Journal: Library Trends

Volume 56, Issue 4

721 -- 723W. Boyd Rayward, John Unsworth. Preface
724 -- 730Lorraine J. Haricombe, Keith Russell. The Influence of F. W. Lancaster on Information Science and on Libraries: Notes on the scope of this Festschrift
731 -- 739Robert M. Hayes. A Tribute to F. Wilfrid Lancaster
740 -- 746Cesaria Lancaster, Miriam Meyer, Owen Lancaster, Jude Lancaster, Aaron Lancaster, Lakshmi Hanumanthappa, Raji Hanumanthappa. F. W. Lancaster: A Family Tribute
747 -- 762Lorraine J. Haricombe, Chandra Prabha. F. W. Lancaster as Scholar, Teacher, and Mentor: Reflections of Students
763 -- 783Tefko Saracevic. Effects of Inconsistent Relevance Judgments on Information Retrieval Test Results: A Historical Perspective
784 -- 815Péter Jacsó. h-index in Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science for F. W. Lancaster
816 -- 829Carol Tenopir. Online Systems for Information Access and Retrieval
830 -- 842Candy Schwartz. Thesauri and Facets and Tags, Oh My! A Look at Three Decades in Subject Analysis
843 -- 858Arthur P. Young. Aftermath of a Prediction: F. W. Lancaster and the Paperless Society
859 -- 887Barbara A. Rapp. Excellence in Evaluation: Early Landmarks at the National Library of Medicine
888 -- 909Martha Kyrillidou, Colleen Cook. The Evolution of Measurement and Evaluation of Libraries: A Perspective from the Association of Research Libraries
910 -- 930Keith Russell. Evidence-Based Practice and Organizational Development in Libraries
931 -- 953Beverly P. Lynch. Library Education: Its Past, Its Present, Its Future
954 -- 967Jian Qin. F. W. Lancaster: A Bibliometric Analysis
968 -- 974Leigh S. Estabrook, F. W. Lancaster. Reflections: An Interview with F. W. Lancaster

Volume 56, Issue 3

567 -- 569Wayne A. Wiegand. Alternative Print Culture: Social History and Libraries - Introduction
570 -- 600Chip Berlet. The Write Stuff: U. S. Serial Print Culture from Conservatives out to Neonazis
601 -- 617Randall K. Burkett. The Joy of Finding Periodicals "Not in Danky"
618 -- 634Daniel F. Littlefield, James W. Parins. Native American Press in Wisconsin and the Nation, 1982 to the Present
635 -- 649Christiane Harzig, Dirk Hoerder. Internationalizing Working-Class History since the 1970s: Challenges from Historiography, Archives, and the Web
650 -- 666Honor R. Sachs. Reconstructing a Life: The Archival Challenges of Women's History
667 -- 677Chris Dodge. Collecting the Wretched Refuse: Lifting a Lamp to Zines, Military Newspapers, and Wisconsinalia
678 -- 704Juris Dilevko. An Alternative Vision of Librarianship: James Danky and the Socio-cultural Politics of Collection Development
705 -- 719Christine Pawley. "Success on a Shoestring: " A Center for a Diverse Print Culture History in Modern America

Volume 56, Issue 2

299 -- 302Cindy Ingold, Susan E. Searing. Introduction: Gender Issues in Information Needs and Services
303 -- 327Kay Ann Cassell, Kathleen Weibel. Public Library Response to Women and Their Changing Roles Revisited
328 -- 343Dolores Fidishun. Women and the Public Library: Using Technology, Using the Library
344 -- 359Kären M. Mason, Tanya Zanish-Belcher. Raising the Archival Consciousness: How Women's Archives Challenge Traditional Approaches to Collecting and Use, Or, What's in a Name?
360 -- 386Eliza T. Dresang, Melissa Gross, Leslie Edmonds Holt. New Perspectives: An Analysis of Gender, Net-Generation Children, and Computers
387 -- 401Denise E. Agosto, Kimberly L. Paone, Gretchen S. Ipock. The Female-Friendly Public Library: Gender Differences in Adolescents' Uses and Perceptions of U.S. Public Libraries
402 -- 422Suzanne M. Stauffer. Developing Children's Interest in Reading
423 -- 448Melody M. Allison. Women's Health: Librarian as Social Entrepreneur
449 -- 468Cindy Ingold. Women's Studies Databases: A Critical Comparison of Three Databases for Core Journals in Women and Gender Studies
469 -- 493Susan E. Searing. Biographical Reference Works for and about Women, from the Advent of the Women's Liberation Movement to the Present: An Exploratory Analysis
494 -- 508Ellen Broidy. Gender and the Politics of Information: Reflections on Bringing the Library into the Classroom
509 -- 541Hope A. Olson. How We Construct Subjects: A Feminist Analysis
542 -- 565Bahrat Mehra, Donna Braquet. Library and Information Science Professionals as Community Action Researchers in an Academic Setting: Top Ten Directions to Further Institutional Change for People of Diverse Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities

Volume 56, Issue 1

1 -- 3Michele Valerie Cloonan, Douglas Ross Harvey. Preserving Cultural Heritage: Introduction
4 -- 25Abby Smith. Valuing Preservation
26 -- 52Heather Marie MacNeil, Bonnie Mak. Constructions of Authenticity
53 -- 65Annemaree Lloyd. Guarding Against Collective Amnesia? Making Significance Problematic: An Exploration of Issues
66 -- 79Anna Catalani. Displaying Traditional Yorùbá Religious Objects in Museums: The Western Re-Making of a Cultural Heritage
80 -- 106Paul Eggert. The Conservator's Gaze and the Nature of the Work
107 -- 132András J. Riedlmayer. Crimes of War, Crimes of Peace: Destruction of Libraries during and after the Balkan Wars of the 1990s
133 -- 147Michele Valerie Cloonan. The Paradox of Preservation
148 -- 163Kevin Bradley. Defining Digital Sustainability
164 -- 182Yola de Lusenet. Tending the Garden or Harvesting the Fields: Digital Preservation and the UNESCO Charter on the Preservation of the Digital Heritage
183 -- 197Karen F. Gracy. Moving Image Preservation and Cultural Capital
198 -- 215Ingrid Mason. Virtual Preservation: How Has Digital Culture Influenced Our Ideas about Permanence? Changing Practice in a National Legal Deposit Library
216 -- 229Howard Besser. Collaboration for Electronic Preservation
230 -- 258Paula De Stefano, Tyler O. Walters. A Natural Collaboration: Preservation for Archival Collections in ARL Libraries
259 -- 274Douglas Ross Harvey. UNESCO'S Memory of the World Programme
275 -- 287Sherelyn Ogden. Understanding, Respect, and Collaboration in Cultural Heritage Preservation: A Conservator's Developing Perspective
288 -- 297Ann Russell. Training Professionals to Preserve Digital Heritage: The School for Scanning