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  1. Wiesenmüller, H.; Horny, S.: Basiswissen RDA : eine Einführung für deutschsprachige Anwender (2017) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Mit der ersten Auflage von Basiswissen RDA lag erstmals ein deutschsprachiges Lehrbuch für das neue, internationale Katalogisierungsregelwerk RDA (Resource Description and Access) vor. Seither wurde nicht nur das Regelwerk selbst an vielen Stellen verändert, sondern auch die deutschsprachigen Anwendungsrichtlinien wurden erheblich erweitert und verfeinert - nicht zuletzt aufgrund der Praxiserfahrungen seit dem Beginn der aktiven Katalogisierung mit RDA. Die überarbeitete und erweiterte Neuauflage - präsentiert die Katalogisierungsregeln auf dem aktuellen Stand von 2017 - bietet an vielen Stellen zusätzliche Details und Erläuterungen - geht besonders auf typische Fragen und Probleme ein, die beim Katalogisieren mit RDA auftreten - wurde um Beispiele und Erklärungen für verschiedene Themenbereiche erweitert (u.a. Reproduktionen, E-Books, Sprachkurse) - behandelt auch das neue theoretische Modell IFLA LRM und die geplante Weiterentwicklung von RDA Die zweite Auflage von Basiswissen RDA ist ein unverzichtbarer Begleiter für Studierende, Auszubildende und Beschäftigte in Bibliotheken, die mit RDA arbeiten. Das Lehrbuch unterstützt nicht nur beim Anfertigen von korrekten Katalogisaten, sondern auch dabei, das neue Regelwerk zu verstehen.
    Content
    Vgl. auch: http://www.basiswissen-rda.de/. IAllgemeiner Teil; 1 Formalerschließung: Konzepte und Standards; 1.1 Ziele von Formalerschließung; 1.2 Bisherige Regelwerke; 1.3 Bibliografische Beschreibung; 1.4 Eintragungen und Verweisungen; 1.5 EDV-Katalogisierung; 1.6 Aktuelle Herausforderungen; 2 Das FRBR-Modell; 2.1 Grundlagen; 2.2 Entitäten der Gruppe 1; 2.3 Entitäten der Gruppe 2; 2.4 FRBR in der Praxis; 3 RDA: Grundlagen; 3.1 Die Entwicklung von RDA; 3.2 RDA und FRBR; 3.3 Weitere Grundprinzipien von RDA; 3.4 Das RDA Toolkit; Haupteil; 4 Manifestationen und Exemplare; 4.1 Allgemeines 4.2 Grundprinzipien beim Erfassen und Übertragen4.3 Informationsquellen; 4.4 Titel der Manifestation; 4.5 Verantwortlichkeitsangabe; 4.6 Ausgabevermerk; 4.7 Erscheinungsvermerk; 4.8 Gesamttitelangabe; 4.9 Erscheinungsweise; 4.10 Identifikator für die Manifestation; 4.11 Anmerkung zur Manifestation; 4.12 Medientyp und Datenträgertyp; 4.13 Umfang; 4.14 Weitere Merkmale von Datenträgern; 4.15 Bezugs- und Zugangsinformationen; 4.16 Merkmale auf Exemplar-Ebene; 4.17 Begleitmaterial; 4.18 Beschreibung von mehrteiligen Monografien; 4.19 Beschreibung von monografischen Reihen 4.20 Beschreibung von integrierenden Ressourcen
    5 Werke und Expressionen; 5.1 Allgemeines; 5.2 Titel des Werks; 5.3 Weitere Merkmale von Werken; 5.4 Inhaltstyp; 5.5 Weitere Merkmale von Expressionen; 5.6 Sucheinstiege für Werke und Expressionen; 5.7 Beschreibung des Inhalts; 6 Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 6.1 Allgemeines; 6.2 Moderne Personennamen; 6.3 Moderne Personen: Merkmale und Sucheinstiege; 6.4 Besondere Personengruppen; 6.5 Familien; 6.6 Namen von Körperschaften; 6.7 Namen von untergeordneten Körperschaften; 6.8 Körperschaften: Merkmale und Sucheinstiege; 6.9 Gebietskörperschaften und die ihnen untergeordneten Körperschaften6.10 Konferenzen und ähnliche Veranstaltungen; 7 Geografika; 7.1 Allgemeines; 7.2 Namen von Geografika; 8 Primärbeziehungen; 8.1 Allgemeines; 8.2 Primärbeziehungen und Datenmodelle; 8.3 Kernelemente bei den Primärbeziehungen;
    9 Beziehungen zu Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 9.1 Allgemeines; 9.2 Geistiger Schöpfer: Allgemeines; 9.3 Körperschaft als geistiger Schöpfer; 9.4 Sonstige Person, Familie oder Körperschaft, die mit einem Werk in Verbindung steht; 9.5 Mitwirkender 9.6 Geistige Schöpfer und Mitwirkende: Besondere Fälle9.7 Beziehungen auf der Manifestationsebene; 9.8 Beziehungen auf der Exemplar-Ebene; 10 Beziehungen zwischen Werken, Expressionen, Manifestationen und Exemplaren; 10.1 Allgemeines; 10.2 In Beziehung stehende Werke; 10.3 In Beziehung stehende Expressionen; 10.4 In Beziehung stehende Manifestationen; 10.5 In Beziehung stehende Exemplare; 11 Beziehungen zwischen Personen, Familien und Körperschaften; 11.1 Allgemeines; 11.2 In Beziehung stehende Personen; 11.3 In Beziehung stehende Familien; 11.4 In Beziehung stehende Körperschaften; 12 Sacherschließung in RDA
    Issue
    2., überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage.
  2. IFLA Cataloguing Principles : steps towards an International Cataloguing Code. Report from the 1st Meeting of Experts on an International Cataloguing Code, Frankfurt 2003 (2004) 0.00
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    BK
    06.04 / Ausbildung, Beruf, Organisationen <Information und Dokumentation>
    Classification
    06.04 / Ausbildung, Beruf, Organisationen <Information und Dokumentation>
    Footnote
    The book is organized into four sections: introduction and results; presentation papers; background papers; and an appendix. The introduction by Barbara Tillett serves as a summary and report of the IME ICC meeting itself. The statement of the purpose of the meeting bears reporting in full (p. 6): "The goal for this meeting was to increase the ability to share cataloguing information worldwide by promoting standards for the content of bibliographic records and authority records used in library catalogues." The next item is a report summarizing the cataloguing Code comparisons prepared prior to the conference. As a mechanism for discussion, 18 codes were compared with the Paris Principles, the extent of compliance or divergence noted and discussed by representatives from the respective rule-making bodies. During the meeting the presentation of the comparisons took up half of the first day, but for the detailed responses one must return to the IME ICC website. The published summary is very dense, and difficult to follow if one is not very familiar with the Paris Principles or the codes being compared. The main outcome of the meeting follows, this is the Statement of International Cataloguing Principles (draft, as approved Dec. 19, 2003 by IME ICC participants), accompanied by a useful Glossary. The most important eontribution of this volume is to serve as the permanent and official record of the Statement as it stands after the first IME ICC meeting. Subsequent meetings will surely suggest modifications and enhancements, but this version of the Statement needs to be widely read and commented on. To this end the website also makes available translations of the Statement into 15 European languages, and the glossary into four languages. Compared to the Paris Principles, this statement covers some familiar ground in the choice of access points and forms of names, but its overall scope is broader, explicitly referring to the role of authority records, entities in bibliographic records and relationships. It concludes with an appendix of "Objectives for the construction of cataloguing codes."
    Weitere Rez. in: ZfBB 52(2005) H.3/4, S.227-228 (K. Haller): " ... Im Mittelpunkt der Publikation steht das revidierte Statement of International Cataloguing Principles. Es wendet sich mit seinen Grundsätzen gleichermaßen an Bibliografien und Bibliothekskataloge sowie Datensammlungen in Archiven, Museen und dergleichen Einrichtungen. Terminologisch und inhaltlich geht das Statement von den Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) aus. Durch die Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records (FRANAR) werden die Normdateien und die Sacherschließung in das Statement eingebracht. Die FRBR sind ein theoretisches Modell, ein strategisches Dokument, in dem durch die Entitäten die logischen Zusammenhänge dargestellt und damit die notwendi ge Erschließungsqualität definiert wird. Es geht um klare Grundsätze für Wahl, Anzahl und Art der Suchbegriffe (access points) und deren Beziehungen. ... Insgesamt ist die Publikation sehr zu begrüßen und als Pflichtlektüre allen Verantwortlichen im Erschließungsbereich und dem in Ausbildung befindlichen Nachwuchs dringend zu empfehlen."
  3. Understanding FRBR : what it is and how it will affect our retrieval tools (2007) 0.00
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    Abstract
    An overview of the FRBR model, and how it can improve access to information through the helpful organization of metadata records. What is FRBR, and why is everyone talking about it? Is it really going to revolutionize cataloguing? And if so, what form will it take? This book is written for librarians, bibliographic systems designers, library and information science faculty and students, and anyone else who is interested in learning about the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) and how following the FRBR model can improve access to information through helpful organization of the metadata records that are surrogates for information resources. Serials, art, music, moving images, maps, and archival materials are just a few of the formats covered. Not for catalogers only!
    Footnote
    Resonanz: "Arlene Taylor and her compadres don't even try to teach you how to construct a hierarchical record. Instead, they direct their efforts toward showcasing what's possible when digital technology and traditional cataloging practice meet. This is the future of cataloging." - Library Media Connection "The emergence of this textbook is testimony to the breadth and depth of work done to date. It documents much of that work, and provides a good basic introduction to FRBR that is broadly understandable... The relational concepts within FRBR are complicated and can be challenging. This book does a good job of illuminating them in a straightforward manner. It also describes how the application of the FRBR concepts could improve our systems of bibliographic access in very specific ways... For those of us that really want or need to be able to predict the impact that FRBR will have on our work, this is an accessible explanation of the current state of the art. As such it is a real contribution to our understanding." - TechKNOW "Understanding FRBR... features chapters contributed by leading authorities in the cataloging field... It offers a basic introduction to FRBR, discussions about FRBR, FRAD (functional requirements for authority data), and RDA (resource description and access), and the issues involved in using FRBR in nontraditional library settings such as with cartographic materials and music. Both books are well illustrated and include numerous bibliographical resources.' [Reviewed in conjuntion with FRBR: A Guide for the Perplexed]." - Library Journal "Taylor and her contributors cover FRBR and introduce the reader to FRAD as well... All chapters conclude with current and useful references to further reading and more information." - Booklist "Understanding FRBR is clearly written, well illustrated (many of the concepts are clarified by very helpful diagrams), and well indexed; additionally, chapters feature extensive bibliographies, many of which provide URLs to the IFLA groups' documents. While it may seem that this book is of interest only to catalogers, the application of FRBR will change the structure of catalog and the systems used to store and display it; therefore, it is an important text for systems librarians, reference librarians, and anybody else interested in the future of the organization and display of bibliographic information." - College & Research Libraries "Understanding FRBR is a useful and timely book that brings together recent developments in FRBR and offers several assessments of it." - Technicalities "No cataloguer, bibliographic systems designer or library and information science lecturers and students should be without this book. It is a useful resource in acquiring an understanding of what FRBR is about and how it will change the way in which cataloguers will think about cataloguing in future." - The Electronic Library
  4. Weber, M.B.; Austin, F.A.: Describing electronic, digital, and other media using AACR2 and RDA : a how-to-do-it manual and cd-rom for librarians (2011) 0.00
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    LCSH
    Cataloging of electronic information resources / Handbooks, manuals, etc
    Subject
    Cataloging of electronic information resources / Handbooks, manuals, etc
  5. Oliver, C: Introducing RDA : a guide to the basics after 3R (2021) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Since Oliver's guide was first published in 2010, thousands of LIS students, records managers, and catalogers and other library professionals have relied on its clear, plainspoken explanation of RDA: Resource Description and Access as their first step towards becoming acquainted with the cataloging standard. Now, reflecting the changes to RDA after the completion of the 3R Project, Oliver brings her Special Report up to date. This essential primer concisely explains what RDA is, its basic features, and the main factors in its development describes RDA's relationship to the international standards and models that continue to influence its evolution provides an overview of the latest developments, focusing on the impact of the 3R Project, the results of aligning RDA with IFLA's Library Reference Model (LRM), and the outcomes of internationalization illustrates how information is organized in the post 3R Toolkit and explains how to navigate through this new structure; and discusses how RDA continues to enable improved resource discovery both in traditional and new applications, including the linked data environment.

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