Bibliographic control
“The term bibliographic control refers to the operations by which recorded
information is organized or arranged according to established standards and
thereby made readily retrievable.” (Chan, 1994, p.
3).
Bibliographic
control have been defined as “power over writings”.
Patrick Wilson (1968) expresses it this way: “There seem to me to be two quite
distinct sorts of things that deserve to be called exercises of bibliographical
control”. He terms the two forms “exploitative
control” and “descriptive control”. The first is about the conditions for the
best possible utilization of the documents (to identify the best text to a given
purpose), the other is about the pure descriptive recording of the documents.
Literature:
Anderson, D. (1974). Universal Bibliographic Control, a long-term policy, a plan
for action. Pullach, München: Saur.
Anderson, D. (1982). UBC. A survey of Universal Bibliographic Control. London: IFLA International Office for UBC. (Occasional Papers; 10).
Chan, L. M.
(1994). Cataloging and Classification: An Introduction. (2nd ed.). New
York: McGraw-Hill.
Davinson, D. (1981). Bibliographic control. 2nd ed. London: Clive Bingley.
International Congress on Universal Availability of Publications, 3-7 May 1982.
Main working document including annotated programme and summary. Paris: Unesco,
1982 (PGI-82/UAP/2).
Manual on bibliographic control. Compiled by the IFLA International Office for
UBC. General Information Programme. Paris: Unesco, 1983.
(PGI-83/WS/8).
Plassard, M.-F. (1994). The IFLA Core Programme for Universal Bibliographic
Control and International MARC (UBCIM). Recent developments and current state.
IN: Alexandria, 6(2), 145-153.
Shera, J. H. & Egan, M. E. (1951). Bibliographic organization. Papers presented
before the Fifteenth Conference ... July 24-29, 1950. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
Wilson, P. (1968). Two kinds of power. An essay on bibliographical control. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Birger Hjørland
Last edited: 26-04-2006
to be edited:
Bibliografisk kontrol betegner udvikling og vedligeholdelse af et system af
bibliografiske registreringer af dokumenter i trykte eller elektroniske
bibliografier. Formålet med bibliografisk kontrol er at sikre, at dokumenterne -
og dermed den viden/information disse rummer - kan genfindes.
Universal Bibliographic Control (UBC) blev i 1970erne formuleret som et program
under IFLA, International Federation of Library Associations & Institutions,
med det mål at styrke udviklingen af et verdensomspændende system for kontrol
med og udveksling af bibliografisk information. Formålet hermed var at gøre
bibliografisk information universelt tilgængelig, og styrke mulighederne for
udveksling og genbrug af bibliografiske data. Midlerne hertil var bl.a.
udviklingen af fælles retningslinier for description og klassifikation og
kompatibilitet mellem de formater, der anvendes. UBC er baseret på nationale
tiltag, specielt i form af nationalbibliografier, hvor de enkelte lande påtager
sig ansvaret for bibliografisk kontrol med de dokumenter, der publiceres i
landet.
UBC-programmet koordineres fra IFLA’ kontor for UBCIM Programme (Universal
Bibliographic Control and International MARC Programme). UBC-programmet hænger
nøje sammen med et andet af IFLA’s store “core programmes”: Universal
Avalability of Publications (UAP), hvis formål det er at sikre alle brugere den
videst mulige adgang til selve dokumenterne, d.v.s fremme deres tilgængelighed
ved lån eller på anden vis, nationalt såvel som internationalt.