVICI (Bibliothèque nationale de France,
Paris, France)
Library and
Archives Canada: towards a trusted digital
repository
PAM ARMSTRONG (Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa,
Canada)
From theory to
practice: digital preservation at the National Library of
New Zealand
STEVE KNIGHT (National Library of New Zealand, Wellington,
New Zealand)
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08.30-12.45
85
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Literacy and Reading in co-operation with the
Public Libraries and Library Services to Multicultural
Populations
The Global Literacy and Reading Fair: sharing good
library practices n support of the United Nations Literacy
Decade 2003-2012
The half-day session will be organised as an open,
interactive, and participatory space for presenters to enable
them to display their materials, demonstrate experiences and
products to participants and to discuss their projects,
programmes and reading campaigns.
Introductions: Ivanka Stricevic (Croatia), Gwynneth
Evans (Canada) and Robert Sarjant (UK)
All about
IBBY—and what about children in crisis and
books?
PATSY ALDANA (IBBY, Toronto, Canada)
Donner le goût
de lire en milieu défavorisé
ANTOINETTE FALL CORREA (Bibliothèque-Lecture-Développement
– BLD; CODE, Canada, Senegal)
The
potential of national reading campaigns Experiences from
Austria and the Netherlands in international
perspective
MARIAN KOREN (Public Library Association, Research and
International Affairs, The Netherlands) and GERALD LEITNER
(The Austrian Public Library Association, Austria)
Make the Stories
You Tell Your Own
ROBERT STELMACH alias MAX TELL (Storyteller, White Rock,
British Columbia, Canada)
Time to Read and
Estevan Area Literacy Group: results from two collaborative
approaches to literacy
GREGORY SALMERS (Southeast Regional Library, Saskatchewan,
Canada)
The
Holiday Reading Adventure (HRA) Programme in
Namibia
BERNADETTE H. MUKULU and E. R. MAKINZA (Ministry of
Education, national Library of Namibia, Windhoek,
Namibia)
Getting to Know the Library: introducing adult
learners (literacy, ESOL/FSL) to the resources and services
of the public library
BRENDA LIVINGSTON (Toronto Public Library, Toronto, Canada)
and MARCIA ARONSON (Adult and Readers' Advisory Services,
Ottawa Public Library, Ottawa, Canada)
The Locker-Room
Librarian: The Maradona of literature dissemination
STIG ELVIS FURSET (Norwegian Archive, Library and Museum
Authority, Oslo, Norway)
Mangan ra
Mangan Moco Buku! - Eating or Starving, Read
Books
IDA F. PRIYANTO (Gadjah Mada University Library,
Yogyakarta, Indonesia)
Optimization and
Sustainability – An Overview of Reading Promotion by
the Hong Kong Public Libraries
MARY MEI-LEE LAU CHENG (Hong Kong Public Libraries, Hong
Kong)
Taking Library
Services to Hospital Wards: A Case of Embu Provincial
Hospital - Kenya
AUGUSTINE MUSYOKI MUTISO (Kenya National Library Service,
Embu, Kenya)
Nurturing a
Nation of Readers: Sharing the Joy and Adventure of the
Reading Experience through the Singapore public
libraries
SHARON THIEN (Service Management, Public Library Services,
National Library Board, Singapore) and KIANG-KOH LAI LIN
(Reading Initiatives, National Library Board, Singapore)
New Directions for
Children’s Libraries in Africa: Publishing for Early
Readers
KATHY KNOWLES (Osu Childrens’ Library Fund, Winnipeg,
Canada)
Au pays des
ménagères-oiseau: de l’apprentissage à
l’expression collective
ANNICK GUINERY (Bibliothèque Municipale de Choisy le Roi,
Choisy le Roi, France)
La contribución de
la biblioteca pública de América Latina y el Caribe a la
formación de lectores. Avances de la Encuesta Internacional
de Lectura
ELSA RAMÍREZ LEYVA (Centro Universitario de Investigaciones
Bibliotecológicas de la UNAM, México City, México)
El futuro
bibliotecario y la lectura: un estudio de caso en la
Universidad de La Habana
MAJELA GUZMÁN GÓMEZ (Universidad de La Habana, Facultad de
Comunicación, Departamento de Bibliotecología y Ciencia de
la Información, Ciudad de La Habana, Cuba)
Creating
reading environments: our initiatives in West Bengal,
India
RATNA BANDYOPADHYAY (University of Calcutta, The LIS
Department, Calcutta, India)
Centre national
de la literature pour la jeunesse – la joie par les
livres: des actions pour l’accès des enfants à ls
lecture
VIVIANA QUINONES (La Joie par les Livres - Centre national
de la literature pour la jeunesse Paris, France)
|
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10.45-12.45
86
|
SI – Libraries for the
Blind
Achieve more through design for all: how to make your
website, buildings, presentations and print materials more
accessible to print disabled people
Web accessibility:
what we have achieved and challenges ahead
JENNY CRAVEN (Manchester Metropolitan University,
Manchester, UK)
A building with
vision
LESLEY McDONALD (Canadian National Institute for the Blind,
Toronto, Canada)
Making
presentations accessible to blind and low vision
participants
PENNY HARTIN (World Blind Union, Toronto, Canada)
Designing your
library's printed materials for accessibility
JON HARDISTY (RNIB National Library Services, Stockport,
UK) and MINNA VON ZANSEN (Celia Library for the Visually
Impaired, Helsinki, Finland)
A user’s reflections and concluding remarks
FRAN CUTLER (Canadian National Institute for the Blind,
Toronto, Canada)
|
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10.45-12.45
87
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SI – Copyright and other Legal
Matters with FAIFE
Barriers of access to government information
Crown Copyright
and the privatization of government information
CHABRIOL COLEBATCH (McMaster University, Hamilton,
Canada)
Electronic
publication: problems of archiving and access to archived
information, including legal deposit, data protection and
related topics
HARALD VON HIELMCRONE (Statsbiblioteket, Aarhus,
Denmark)
The
impact of copyright on access to public information in
African countries: a perspective from Uganda and South
Africa
DENISE NICHOLSON (University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, South Africa) and DICK KAWOOYA (University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA)
Freedom of information legislation: what can we learn
from countries with such laws?
MARY ALICE BAISH (American Association of Law Libraries,
Washington, USA)
|
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10.45-12.45
88
|
|
Officers Training Session
|
|
12.45-13.45
13.45-15.45
90
|
SI – Division VIII – Regional
Activities
Indigenous knowledge: language, culture and information
technology
Joining the circle of indigenous knowledge: supporting
indigenous language and technology through IT
LORIENE ROY (University of Texas, Texas, USA)
Conocimiento indígena y el papel de la información en
la educación: La Biblioteca Quechua de Ayaviri-Perú
HUGO MAMANI and CESAR AUGUSTO CASTRO ALIAGA (Colegio de
Bibliotecólogos del Perú, Lima, Peru)
Indigenous
knowledge and the role of information literacy
education
DAN DORNER and G.E. GORMAN (Victoria University,
Wellington, New Zealand)
Harnessing information technologies tools to promote
the preservation and effective use of indigenous knowledge
systems: a case study of information business traders in
Namibia
ELISHA R.T. CHIWARE (University of Namibia, Windhoek,
Namibia)
Small libraries, big impact
MARY ALICE McCARTHY (The Riecken Foundation, Washington,
USA)
|
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13.45-15.45
91
|
SI-F – Library Theory and
Research
Libraries as space and place: theoretical
approaches
Facilitator: Ragnar Andreas Audunson |
|
13.45-15.45
92
|
|
Officers Training Session
|
|
13.45-15.45
93
|
|
Management of Library Associations, Continuing
Professional Development and Workplace learning with ALP
(Part 2)
Leadership skills and advocacy for libraries: Best
practices in library association management
Facilitators: Sylvia Piggott and
Sinikka Sipilä |
|
13.45-15.45
94
|
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Working Group on Digital Libraries
(Claudia Lux/Ingeborg Verheul)
|
|
13.45-18.00
95
|
SI – Audiovisual and Multimedia,
Copyright and other Legal Matters, National Libraries and
Bibliography
The legal deposit of audiovisual and multimedia
materials: practice around the world
Part 1 – Overview and case studies
Part 2 – Regional Reviews and World Survey
|
|
16.00-18.00
96
|
SI – Division IV –
Bibliographic Control
New challenges in bibliographic control in North
America
|
|
16.00-18.00
97
|
SI-F – Newspapers
The North American ethnic press
Canadian Inuit
newspapers and periodicals: past, present and future
SHARON RANKIN (McGill University Library, Montréal,
Canada)
Publication,
access and preservation of Scandinavian immigrant press in
North America
JAMES SIMON and PATRICIA FINNEY (Center for Research
Libraries, Chicago, USA)
Documenting
immigrant experiences: a study of the Chinese-language
newspapers published in the USA and Canada
TAO YANG (The State University of New Jersey, New
Brunswick, USA)
Sauvegarder et
numériser la presse des immigrations en France à la BnF,
XIXème-XXème siècles
PHILIPPE MEZZASALMA (Bibliothèque nationale de France,
Paris, France)
|
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16.00-18.00
98
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|
Library History
Promotion and representation of libraries and librarians
in non-textual media
Pictorial and graphic representations of early public
libraries in Britain
ALISTAIR BLACK (Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds,
UK)
From grandiose to green: a history of public library
architecture
ANN CURRY (University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada)
Libraries on
postcards: historical trends, modern applications and
potential
SJOERD KOOPMAN (IFLA Headquarters, The Hague,
Netherlands)
|
|
16.00-18.00
99
|
|
Women, Information and Libraries Discussion
Group
Putting women on the agenda: Empowering women
professionals to lead in the information society
Modelling
transcultural leadership: lifting as we climb
BARBARA FORD (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Urbana, USA)
New connections and
partnerships: seeking and finding collaborations
LORIENE ROY (The University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
Texas)
Developing your
leadership potential: some current opportunities
MICHELE M. REID (North Dakota State University, Fargo,
US)
Les qualités de chef comme collaborateur: comment un
bibliothecaire peut marcher en tete au milieu d'un
organisation; le pouvoir de la direction distribuée
LESLEY FARMER (California State University, Long Beach,
USA)
What makes a good mentor / mentee: launching the Big
Sister-Little Sister Mentorship Scheme
VERONDA J. PITCHFORD (Urban Libraries Council, Chicago,
USA) and LIZ LEWIS (BBC Information & Archives, London,
UK)
Qu’est ce qui fait un bon mentor / mentoré:
lancement due Project Big Sister-Little Sister
RÉGINE HORINSTEIN (Corporation des bibliothécaires
rofessionals du Québec, Montréal, Canada) and SUZANNE
PAYETTE (Bibliothèque municipale de Brossard, Brossard,
Canada)
What makes a good
mentor / mentee: Launching the Big Sister / Little Sister
Mentorship Scheme
MARIA COTERA (University College London, London, UK), LOIDA
GARCIA-FEBO (Queens Public Library, New York, USA), RÉGINE
HORINSTEIN (Corporation des bibliothécaires professionals
du Québec, Montréal, Canada), LIZ LEWIS (BBC, London, UK),
SUZANNE PAYETTE (Bibliothèque municipale de Brossard,
Brossard Canada) and VERONDA J. PITCHFORD (Urban Libraries
Council, Chicago, USA)
Mentoring the mentors
LORI DRISCOLL (University of Florida Smathers Libraries,
Gainesville, USA)
|
|
16.00-18.00
100
|
|
Indigenous Knowledge
This will be the final meeting of the Presidential
Commission on Indigenous Matters. It will discuss
recommendations for future means of addressing issues relating
to Indigenous peoples.
Chair: Loriene Roy (University of Texas,
Texas, USA)
|
|
18.30
101
|
|
|
The Hollywood Librarian
Movie showing: 2000bc
A full-length film, made by ANN SEIDL, which explores how
Librarians are depicted in the movies, and compares that with
the roles of Librarians in the real world today. We will be
showing it in a 1600-seater theatre, with popcorn and soda on
sale, to try to suggest the real "movie" feel.
It will be followed by a short forum discussion chaired by IFLA
President CLAUDIA LUX (whose Presidential theme is "Libraries
on the Agenda"), and featuring ANN SEIDL herself. Joining them
will be two IFLA experts:
MADELEINE LEFEBVRE, Chief Librarian at Ryerson
University, Toronto, former president of the Canadian
Library Association and author of "The Romance of
Libraries", is also a professional movie, theatre and TV
actress.
HOWARD BESSER, Professor of Cinema Studies at New York
University, is also a Professor Emeritus at UCLA's
Department of Information Studies. He is a frequent speaker
on the social and cultural effects of the media.
|
Tuesday 12 August 2008
08.30-18.00
102
|
Off-site – Art
Libraries
Art libraries developing partnerships and tools to share
knowledge, improve understanding, and discover common
treasures
Sin
fronteras: Mexican painters in a visual/virtual
dialogue
ELSA BARBERENA, CARMEN BLOCK and GUILLERMINA OSORIO
(Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México, Mexico City,
Mexico)
Narrative inquiry: sharing space, crossing borders in
art and design libraries
ROBERT FABBRO (Ontario College of Art & Design,
Toronto, USA)
Art and architecture in Illinois libraries
ALLEN LANHAM (Eastern Illinois University, Charleston,
USA)
Global
perspectives: a celebration of children’s art and
imagination
KATHLEEN C. LONBOM (Illinois State University, Normal,
USA)
Artlibraries.net and
arthistoricum.net: new developments and
co-operations
RÜDIGER HOYER (Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte, Munich,
Germany) and JAN SIMANE (Max Planck Institute, Florence,
Italy)
Aperçu du paysage
de la numérisation en France en histoire de l'art: les
programmes de la BnF et de l'INHA
LUCILE TRUNEL (Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris,
France)
Location:
Théatre de la bordée, Quebec City
|
|
08.30-10.30
103
|
SI – Library and Research Services
to Parliaments
Challenges of communication in a parliamentary
environment: language issues, communication channels –
new tools 2.0, social communication, client
communication
|
|
08.30-10.30
104
|
SI-F – Preservation and
Conservation (PAC)
IFLA-PAC international and regional centres: a network
for training in the preservation field
Multicultural issues in training and communication:
Things to remember when communication across cultures,
languages, and time zones
CHRISTIANE BARYLA (IFLA PAC Director, Paris, France)
Facing Multicultural Issues in training and
communication: which tools?
FREDERICK ZARNDT (President, Planman Consulting, Coronado
CA, USA)
PAC Regional Centre USA and Canada
DIANNE L. VAN DER REYDEN (Director for Preservation,
Library of Congress, Washington, USA)
PAC Regional Centre for The Caribbean
ANNETTE WALLACE (Director of NALIS - National Library and
Information System Authority-, Port of Spain, Trinidad and
Tobago)
PAC Regional Centre for Eastern Europe and the CIS
ROSA SALNIKOVA (Head of Preservation, Library for Foreign
Litterature, Moscow, Russia)
PAC Regional Centre China
CHEN LI (Deputy Director, National Library of China,
Beijing)
PAC Regional Centre Asia
NORIKO NAKAMURA (Acquisitions Department, National Diet
Libray, Tokyo, Japan)
Conclusions
FREDERICK ZARNDT (President, Planman Consulting, Coronado
CA, USA)
Discussion: how to improve PAC network.
Moderator: DANIELLE MINCIO (President of
COSADOCA, Department of Manuscripts, Bibliothèque cantonale et
universitaire, Lausanne Dorigny, Switzerland) |
|
08.30-09.30
105
|
|
Libraries for Children and Young
Adults
Presenting revised guidelines: Library services for
young adults
|
|
08.30-10.30
106
|
|
Asia and Oceania
From me to you to us: how libraries in Asia and Oceania
contribute to global understanding
TBA
TBA
A
school-library-centered community information resources
sharing model and its impact on cultural life of rural
communities in China
WENJIE ZHOU, ELAINE X. DONG and TIM J. ZOU (China Evergreen
Rural Library Service Center, Lanzhou, China)
The tele-cottage
approach to the community development in the rural
Karnataka, India
S.L. SANGAM (Karnatak University, Dharwad, India)
Designing of
cultural knowledge portal: a South East Asian
experiment
AJAY PRATAP SINGH (Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi,
India)
Preservation
and provision of access to indigenous knowledge in Sri
Lanka
PIYADASA RANASINGHE (University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri
Lanka
|
|
08.30-11.45
107
|
SI – Management and Marketing,
Statistics and Evaluation and Library Theory and
Research
Managing libraries in a changing environment –
legal, technical and organisational aspects
Libraries,
telecentres and cybercafés: a study of public access venues
around the world
RICARDO GOMEZ, CHRISTOPHER T. COWARD and RUCHA AMBIKAR
(University of Washington, Seattle, USA)
L'archivage
d'Internet, un défi pour les décideurs et les
bibliothécaires: scénarios d'organisation et d'évaluation
L'expérience du consortium IIPC et de la BnF
(The challenge of introducing web archiving to library
stakeholders and staff: playing with metrics and
organization – the IIPC experience of the National
Library of France)
GILDAS ILLIEN (National Library of France, Paris,
France)
The ethical implications of some high value-added
information services in S&T and corporate libraries
EDUARDO OROZCO SILVA (Institute of Scientific and
Technological Information, Havana, Cuba)
Measurement of library services, to quantify or
qualify?
DAVID McMENEMY, STEPHEN BUCHANAN and CHRISTINE
ROONEY-BROWNE (University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK)
Count the
traffic
TORD HØIVIK (Oslo University College, Oslo, Norway)
Visualising and
defining effective library systems: Croatian academic
libraries
MARINA MIHALIC (The National and University Library of
Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia)
At the crossroads:
library and technology
VESNA VUKSAN (Belgrade City Library, Belgrade, Serbia)
|
|
08.30-12.45
108
|
|
President-Elect’s Brainstorm
Session
Libraries for Access to Knowledge
Ellen Tise
|
|
09.30-10.30
108a
|
|
IFLA-CDNL Alliance for Bibliographic
Standards
Developments in the role and activities of ICABS
CAROLINE BRAZIER (British Library and Chair of ICABS)
Demonstration of the proposed new web presence for
ICABS
PAMELA GATENBY (National Library of Australia, ICABS
Advisory Board)
Panel based Question and Answer session with the
audience
|
|
10.45-12.45
109
|
SI – Science and Technology
Libraries
Science across libraries: provision of science and
technology information resources and services in diverse
settings
WorldWideScience.org
– the Global Science Gateway: bringing the
world’s science to all corners of the globe
WALTER WARNICK (U.S. Department of Energy’s Offices
of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), USA)
The Biodiversity
Heritage Library: sharing biodiversity literature with the
world
NANCY E. GWINN (Smithsonian Institution Libraries,
Washington, USA) and CONSTANCE RINALDO (Harvard University,
Cambridge, USA)
An
innovative ICT solution to steer rural communities to
global understanding: a case study from Durban, South
Africa
ELIZABETH HESTER GREYLING (eThekwini Municipal Library,
Durban, South Africa) and RONEL SMITH (Meraka Institute,
Pretoria, South Africa)
Beyond the
Bibliographic: making the most of free scientific and
technical information
DON MACMILLAN (University of Calgary Library, Calgary,
Canada)
|
|
10.45-12.45
110
|
SI-F – Division III –
Libraries Serving the General Public
Public library services to indigenous/aboriginal
people
Public library services to indigenous/aboriginal
people
WENDY SINCLAIR (Albtert Library – Regina Public
Library, Regina, Canada)
Followed by 7 contributions of best practice from each
of the Sections of Divisions III.
|
|
10.45-12.45
111
|
|
Geography and Map Libraries
Mapping North America: a graphic journey through
history
Mapping a continent at the Bibliothèque et Archives
nationales du Québec
JEAN-FRANÇOIS PALOMINO (Bibliothèque et Archives nationales
du Québec, Montréal, Canada)
Mapping the
international boundary between British Canada and the
United States: the letters and maps of David Thompson,
1817-1826
FRANCES L. POLLITT (Maine Historical Society, Portland,
USA)
From New Netherlands to New York: exploring unknown
shores 1609-2009 (Celebrating the quadricentennial of Henry
Hudson’s exploration of the waterways of New York)
ALICE C. HUDSON (The New York Public Library, New York,
USA)
The Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec
online digital map collection
JEAN-FRANÇOIS PALOMINO (Bibliothèque et Archives nationales
du Québecs, Montréal, Canada)
|
|
10.45-12.45
112
|
|
Campaign for the World's Libraries- @ your
library
Canada and the Campaign: Strategies of the Ontario
Library Association
SHELAGH PATERSON (Executive Director, Ontario Library
Association)
Partnerships Expand Your Campaign
MEGAN HUMPHREY (Manager, Campaign for America's
Libraries)
LIANSA and South Africa Initiates It's Campaign:
Results and Future Plans
Speaker TBA
Chair: Michael Dowling (Director,
Administrative, policy & procedures, American Library
Association) |
|
12.00-14.00
113
|
|
Poster Sessions
Exhibition Hall
|
12.45-13.45 Lunch
12.45-15.45
115
|
SI – Africa
Globalisation: challenges and opportunities for African
libraries
|
|
13.45-15.45
116
|
SI – Library Buildings and
Equipment with Metropolitan Libraries
Renovating and renewing libraries: the wow
factor
A tale of two libraries
JOHN PATKAU (Patkau Architects, Vancouver, Canada)
Restoration and rehabilitation of Palacio Davalos for
the public library of the state of Guadalajara, Spain
JOAQUIN BAU MIQUEL (Ministerio de cultura, Spain)
Transforming building renovation to exceed user
expectation
PATRICIA ALBANESE and PETER GENOVESE (Global Library
Consulting, Rochester, USA)
Wow! Toronto Branch
Libraries Transformed
ANNE BAILEY (Toronto Public Library, Toronto, Canada
Followed by an open forum on library design issues
with a panel of speakers.
|
|
13.45-15.45 Session bilingue/Bilingual
session
117
|
SI-F – Genealogy and Local History
with FAIFE
Access to genealogical data: data protection versus
unlocking the records
Serving
the genealogical and historical research communities: an
overview of records access and data privacy issues
(Au service des généalogistes et des historiens: questions
de l'accès à la documentation vis-à-vis la confidentialité
des données personnelles)
WAYNE J. METCALFE and MELVIN P. THATCHER (Genealogical
Society of Utah/FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, USA)
What a pistarckle!
Access to Caribbean records for family history
research
(Quel cauchemar! L'accès à la documentation aux fins de la
recherche généalogique aux Caraïbes)
SUSAN LAURA LUGO (Caribbean Genealogy Library, St. Thomas,
VI, USA)
Protection des
personnes et exigences scientifiques : les enjeux de la
réforme sur l'accès aux archives en France
(Protection of individuals versus the needs of research:
what is at stake in the reform of archival access in
France)
PHILIPPE COLOMB (Bibliothèque Cujas, Paris, France)
The release of
Canada’s Historic Census
(La diffusion du recensement historique du Canada)
LORNA MILNE (Senator, The Senate, The Parliament of Canada,
Ottawa, Canada)
|
|
13.45-15.45
118
|
|
Library Services to Multicultural
Populations
Library services without cultural borders: navigating
through demographic realities and best practices in
multicultural library services
Best
practices in library services to aboriginal peoples in
Saskatchewan
DEBORAH LEE (University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan,
Canada) and DEIRDRE CRICHTON (Parkland Regional Library
System, Canada)
The library as
a reflection of the city’s cultural diversity
IMMA SOLÉ and NEUS PINEN (The Public Libraries Consortium
of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain)
Changing
Demographics: marketing to communities in transition:
reaching out to new immigrants
FRED GITNER (Queens Library, New York, USA)
Best
Practices in Multicultural Library Services: Library
Settlement Program (LSP) at Toronto Public Library
ELIZABETH GLASS and DEBI SHEFFIELD (Toronto Public Library,
Toronto, Canada)
Public Libraries
and modernity in Colombia: multiple cultures, multiple
realities
DIANA CAROLINA MARTÍNEZ SANTOS (Universidad de la
Salle, Bogotá, Colombia)
|
|
13.45-15.45
119
|
|
IFLA Publications
Launch of new IFLA Publications
Chair: Sjoerd Koopman, IFLA Coordinator of
Professional Activities
Authors and editors are presenting the top new titles
recently published. The variety is as broad as the IFLA palette
of activities: new publications on bibliographic control,
information technology in developing countries, information
literacy, local history librarianship and library education.
Take this opportunity to meet many of the authors and to
learn about the latest state of play and... of course you can
place your orders!
|
|
13.45-15.45
120
|
|
LIS Education in Developing Countries
DG
LIS Education in developing countries and the challenges
of human resource development
|
|
13.45-15.45
121
|
|
International Relations in National
Organisations – Special Interest Group
Do you work in a national-level organisation (institution or
association) and have responsibilities for managing
international relations? Then please attend this meeting to
establish a new Special Interest Group for IFLA. The Group will
provide a forum for investigating how different organisations
manage their international affairs and for exchanging expertise
and experience. The hope is that those organisations with
well-established international relations offices will share
with and assist those who are in development or just getting
|
16.00-18.00
122
|
SI – Academic and Research
Libraries with Management and Marketing
Public and private partnerships
Academic Library public/private partnerships:
definitions of motivation, risk and success
JAMES NEAL (Columbia University, USA)
Partners of equals
– libraries ‘mixing molecules’ with
private organisations
WIN SHIH (University Libraries, University at Albany, State
University of New York, Albany NY, USA)
Partnerships
between public libraries and other agencies in England for
provision of adult learning
LINDA ASHCROFT (Liverpool Business School, Liverpool John
Moores University, UK)
Public and private partnerships – the British
Library’s experience
LYNNE BRINDLEY (British Library, London, UK)
|
|
16.00-18.00
123
|
SI – Education and
Training
Recruiting students into LIS programmes: navigating
towards global understanding
Recruiting LIS
students who can navigate complexity in support of global
understanding
FIONA BLACK (Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada)
Subject
analysis of online syllabi in library and information
science: do academic LIS programs match with job
requirements?
KAYVAN KOUSHA (University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran) and
MAHSHID ABDOLI (National Library of Iran, Tehran, Iran)
Course
choice and equipage of the professionals: implications for
restructuring LIS programmes in developing countries with
special reference to India
M. BAVAKUTTY (Pondicherry University, Pondicherry, India),
T.P.O. NASIRUDHEEN and K. C. ABDUL MAJEED (Farook College,
Calicut, India)
Attracting
students into library and information science programmes in
developing countries: the Nigerian experience
ZAKARI MOHAMMED (Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria,
Nigeria)
LIS graduates
employability-needs and expectations of the Library and
Information Science (LIS) curriculum at the University of
the Punjab (PU): An appraisal of Pakistani LIS
professionals
Questionnaire:
NOSHEEN FATIMA WARRAICH (University of the Punjab, Lahore,
Pakistan)
|
|
16.00-18.00
124
|
SI-F – Health and Biosciences
Libraries
The role of humanities in medical education and patient
care
Humanities in
the medical education and patient care: lessons from some
colleges of medicine in the Nigeria Universities
ADEFUNKE OLANIKE ALABI, TAIWO OLADELE OGUNYADE and YETUNDE
ABOSEDE ZAID (University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria)
Using citation
analysis to determine the use of information sources in the
humanities by postgraduate students in the health and
biomedical sciences: a case study
ADRIAAN SWANEPOEL (Tshwane University of Technology in
Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa)
Development
and use of humanities collection in hospital libraries in
Hyderabad: a survey
V. VISHWA MOHAN and VAHIDEH ZAREA GAVGANI (Dept. of Library
& Information Science, Osmania University, Hyderabad,
India
Medical humanities
collection development: policy guidelines for Indian
hospital libraries
MEDHA V. JOSHI (Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai, India)
The art
of medicine – visualising medicine from Vesalius to
MRI
BRUCE MADGE (The London Upright MRI Centre, London, UK) and
OCTAVIA-LUCIANA PORUMBEANU (Library and Information Science
Department Faculty of Letters, University of Bucharest,
Bucharest, Romania)
|
|
16.00-18.00
125
|
|
School Libraries and Resource Centres
All aboard at the school library: giving children the
tools they need to navigate the future!
|
|
16.00-18.00
126
|
|
National Association Members Meeting
|
|
16.00-18.00
127
|
|
New Professionals Discussion Group
Mind the gap: bridging the inter-generational
divide
Panel discussion with the following panellists:
SUE HUTLEY
(Australian Library and Information Association,
Australia)
BARBARA SCHLEIHAGEN and SUSANNE RIEDEL
(German Library Association, Germany)
KEITH MICHAEL FIELS
(American Library Association, USA)
|
|
18.00
128
|
|
Cocktail Reception and Fun Night
|
400abc
|
Wednesday 13 August 2008
08.30-10.30
129
|
SI – Classification and
Indexing
Classification and indexing without language
borders
|
|
08.30-10.30
130
|
SI – Government Information and
Official Publications
Globalisation of government information: creating
digital archives for increased access
Government web
content in Canada: a national library web archive
perspective
GILLIAN CANTELLO and JOHN STEGENGA (Library and Archives
Canada, Ottawa, Canada)
Archiving foreign
government statistical websites for all at Indiana
University Libraries
ANDREA SINGER (Indiana University Libraries, Bloomington,
USA)
La
documentation juridique au Rwanda: l’accessibilité
par le biais du numérique
ANNE-MARIE AUGER and JONAST MUTWAZA (Tribunal penal
international pour le Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda)
- Access to Government
Information Resources via RSS: Digitalized Individual Files
of Self-employees in China
XIAOWEN DING (Library of Jiangsu Provincial Party
Institute, Nanjing, China)
Preserving access
to government websites: development and practice in the
cybercemetary
STARR HOFFMAN (University of North Texas Libraries, Denton,
USA)
|
|
08.30-10.30
131
|
|
Libraries on the Agenda
President's Information Society Working Group / Panel
Discussion "Towards an Information Society for All"
Panellists:
Claudia Lux, IFLA President
- Libraries on the Agenda
Stuart Hamilton, IFLA Senior Policy Advisor
- IFLA's lobbying for the information society: strategy,
focal points, partners
Danielle Mincio, President's Information Society
Working Group
- WSIS-action lines and follow up: achievements and coming
activities
Elisabeth de Carvalho, IFLA Latin America and
Caribbean Section - Regional Manager
- The
Common Base of Citizen Knowledge and the role of
telecenters in the Sao Paulo State
- The role of public libraries in the Colombian society
- Recommendations of the Seminar for Indigenous Libraries
in Latin America
Filiberto Felipe Marinez, IFLA Latin America and
Caribbean Section - Chair
- IFLA's activities in the region
Dr. Hesham Azmi, Coordinator, IS Program, Department
of Mass Communication & Information Science, CAS, Qatar
University
- The role of libraries in the information societies of the
Gulf States
Moderator: Christel Mahnke, Coordinator,
President's Information Society Working Group |
|
08.30-10.30
132
|
|
Libraries and Web 2.0 Discussion Group
Sharing bibliographic data-reuse and free licenses for
the ‘product’ of libraries
The Open Knowledge Foundation (ONF) has criticized the draft
report of the Working Group for Bibliographic Control of the
Library of Congress because there is no provision for the
access, re-use and re-distribution of bibliographic data
without restriction. The ONF published a petition that all
bibliographic data should be free which is supported by users
and Web 2.0 services like Library Thing and the Open Library
Project. What does that mean for our practice?
We would like to discuss this with representatives of the
projects, national libraries and other major data providers. We
think that we need to start the discussion as soon as possible
and therefore invite all interested delegates to this first
meeting of the Library and Web 2.0 Discussion Group.
|
|
08.30-11.30
08.30-12.45
134
|
SI-F – Information Literacy with
Academic and Research Libraries
Return on investment: learners’ outcomes in
information literacy. Do they really learn?
Indicators on
'information literacy' and the Information for All
programme; a challenge for libraries
SIMON ELLIS (UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Montréal,
Canada)
Quels
enseignements retenir de l'évaluation des competences
documentaires des étudiants qui accèdent à
l’enseignement supérieur en Communauté française de
Belgique?
BERNARD POCHET (Gembloux Agricultural University, Gembloux,
Belgium) and PAUL THIRION (Université de Liège, Liège,
Belgium)
Could learners
outcomes in information literacy be measured: pluses and
minuses of testing
NATALIA I. GENDINA (Kemerovo State University of Culture
and Arts, Kemerovo, Russian Federation)
More than mere
collections: portfolio’s as direct and authentic -
assessment of information literacy outcomes
BARBARA D’ANGELO (Arizona State University, Mesa,
USA)
We have evidence,
they are learning: using multiple assessments to measure
student information literacy learning outcomes
GABRIELA SONNTAG (California State University in San
Marcos, San Marcos, USA)
Students’
perspective of the information literacy program offered by
the University of the South Pacific
GWEN NOELINE MAR (University of the South Pacific Library,
Suva, Fiji)
Appropriation du
questionnaire d'auto-évaluation des connaissances
informationnelles par les bibliothécaires: le cas des
sciences de l'éducation et de l'anthropologie à
l'Université de Montréal
JEAN-FRANÇOIS DURNIN and CATHERINE FORTIER (Montreal
University Libraries, Montréal, Canada)
|
|
09.00-11.30
135
|
Off-site – Libraries for Children
and Young Adults
Guided Library visit, focused on children’s
department and services
Presentation of the animation program of library of
Charlesbourg
Presentation from "Communication-Jeunesse", on
promotion of children’s and young adult literature
Presentation of Guidelines Library Services for Babies
and Toddlers
Location:
Public Library of Charlesbourg
|
|
09.00-16.00
136
|
Off-site – Education and
Training
LIS support staff education: library technicians and
library assistants
Library
Technician course recognition in Australia: The challenges
of a distributed national education program
GILLIAN HALLAM (Queensland University of Technology,
Brisbane, Australia) and PAUL GENONI (Curtin University of
Technology, Perth Australia)
La formation
d'aide-bibliothécaires au Rwanda: une résolution partielle
du problème du personnel du domaine de bibliothéconomie et
des sciences de l'information
MUHEBERA BIZIMANA (Kigali Institute of Education, Kigali,
Rwanda)
The bachelor as an
academic degree – apprenticeship versus study
degree?
URSULA GEORY (Cologne University of Applied Science,
Cologne, Germany)
The Library
Support Staff Certification Program: past, present and
future
JENNIFER GRADY (American Library Association, Chicago, USA)
and BARBARA MANSON (East Caroline University, Greenville,
USA)
Supportive
staff in libraries of Visakhapatnam City: an evaluative
study
R.S.R. VARALAKSHMI (Andhra University, Visakhapatnam,
India)
Evaluation du
programme de formation des technicians en BSI du department
de bibliothéconomie de l’Université
d’Alger
NADIA TEMMAR (Banque d’Algerie, Algé, Alger)
Formation pour les «
assistants » des Bibliothèques Publiques Tunisiennes
(BPT)
AHMED KSIBI (Institut Supérieur de Documentation, Tunis,
Tunisia)
Les besoin en
formation des assistants et techiniciens bibliothécaires au
Marco en leur positionnement dans le milieu
professional
ABDERRAHIM AMEUR (Bibliothèque Nationale du Royaume du
Maroc, Rabat, Morocco) and IMANE BESRI (Ecole de Sciences
de l’Information, Rabat, Morocco)
Liberal arts
in the education and training of LIS paraprofessionals: the
cases of South Africa and Québec, Canada
CHRISTINE JACOBS (John Abott College, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue,
Canada) and JAYA RAJU (Durban University of Technology,
Durban, South Africa)
Location:
CEGEP Francois-Xavier Garneau
1660, Boulevard de l’Entente, Québec (G1S 4S3)
Tel: (418) 688-8310
E-mail: communications@cegep-fxg.qc.ca
|
09.30-18.00
137
|
Off-site – Genealogy and Local
History
Field trip to Grosse-Ile and the Irish National Historic
Site of Canada
Cost: CAN $80
Advance registration required.
For more information and to download the registration form,
please go to http://archive.ifla.org/IV/ifla74/field-trip_20080813.htm
|
|
10.45-12.45
138
|
SI – Knowledge
Management
Towards understanding in the multicultural world
Knowledge sharing and practice – 3
presentations:
KM tools in practice – 3 presentations:
LYNNETTE SIMPSON (Information/Knowledge Architect,
Robbins-Gioia, LLC)
Taxonomy
development for knowledge management
MARY S. WHITTAKER (The Boeing Company, Boeing Library
Services, Seattle WA, USA) and KATHYRN BREININGER (Boeing
Reports Management Services, Seattle WA, USA)
ÉRIC BERGERON (VP Technology, CEDROM-SNi &
President, IXIA, and Graydon Saunders, Advanced Micro
Devices)
Moderator: Xuemao Wang (Sheridan Libraries,
Johns Hopkins University, USA) |
|
10.45-12.45
139
|
SI – Acquisition and Collection
Development
In and out (of copyright): Contrasting perspectives on
digitization of library collections
Canadian
mass digitization: the University of Toronto Libraries
partnership with the Internet Archive – historical
overview, recent issues, and future implications
JONATHAN BENGSTON (University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada)
and ROBERT MILLER (Internet Archive, San Francisco, USA)
Mass digitization
for research and study: the digitization strategy of the
Bavarian State Library
KLAUS CEYNOWA (Bavarian State Library. Munich, Germany)
British Library
digitisation: access and copyright
ED KING (British Library, London, UK)
Gallica 2:
expérimentation d'une offre numérique incluant des
documents soumis au droit d'auteur
LUCIEN SCOTTI (Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris,
France)
|
|
10.45-12.45
141
|
|
Agricultural Libraries DG
Trends in agricultural information transfer systems
worldwide
|
|
10.45-12.45
142
|
|
Law Libraries
Québec law and digital libraries
IF-LAW=Information Forum: Law in a mixed
jurisdiction
MAITRE DANIEL BOYER (McGill University Law School,
Montreal, Canada) and DOMNIQUE LAPIERRE (Laval University
Library, Quebec, Canada)
|
|
12.00-14.00
143
|
|
Poster Sessions
|
Exhibition Hall
|
12.45-13.45 Lunch
144
|
SI – Plenary Session
James Bartleman
James Bartleman is aboriginal, member of the Mnjikaning
First Nation. He is the former Lieutenant-governor of Ontario
and has a longstanding career in Canadian diplomacy. He has
been Canadian ambassador to Cuba, to Israel, and to NATO in
Brussels; he has also been Canadian High- Commissioner to South
Africa and to Australia. He is actually very active in
aboriginal youth literacy initiatives and created in 2004 a
book program, collecting books to stock school libraries in
aboriginal communities in Northern Ontario and Nunavut.
Commemorating his office as lieutenant-governor, the government
of Ontario recently created The "James Bartleman Aboriginal
Youth Creative Writing Award", giving aboriginal youth an
opportunity to showcase their writing abilities.
Chair: Helena R. Asamoah-Hassan, Governing
Board Member of IFLA
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|
13.45-15.45
145
|
SI – Latin America and the
Caribbean
Cultural identity and technology in Latin America and
the Caribbean libraries
The
experience of the Common Base of Citizen Knowledge - CBCK
(BCCC)
LUZIA MONTEIRO SOARES, MARIA ISABEL CABRAL DA FRANCA and
ELIZABET M. RAMOS DE CARVALHO (Instituto Lidas, Sao Paulo,
Brazil)
Palabra
viva: UN rescate del patrimonio cultural colombiano
FLOR JANETH ARDILA REYES and MARÍA MERCEDES VILLAMIZAR
CAYCEDO (Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogota,
Colombia)
Recources
on Caribbean cultural identity: documentation, preservation
and access
JENNIFER M. JOSEPH (The University of the West Indies, St.
Augustine Campus, Trinidad and Tobago) and JOAN VACIANNA
(The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus,
Jamaica)
Promoviendo
la inclusión tecnológica: experiencia entre una biblioteca
parlamentaria y un centro de educación técnica en
Chile
ANA MARÍA PINO YAÑEZ (Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de
Chile, Santiago de Chile, Chile) and CLAUDIA ESCOBAR
SEPÚLVEDA (Fundación Centro de Formación Técnica DuocUC,
Santiago de Chile, Chile)
|
|
13.45-15.45
146
|
UNIMARC
Evolving bibliographic standards: the role and place of
UNIMARC
UNIMARC Bibliographic Format, the new 3rd edition and
the future
ALAN HOPKINSON (Middlesex University, London, UK)
New developments in UNIMARC/Authorities: impacts from
the 3rd edition of the Bibliographic Format and the FRAD
model
MIRNA WILLER (University of Zadar, Zadar, Croatia)
The UNIMARC landscape: updated overview
MARIA INEEZ CORDEIRO (National Library of Portugal, Lisbon,
Portugal)
|
|
13.45-15.45 Session bilingue/Bilingual
session
147
|
|
SI-F –Access to Information Network
Africa (ATINA) Discussion Group (Réseau d’accès à
l’information en Afrique (RAIA))
La participation des bibliothèques dans le mouvement
vers l’accès public à l’information, vers le
gouvernement transparent et vers la démocratie: les cas de
l’Afrique du Nord, du Centre et de l’Ouest
(Public Information Access, Open Government and Democracy in
North, Central and West Africa: the Role of Libraries)
Afrique de l'Ouest:
enjeux et stratégies pour aller vers la société de
l'information
(Moving towards the information society: stakes and
strategies in West Africa)
DJIBRIL NDIAYE (Bureau International du Travail, Dakar,
Sénégal)
Les problèmes
d'accessibilité à l'information pour le développement en
Afrique centrale: quel rôle les centres de documentation et
d'information devront jouer?
(What can information and documentation centres do about
the problems of accessing information for development in
Central Africa?)
ROSALINE NJIKE NYANJOU ÉP NJIKE (Bureau Sous Régional de
l'UNESCO en Afrique Centrale, Yaoundé, Cameroun)
L'accès populaire à
l'information, la liberté d'expression et la construction
de la démocratie au Cameroun et au Bénin
(Public access to information, freedom of expression and
the building of democracy in Cameroon and in Benin)
RACHEL SOLANGE MIENJE MOMO (Centre Régional Africain de
Technologie (CRAT), Dakar, Sénégal)
The Current State
of Government Publishing and Access to Government
Information in Nigeria
(L'état actuel de l'édition officielle et de l'accès à
l'information gouvernementale au Nigeria)
ANGEL D. BATISTE (Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.,
USA)
"Did WSIS change a thing?" Freedom of expression in
Tunisia and the rest of the Maghreb after the World Summit
on the Information Society, Geneva 2003 – Tunis
2005
(Les séquelles du Sommet mondial sur la société de
l’information Genève 2003 – Tunis 2005 en ce
qui concerne la liberté d’expression en Tunisie et
aux autres pays du Maghreb)
STUART HAMILTON (IFLA Headquarters, The Hague, The
Netherlands)
Review of themes from the papers. Future work of the
ATINA/RAIA group.
(Grandes lignes des présentations. Travail du groupe
RAIA/ATINA dans l'avenir.)
|
|
13.45-18.00
148
|
SI – Social Science Libraries with
Division II – Special Libraries and Geography and Map
Libraries
Borderless collections in the social sciences: platforms
for digital access, disseminations and preservation
National Geographic
Society: setting priorities in global digital outreach in a
multimedia environment
BARBARA FERRY (National Geographic Society, USA)
Joining the global
research community: models for increasing visibility and
access to international and national research
information
PETER BURNETT (INASP, International Network for the
Availability of Scientific Publications, Oxford, UK)
Access to online
resources in social sciences in Lithuania
EMILIJA BANIONYTE (Vilnius Pedagogical University, eIFL,
Vilnius, Lithuania)
Vascoda.de and the
system of the German virtual subject Libraries
RALF DEPPING (University Köln, Germany)
Présentation de la
bibliothèque numérique, Les Classiques des sciences
sociales
GILLES CARON AND JEAN-MARIE TREMBLAY (University
Chicoutimi, Canada)
Articles de fonds et articles récents: la mise en
ligne des revues de sciences humaines et sociales
engendre-t-elle un effet de « longue traîne » ?
L’exemple du portail Cairn
MARC MINON (CAIRN, Belgium/France)
Persée, un
outil au service de la communication scientifique
francophone
NATHALIE FARGIER (Programme Persée, Responsable de la
documentation et des relations revues) and VALÉRIE NEOUZE
(Ministry of Education, France)
Infrastructures,
publications et ressources numériques pour les sciences
humaines et sociales: l’état des lieux au Canada et
perspective réseau comme option stratégique
GUYLAINE BEAUDRY (University Montreal, Canada)
|
|
13.45-18.00
149
|
|
Metropolitan Libraries with Public
Libraries
Advocacy in the political arena in support of public
libraries and their services and programs
If libraries are so
smart, why aren't they rich? Public library advocacy in
Canada
WENDY NEWMAN (University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada)
Working
together: community-led libraries toolkit
ANNETTE DEFAVERI (Vancouver Public Library, Vancouver,
British Columbia, Canada) and ANDRE GAGNON (Regina Public
Library, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada)
Library advocacy: The
National Library Board of Singapore’s
experience
NGIAN LEK CHOH (National Library of Singapore,
Singapore)
Public libraries in the Arab countries: between
governmental agenda and popular demand
EMAD ABU EID (Dubai Public Library, Dubai, United Arab
Emirates)
La entrada de
las Bibliotecas de Barcelona en el "mapa" cultural, o de
como hacer de la necesidad, virtud
MARTA CLARI (Institut de Cultura de Barcelona, Barcelona,
Spain) and MERCÈ MUÑOZ (Secretaria Técnica, Biblioteques de
Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain)
The role of policy in advocacy: the experiences of the
State Library of Queensland in the Smart State
VICKI McDONALD (State Library of Queensland, Brisbane,
Australia)
|
|
16.00-18.00
150
|
SI – Continuing Professional
Development and Workplace Learning
Emerging technologies in libraries – continuing
professional development and workplace learning implications
and applications
Building capacity for change: new strategies for
libraries, new ways of learning – podcasts, webcasts,
collaboration software, e-learning and more
STEPHEN ABRAMS (SirsiDynix, Canada)
Using web 2.0
technologies to develop a sense of community for emerging
LIS Professoinals
BOB GLASS (Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester,
UK)
Platforms for
real-time collaborative learning for practising librarians:
using blogs, wikis and e-mailing
WUN HAN CHOW (National Library of Singapore, Singapore)
Developing new
skills and expertise to support digital scholarship and
scholarly communication
BRIAN ROSENBLUM (University Kansas, Lawrence, USA)
|
|
16.00-18.00
151
|
SI-F – Serials and Other Continuing
Resources
Navigating the world of serials: new initiatives in
management and cataloguing
Navigating the
currents of vendor-supplied cataloguing
HELEN HEINRICH (California State University, Northridge,
USA)
Sharing an
ERMS: mutualisation for an efficient management of
electronic resources metadata
EMILIE BARTHET (Couperin Consortium, Lyon, France) and
KAREEN LOUEMBÉ (University Lumière, Lyon, Fance)
Journal
aggregations and serials cataloguing: solutions for the
German Union Catalogue of Serials
ULRIKE JUNGER (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Berlin,
Germany)
The new ISSN
standard makes life easier for the serials community
ALAIN ROUCOLLE (ISSN International Centre, Paris,
France)
|
|
16.00-18.00
152
|
|
Industry Symposium
The new world of metadata
Jay Jordan, OCLC President and CEO, and Karen Calhoun,
OCLC Vice President, WorldCat and Metadata Services
Chair: Ellen Tise, IFLA President-elect
(2007-2009) |
|
16.00-18.00
153
|
|
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Access to
Learning Award (ATLA)
All delegates are invited to attend the announcement of the
annual Access to Learning Award which recognizes the innovative
efforts of a public library (or similar organization) outside
the United States to connect people to information through free
access to computers and the Internet. Now in its ninth year,
the award has honoured ground-breaking projects around the
world that are improving people’s lives through access to
technology. This year's award will be presented by William H.
Gates Sr., co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
with an open reception to follow.
Time to be announced
|
|
07.00-17.30
154
|
|
Audiovisual and Multimedia Study Tour
07.00 - 10.15 Quebec Bus Station à Montreal
11.00 - 12.00 Visit to the Grande Bibliothèque, Music and Film
section
12.00 - 13.15 Lunch break
13.30 - 14.30 Visit to the Cinémathèque québécoise
15.00 - 16.00 Visit to the Phonothèque québécoise
16.30 - 17.30 Visit to the National Film Board, CinéRobothèque
(+ one hour for Individual exploration and personalised
screenings if desired)
Delegates have free time in Montreal and may return on any
bus.
Places are limited – first come, first served.
Price TBA, please contact: Ms Élodie Gagné
|
|
Thursday 14 August 2008
08.30-10.30
155
|
SI – Libraries for Children and
Young Adults
Setting sail for new horizons: what tools do we need and
want?
|
|
08.30-10.30
156
|
SI – Cataloguing
Sharing standards: cooperation with other actors
FRBRoo:
enabling a common view of information from memory
institutions
PAT RIVA (Bibliothèques et Archives nationale du Québec,
Montréal, Canada), MARTIN DOERR (Institute of Computer
Science, Crete, Greece) and MAJA ŽUMER (University of
Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Bibliothèques et
archives: partager des normes pour faciliter l'accès au
patrimoine
FRANÇOISE LERESCHE (Bibliothèque nationale de France,
Paris, France)
Sharing
standards and expertise in the early 21st Century: moving
toward a collaborative, "cross-community" model for
metadata creation
MURTHA BACA (Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, USA)
and ELIZABTH O’KEEFE (Morgan Library and Museum, New
York, USA)
Synergy towards
shared standards for ALM: Latvian scenario
ANITA GOLDBERGA (National Library of Latvia, Riga,
Latvia)
|
|
08.30-10.30
157
|
SI-F – Law Libraries, Library and
Research Services for Parliaments, Government Libraries,
Government Information and Other Publications
The seal of approval: official and authentic law in
digital form
|
|
08.30-10.30
158
|
|
Reference and Information Services
Have we blown up the reference desk? Reference services
in virtual worlds
Gimmick
or groundbreaking? Canadian academic libraries using chat
reference in multi-user virtual environments
AMY BUCKLAND (McGill University, Montréal, Canada) and
KRISTA GODFREY (McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada)
The unopened door:
the virtual world and reference services reality in the
Caribbean
INGRID ITON (The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill,
Barbados)
The value of
turning virtual
ASMA AL-WREIKAT (Al-Balqa Applied, Al-Salt, Jordan)
The
sidewalk is our reference desk: when librarians take to the
streets
LIA FRIEDMAN (University of California, San Diego, USA) and
MELISSA MORRONE (Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn, USA)
|
|
08.30-10.30
159
|
|
Information Technology
Enabling access to the global library – small is
beautiful: distributed deployment of library services for small
and special libraries
Case study:
The Evergreen Open Source Integrated Library System; its
origins and significant implementations in the USA and
Canada
BEN HYMAN (Public Library Services Branch, Ministry of
Education, Government of British Columbia, Canada,
Victoria, BC, Canada) and JULIE WALKER (Georgia Public
Library Service, Atlanta, GA, USA)
Archon:
facilitating global access to collections in small
archives
SCOTT W. SCHWARTZ, CHRISTOPHER PROM, KYLE FOX and PAUL
SORENSEN
(University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois, USA)
Punching
above our weight: a small Scottish Library Service joins
the global community
ANTHONY BROWNE (East Renfrewshire Council, Community
Services, Scotland, UK) and CHRISTINE ROONEY-BROWNE
(Department of Computer and Information Sciences,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK)
Digital
archiving of e-journals for Special libraries
EDMUND BALNAVES and MARK CHEHADE (Prosentient Systems,
Sydney, Australia)
|
|
08.30-12.45
160
|
|
National Libraries with Statistics and
Evaluation
Ensuring quality in national libraries: performance
measures and quality evaluation supporting cultural heritage
and research
Quality indicators
for National Libraries: the new standard
ROSWITHA POLL (University and Regional Library Münster,
Münster, Germany)
Scholarly
E-reading Patterns in Australia, Finland, and the United
States: A Cross Country Comparison
CAROL TENOPIR (University of Tennessee, Tennessee, USA),
CONCEPCIÓN S. WILSON (University of New South Wales,
Australia), PERTTI VAKKARI and SANNA TALJA (University of
Tampere, Finland) and DONALD W. KING (University of North
Carolina-Chapel Hill, USA)
How much is much?
Developing and interpreting national library visitor
statistics
TORD HØIVIK (Norwegian National Library, Oslo, Norway)
Utilization of
indicators in the National Diet Library (NDL): Efforts for
activity evaluation
AKIKO HASHIZUME (National Diet Library, Tokyo, Japan)
Towards open,
multidimensional measurement of library services - case:
Finland
MARKKU LAITINEN (National Library of Finland, Helsinki,
Finland)
Les
indicateurs de qualité de service - Exemple de la
Bibliothèque nationale de France
NICOLE DA COSTA (Déléguée à la stratégie), JULIEN BARBIER
(Chargé de mission Etudes et contrôle de gestion,
Délégation à la stratégie Bibliothèque nationale de France)
and ELISABETH FREYRE (Chargée de mission Délégation aux
relations internationals, Bibliothèque nationale de France,
Paris, France - présentera le papier)
Measuring
performance through financial information: a case
study
JASMINE CAMERON (National Library of Australia, Canberra,
Australia)
|
|
10.45-12.45
161
|
SI – Copyright and other Legal
Matters
Users’ rights: making copyright work for
libraries
|
|
10.45-12.45
162
|
SI – Bibliography
National Bibliography Agencies without borders –
experiences on collaboration with other producers of
bibliographic data
Vers une
Bibliographie nationale 2.0? Collaboration avec l'usager et
usages de la collaboration
PHILIPPE CANTIÉ and ANNE-CÉLINE LAMBOTTE (Bibliothèque
nationale de France, Paris, France)
Collaboration
among producers of bibliographic data. Achievements and
planned initiatives at the Italian National
Bibliography
FEDERICA PARADISI (National Central Library of Florence,
Florence, Italy)
Canadiana, the
national bibliography for Canada, in the digital age
LIZ McKEEN (Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa, Canada)
Update on the work with IFLA Guidelines for National
Bibliographies in the Electronic Age
MAJA ŽUMER (University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana,
Slovenia)
|
|
10.45-12.45
163
|
SI-F – E-learning Discussion
Group
Putting the learner into E-learning
Do
librarians like to learn online?
DEBBI BODEN (University of Worcester, Worcester, UK) and
RUGH STUBBINGS (Pilkington Library Loughborough University,
Loughborough, UK)
The
economics of learner centered online education
BRUCE KINGMA and KATHLEEN SCHISA (Syracuse University
School of Information Studies, Syracuse, USA)
Information
Literacy by Design: An e-Learning Wiki for
Librarians
CORINNE LAVERTY (Queen’s University, Kingston,
Canada)
Putting the
learners into e-learning: an experience of Sukhothai
Thammathirat Open University (STOU), Thailand
CHUTIMA SACCHANAND (Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University,
Nonthaburyi, Thailand)
|
|
10.45-12.45
164
|
|
Knowledge Management with Information Technology
and Library and Research Services for Parliaments
Social computing tools and knowledge sharing
DAVID GURTEEN (Gurteen Knowledge Community)
Panel Discussion with the following panellists:
MARY LEE KENNEDY (Harvard Business School, Knowledge
and Library Services, USA)
MOIRA FRASER (Information and Knowledge, New Zealand
Parliament, New Zealand)
PATRICK DANOWSKI, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin,
Germany
|
|
10.45-12.45
165
|
|
Government Libraries
Conquering barriers – the politics of information:
communication, collaboration and content
Moving towards a new information specialist profile
DANIEL J. CARON (Library and Archives Canada, Gatineau,
Canada)
Learning from
the past: Mass communication and access to information in
Malawi from 1964-1994
PATRICK M. MAPULANGA (University of Malawi Libraries,
Zomba, Malawi)
The Documentation
Centre of the Catalan Data Protection Authority:
implementing information policies to obtain a successful
library service
MIGUEL NAVAS (Catalan Data Protection Authority, Barcelona,
Catalonia, Spain)
Hindering factors to
access and usage of government libraries in Kenya
NERISA KAMAR (Egerton University, Egerton, Kenya)
Ethical, legal and
political dimensions of managing personal information: a
discussion paper
ERIC DAVIES (Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK)
|
|
13.15-14.45
15.00-16.15
Friday 15 August 2008
08.30-10.50
168
|
|
SC II Audiovisual and Multimedia
|
|
169
|
|
SC II Science and Technology Libraries
|
|
170
|
|
SC II Public Libraries
|
|
171
|
|
SC II Art Libraries
|
|
172
|
|
SC II Bibliography
|
|
173
|
|
SC II Genealogy and Local History
|
|
174
|
|
SC II Preservation and Conservation
|
|
175
|
|
SC II Document Delivery and Resource Sharing
|
|
176
|
|
SC II Education and Training
|
|
177
|
|
SC II Government Information and Official Publications
|
|
178
|
|
SC II Library History
|
|
179
|
|
SC II Libraries for Children and Young Adults
|
|
180
|
|
SC II Libraries Serving Disadvantaged Persons
|
|
181
|
|
SC II Library Services to Multicultural Populations
|
|
182
|
|
SC II Asia and Oceania
|
|
183
|
|
CLM Business Meeting
|
|
11.00-13.50
184
|
|
SC II Serial Publications and other continuing
Resources
|
|
185
|
|
SC II Health and Biosciences Libraries
|
|
186
|
|
SC II Acquisition and Collection Development
|
|
187
|
|
SC II Cataloguing
|
|
188
|
|
SC II Government Libraries
|
|
189
|
|
SC II Libraries for the Blind
|
|
190
|
|
SC II Knowledge Management
|
|
191
|
|
SC II Information Technology
|
|
192
|
|
SC II Statistics and Evaluation
|
|
193
|
|
SC II Library Theory and Research
|
|
194
|
|
SC II Management and Marketing
|
|
195
|
|
SC II Social Science Libraries
|
|
196
|
|
SC II Rare Books and Manuscripts
|
|
197
|
|
SC II School Libraries and Resource Centers
|
|
198
|
|
SC II Latin America and the Caribbean
|
|
199
|
|
FAIFE Committee Meeting
|
|
14.00-16.50
200
|
|
Cancelled
|
|
201
|
|
ALP Advisory Board Meeting
|
|
202
|
|
SC II National Libraries
|
|
203
|
|
SC II Classification and Indexing
|
|
204
|
|
SC II Geography and Map Libraries
|
|
205
|
|
SC II Management of Library Associations
|
|
206
|
|
SC II Reference and Information Services
|
|
207
|
|
SC II Newspapers
|
|
208
|
|
SC II Continuing Professional Development & Workplace
Learning
|
|
209
|
|
SC II Information Literacy
|
|
210
|
|
SC II Library and Research Services for Parliaments
|
|
211
|
|
SC II Metropolitan Libraries
|
|
212
|
|
SC II Library Buildings and Equipment
|
|
213
|
|
SC II Law Libraries
|
|
214
|
|
SC II Academic and Research Libraries
|
|
215
|
|
SC II Literacy and Reading
|
|
17.00-18.30
216
|
|
CB II General Research Libraries (Div I)
|
|
217
|
|
CB II Special Libraries (Div II)
|
|
218
|
|
CB II Libraries Serving the General Public (Div III)
|
|
219
|
|
CB II Bibliographic Control (Div IV)
|
|
220
|
|
CB II Collections and Services (Div V)
|
|
221
|
|
CB II Management and Technology (Div VI)
|
|
222
|
|
CB II Education and Research (Div VII)
|
|
223
|
|
CB II Regional Activities (Div VIII)
|
|
Saturday 16 August 2008
08.30-17.00
224
|
|
Governing Board Meeting
|
|
|