Functional Requirements for Authority Data – A Conceptual Model (2009)
par Glenn E. Patton (Ed.)
Series: IFLA Series on Bibliographic Control 34
Publisher: München: K.G. Saur, 2009
This book represents one portion of the extension and expansion of the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records. FRBR has been published as Nr 19 in the present Series. It contains a further analysis of attributes of various entities that are the centre of focus for authority data (persons, families, corporate bodies, works, expressions, manifestations, items, concepts, objects, events, and places), the name by which these entities are known, and the controlled access points created by cataloguers for them. The conceptual model describes the attributes of these entities and the relationships between them.
The current functional requirements were drafted by IFLA's Working Group on Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records (FRANAR) which was established in 1999. Since 2003 IFLA is sharing responsibility for FRANAR with the Conference of Directors of National Libraries (CDNL).
Functional Requirements for Authority Data – A Conceptual Model
Edited by Glenn E. Patton
München: K.G. Saur, 2009
ISBN 978-3-598-24282-3
Euro 59.95 / for USA, Canada, Mexico US$ 84.00.
For IFLA members Euro 49.95 / for USA, Canada, Mexico US$ 70.00
Additional information is available on the Cataloguing website.
Electronic versions
English
Translations
- ar – العربية – Arabic
- ca – Català – Catalan
- de - Deutsch - German (published by De Gruyter Saur as volume 41 of the IFLA Series on Bibliographic Control)
- es – Español – Spanish
- fr – Français – French
-
hr - Hrvat - Croatian (published by
Hrvatsko knjižničarsko društv) - it – Italiano – Italian (also published in print by ICCU)
- ko – 한국어 – Korean (2011 edition - Modifications and Errata for the 2009 text)
- ru – Русский – Russian
- sv – Svenska – Swedish (also available from Svensk Biblioteksförening)
- zh – 中文 – Chinese
Publisher's link: Functional Requirements for Authority Data – A Conceptual Model
Dernière mise à jour: 13 novembre 2016