Automation of Processes in the National Library of China: Historical Review and Future Perspective

Gu, Ben Automation of Processes in the National Library of China: Historical Review and Future Perspective. Alexandria : revista de Ciencias de la Información, 2002, vol. 14, n. 3, pp. 133-139. [Journal article (Paginated)]

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English abstract

As the largest library in China, the National Library of China (NLC) has spent more than 20 years in automating its processes, and has not yet had an integrated library management system, lagging behind libraries of developed countries and also other major libraries in China. In the 1980s and 1990s the NLC made slow progress; reasons for lack of success in the past include the inadequacy of budgets, the extent of the collections, the pursuit of processing of materials in all languages in a single system, and some management problems. In 2001, the NLC signed a contract with Ex Libris to implement its Aleph 500 system and aimed at comprehensive solutions. Aleph 500 meets most of the library’s requirements, supports Unicode and is flexible, extendible and cost-effective. The new system is expected to help the library to fully automate all of its processes, provide services better than other Chinese libraries and process all languages in a single system.

Item type: Journal article (Paginated)
Keywords: library automation system, National Library of China, workflow restructuring, history
Subjects: L. Information technology and library technology > LQ. Library automation systems.
Depositing user: Ben Gu
Date deposited: 03 Aug 2005
Last modified: 02 Oct 2014 12:01
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10760/6587

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