Proposals accepted for a monograph on Managing Grey Literature: Technical Services Perspectives


Editors: Michelle Leonard and Susan Thomas

Contact: Michelle Leonard: mleonard@uflib.ufl.edu

Abstract:

Grey literature is an important resource for scholarly research, and relevant to every discipline. This type of scholarly resource is often overlooked when conducting research, yet provides a richness of unique content, and often more current than commercial publications. This book will describe the importance of and a holistic approach to implement grey literature in library collections.

 

Target Audience:

Librarians, collection managers, preservation librarians, catalogers, library managers, acquisitions librarians


Organization:

Chapters will have a linear progression within the technical services workflow that includes collections, acquisitions, cataloging, and preservation. All chapters will include how decisions are made, policies, tools for assessing quality of grey literature, staff responsibilities, checklist(s) for workflow, case study or library example, opportunities and challenges, and further reading.


Chapter 1: History, description, types, and relevance of grey literature in library collections, including importance to researchers, scholars, and students.
Chapter 2: Collections: policies for selection/deselection, workflow for inclusion,
Chapter 3: Acquisitions: vendors, OA, collection categories in the public facing catalog
promoting grey literature in the library collections, including institutional repositories

Chapter 4: Cataloging

Chapter 5: Preservation

Chapter 6: Marketing, branding and outreach: best communication practices to support grey literature in the collections. Communication techniques for colleagues, administrators, patrons. Examples to be provided.

 

 

Contributor requirements & timeline:

A)   March 25, 2020: call for proposals via listservs; invitations to authors at mid-winter; promotion of call at mid-winter.

B)   April 30, 2020: proposals due; selection of authors; Zoom with authors for expectations, deadlines

C)   May-September: write chapters

D)   October-December: revisions

E)   End of December: revisions due

F)    January 31, 2021: finalize and send to ALCTS

G)   Each chapter will be ~8-10 pages (~4,000-5,000 words), covering the necessary components on the identified topic. 

H)   The chapter title should reflect the content within the chapter. Titles should be short and not contain a subtitle. See http://www.ala.org/tools/author-guidelines for chapter preparation, including font size and formatting.

I)     Tone: Avoid using the passive voice, past tense.

J)    Use the third person, and gender neutral pronouns. Authors must adhere to the Author Guide: http://www.ala.org/tools/author-guidelines

K)   All chapters should use the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS), 17th edition

 

Chapter topics may include:

        Overview of grey literature materials: types of grey literature, examples, uses and relevance to the academic community

        Policies for grey literature in library collections

        Inclusion of grey literature in the collections – identifying, selecting/deselecting, case study/examples

        Acquisitions: vendors, challenges to acquire grey literature, case studies/examples

        Cataloging: best practices, case studies/examples

        Preservation/IR: of institutional materials, case studies/examples

        Marketing/branding the grey literature in library collections: trends and future initiatives, case studies/examples

 

  For chapter author(s), please provide:

        A brief abstract and outline of contents identified above

        Brief biographical statement including your experience relevant to the proposed chapter. Please limit biographical information to one paragraph (500-1,000 word count) and include your current position, one previous position, and any relevant experience related to the subject of the book.

 

Diversity and Inclusion: http://www.ala.org/tools/author-guidelines
We are dedicated to acquiring and creating content that reflects the unique experiences and backgrounds of librarianship. We want readers, library staff, and patrons to feel empowered by the written word and reflected in the books and content that we publish. As you develop your manuscript, consider how diversity and inclusion touch your topic. For resources relating to equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI), see the glossary of EDI terms that the Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services maintains and see the diversity and equity and access policies in the ALA Policy Manual.

 

 

 

 

NASIG is an independent organization working to advance and transform the management of information resources. Our ultimate goal is to facilitate and improve the distribution, acquisition, and long-term accessibility of information resources in all formats and business models. Visit http://www.nasig.org/ for more information.

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