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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Finding Government Resources Online: A Webometric Study Of Selective Federal Depository Library Websites, Charity C. Park Nov 2019

Finding Government Resources Online: A Webometric Study Of Selective Federal Depository Library Websites, Charity C. Park

SLIS Connecting

Over eleven hundred libraries across the United States and its territories participate in the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) by providing public access to free government resources. In the last decade, there has been a significant shift as many government publications are being published only electronically. At the same time, several older physical collections are being digitized and made available online. This shift has caused many FDLP libraries to weed their older physical government document collections and increase their electronic holdings.

This study examines how Federal depository libraries in the United States provide information about their government document collections and …


Love My Fdl Winter 2019, Central Washington University Feb 2019

Love My Fdl Winter 2019, Central Washington University

Brooks Library Events

Annual celebrarion of the Federal Depository for Government Information and Brooks Library's role. Free cookies.


Love My Fdl 2018, Central Washington University Feb 2018

Love My Fdl 2018, Central Washington University

Brooks Library Events

Annual celebrarion of the Federal Depository for Government Information and Brooks Library's role. Free cookies.


Open House: Federal Depository Library, Central Washington University Oct 2017

Open House: Federal Depository Library, Central Washington University

Brooks Library Events

Celebrarion of 55 years of the Federal Depository for Government Information. Giveaways, cake and personal tours.


Fdlp: Federal Depository Library, Ashland University Oct 2017

Fdlp: Federal Depository Library, Ashland University

Government Documents (General)

Photographs of a display of government documents at Ashland University, Ohio.


To Leave Or Not To Leave—Law Libraries And The Fdlp: A Decade Later, Is That Still The Question?, Lauren M. Collins Jul 2017

To Leave Or Not To Leave—Law Libraries And The Fdlp: A Decade Later, Is That Still The Question?, Lauren M. Collins

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

This article recounts the literature of the late 1990s and early 2000s, when some librarians, considering the changing form of government information, questioned whether the FDLP would survive in its existing form and recommended FDLP changes that would keep depository libraries engaged as the means of accessing digital government information evolved. In the later 2000s, articles and reports included comprehensive suggestions to the GPO, by and on behalf of library associations, of ways to make depository libraries stronger partners in the FDLP. Possibly in response to these calls for reform, the GPO polled depository libraries in its 2012 FDLP Forecast …


Love My Fdl Winter 2017, Central Washington University Feb 2017

Love My Fdl Winter 2017, Central Washington University

Brooks Library Events

Annual celebrarion of the Federal Depository for Government Information and Brooks Library's role. Free cookies.


Love My Fdl 2016, Central Washington University Feb 2016

Love My Fdl 2016, Central Washington University

Brooks Library Events

Annual celebrarion of the Federal Depository for Government Information and Brooks Library's role. Free cookies.


Uploading Records To The Coe Database: Easy As 1,2,3!, Sandra Mcaninch, Julene L. Jones, Mary Clark Jan 2016

Uploading Records To The Coe Database: Easy As 1,2,3!, Sandra Mcaninch, Julene L. Jones, Mary Clark

Library Presentations

As part of the Collaborative Federal Depository Program (CFDP), two pieces of software were developed to support the collection development activities of FDLP libraries in the Southeast. Most are very familiar with the ASERL Disposition Database, but some may have forgotten its quiet counter-part, the ASERL COE Database. This database is comprised of brief cataloging records that indicate holdings for all Center of Excellence (COE) libraries (and other contributing depository libraries) in the Southeast and serves as a tool for analyzing the completeness of COE collection(s) and to identify gaps.

To create a database that is as comprehensive as possible, …


Zach's News, Georgia Southern University, Zach S. Henderson Library Apr 2012

Zach's News, Georgia Southern University, Zach S. Henderson Library

University Libraries News Online (2008-2023)

  • Hot Doc: Pink Slime and the FDLP


Federal Government Documents: Dead Or Alive, Charles D. Bernholz Jan 2008

Federal Government Documents: Dead Or Alive, Charles D. Bernholz

UNL Libraries: Faculty Publications

Marcel Proust wrote “What we call our future is the shadow that our past projects in front of us.” For the federal documents universe, this is only partially correct. We should attend more to how it has felt to be documents librarians, instead of trying to reconcile the past with all those wishful digital delivery monologues. A lack of courage on our part now—or relying solely upon that handy silhouette—will jeopardize the prospect of tomorrow's federal documents and their use. That absence of daring, or the use of that crutch, will guarantee that whatever results we are handed in our …


Promoting Government Information: Outreach To Non-Depository Libraries, James T. Shaw Oct 2005

Promoting Government Information: Outreach To Non-Depository Libraries, James T. Shaw

Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations

Some of you may recall that at last year's Fall FDLP Conference, Professor Charles Seavey (University of Missouri, School of Information Science and Learning Technologies) participated in a panel presentation about the future of depository libraries, and he remarked that "any library can be a depository." In the August 2005 issue of American Libraries, Professor Seavey elaborated on his idea in an article entitled, "Documents to the People: Musings on the Past and Future of Government Information." At some risk of oversimplification, his primary point is that the era of electronic access presents a new opportunity for any library …