Categories
Home
About Collection Agency
Collection Agency Classification
Nationwide Collection Agency
Site Map
 
 
   
The University of Pittsburgh Law Library is planning to reorganize and reclassify materials in its international collection

Question:
The University of Pittsburgh Law Library is planning to reorganize and reclassify materials in its international collection. Part of our collection had been classed in comparative law that now would be better off in their country code. Part of our collection is also not fully classified and now with the completion of the international schedules, we want to go back and reclassify these items. The greater problem, however, is that we have had several staff turnovers in the cataloging section of our library, thus, various points-of-view as to where in our collection items should be located, esp. in regard to items that deal with socia l policy. Some catalogers would place anything that was not general law or United States law in the international collection. Some catalogers would determine whether it was legal in nature versus some aspect of social policy and place it in our general treatise collection if it proved to be the latter. Who's right, who's wrong? I tend to agree with both. But it's time to set a precedent. So in the absence of having a librarian that specializes in foreign and comparative law here at Pitt, I am hoping to get some feedback from the rest of you. What steps would you take to complete a reclassification project? How would you organize an international collection? Would you place titles that deal exclusively with social policy yet are foreign in nature in another collection or keep everything in one collection?


Answer:
There are many different "right" ways to catalog material. Neither view is "wrong". You are not just setting precedent, but creating policy - that needs to be both consistent and flexible. Which way best serves your library users (rather than the preferences of particular cataloguers)? What is your client profile? Law students/faculty/staff - or public and undergrad students? How your patrons look up info. - how they expect to find the materials,should play an important role in this decision. How extensive is the collection of materials dealing with the social policy of various foreign countries? As a law school library, we have tended to "fudge" materials into the K schedules wherever reasonable. It has only been in recent years that the LC schedules for law of various countries/regions have been completed. My feeling is that social policy materials received today in LAW libraries are more likely to be located in K rather than general "social" classifications.



Submit your comment or answer


 

Home About Collection Agency Collection Agency Classification Nationwide Collection Agency Site Map


Privacy Policy