The information lifecycle refers to the series of stages through which information passes — from its creation to its eventual disposal or preservation. It helps organizations and institutions manage information efficiently, ensuring accessibility, accuracy, and compliance over time.
The information lifecycle describes how information is created, shared, and used to support knowledge and decision-making. It has three key stages: creation, diffusion, and utilization.
Creation is where information is produced or recorded for the first time. It includes writing reports, collecting data, or generating digital content.
Diffusion is shared or distributed to its intended users through various channels such as emails, reports, or databases. The purpose is to ensure that the right people can access and use the information.
Utilization is when the information is applied in decision-making or actions. Its value depends on how effectively it is used.
The overall scope of this book is to introduce the reader to descriptive
cataloguing, classification and subject access, which deal with the description of the
physical and the intellectual properties of library holdings. The book presents the prac
tices of bibliographic control and focuses on cataloguing and classification codes and
discusses their evolution and technical details. The different structures of library cat
alogues and the principles they are based on are also analysed.
With step-by-step real-world examples and practice material the book provides a
practical perspective on the topics discussed. Thus, although primarily a textbook, it
serves also as a workbook. This makes it ideal for students of library and information
science and for practitioners who wish to acquire or strengthen practical skills in
cataloguing and classification. Web references are included at the end of each chapter
to help the reader to locate additional information.
This book and the individual contributions contained in it are protected under copyright by the
Publisher (other than as may be noted herein).
Rights Notes:
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Details on how to seek permission, further information about the Publisher’s permissions policies and our arrangement with organizations such as the Copyright Clearance Center and the Copyright Licensing Agency, can be found at our website: www.elsevier.com/permissions
A Guide to Using the Anonymous Web in Libraries and Information Organizations
provides practical guidance to those who are interested in integrating the
anonymous web into their services. It will be particularly useful to those
seeking to promote enhanced privacy for their patrons.
The book begins by explaining, in simple terms, what the anonymous web
is, how it works, and its benefits for users. Lund and Beckstrom also explain
why they believe access to the anonymous web should be provided in library
and information organizations around the world. They describe how to provide
access, as well as educate library users on how to utilize the anonymous web and
navigate any challenges that might arise during implementation. The authors
also encourage the development of library policies that guide appropriate con
duct and filter content, where appropriate, in order to deter illegal activity.
A Guide to Using the Anonymous Web in Libraries and Information
Organizations reminds us that libraries and other information providers
have a duty to educate and support their communities, while also preserv
ing privacy. Demonstrating that the anonymous web can help them to fulfil
these obligations, this book will be essential reading for library and infor
mation professionals working around the world.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or
reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical,
or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including
photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval
system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
The right of Brady D. Lund and Matthew A. Beckstrom to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Millar’s book provides a clear, accessible overview of how archives are created, managed, preserved, and used. It explores the principles that underpin archival science—such as provenance, original order, authenticity, and appraisal—while also offering practical guidance on daily archival functions like acquisition, arrangement, description, preservation, and access.
The author emphasizes that archives are not just collections of old documents but living evidence of human activity that shape cultural identity and collective memory. She discusses the evolving role of archivists in the digital age, addressing challenges such as digital preservation, ethical responsibilities, community engagement, and the democratization of archival access.
The author has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act
1988 to be identified as author of this work.
Except as otherwise permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by
any means, with the prior permission of the publisher, or, in the case of
reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of a licence issued by The
Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those
terms should be sent to Facet Publishing, 7 Ridgmount Street, London WC1E 7AE.
Ugly Love by Colleen Hoover is a contemporary romance novel that explores the complexities of love, loss, and emotional healing.
The story centers on Tate Collins, a nursing student, and Miles Archer, a pilot haunted by his tragic past. When Tate moves in with her brother, she meets Miles, his friend and neighbor. The two share an undeniable attraction, but Miles makes it clear he isn’t interested in love—only a physical relationship. Despite his emotional distance, Tate agrees to the arrangement, believing she can keep her feelings in check.
As their relationship deepens, Tate begins to uncover the pain behind Miles’s guarded heart. The novel alternates between Tate’s present perspective and Miles’s past, gradually revealing the heartbreaking event that shaped him.
Themes of the book include emotional trauma, the fear of vulnerability, forgiveness, and the healing power of love. Hoover masterfully portrays how love can be both beautiful and devastating—how it can break a person before it mends them again.
Restricted access – available for metadata viewing only.
Rights Notes:
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information, address Atria Books Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.
Ugly Love by Colleen Hoover is a contemporary romance novel that explores the complexities of love, loss, and emotional healing.
The story centers on Tate Collins, a nursing student, and Miles Archer, a pilot haunted by his tragic past. When Tate moves in with her brother, she meets Miles, his friend and neighbor. The two share an undeniable attraction, but Miles makes it clear he isn’t interested in love—only a physical relationship. Despite his emotional distance, Tate agrees to the arrangement, believing she can keep her feelings in check.
As their relationship deepens, Tate begins to uncover the pain behind Miles’s guarded heart. The novel alternates between Tate’s present perspective and Miles’s past, gradually revealing the heartbreaking event that shaped him.
Themes of the book include emotional trauma, the fear of vulnerability, forgiveness, and the healing power of love. Hoover masterfully portrays how love can be both beautiful and devastating—how it can break a person before it mends them again.
Originally written in the late 1970s, this book was untouched for more than 35 years. McLuhan passed away before it went to press, but Logan always intended to finish it. Even though much has changed in the three decades since work on the project was halted, many of the points that McLuhan and Logan made in the era of 'electric media' are highly cogent in the era of 'digital media.' Looking at the future of the library from the perspective of McLuhan's original vision, Logan has carefully updated the text to address the impact of the Internet and other digital technologies on the library. McLuhan prophetically foreshadowed the transformative effect that computing would have on 'mass library organization' saying it would become obsolescent. It is perhaps no coincidence that a key theme of the book is that libraries must strive to create context given today's hyper information overload. The authors believe this task can be achieved by putting together a compact library of books providing an overview of human culture and scholarship. --From publisher description
Initiatives at a cross-cultural level, where libraries, museums and archives work together in creating digital libraries. This title approaches this issue: digital library user experience - a focus on current user research; digital library content - what users want and how they use it; and, strategies for institutions.
The introduction to this works states that in an information society “free flow of information is a fundamental principle for bridging the knowledge gaps between privileged and under‐privileged communities”. Open access (OA) takes that principle to scholarly communication with the vision that potential readers and users should be freely able to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search or link to, the full text of works, without financial cost or legal or technical barriers. OA can be achieved in a number of ways, the most common of which are to post work to a web site or place in an institutional, disciplinary or national digital repository, commonly called self‐archiving or to publish in an open access journal.
Open Access to Knowledge and Information opens with a summary of some of the major open access statements or declarations from around the world at the time of publication. It informs the reader of the role and responsibilities of the National Knowledge Council (NKC) of India which runs a working group on open access and open education resources. NKC has recommended and supported knowledge portals in key sectors such as water and energy. There are many similar bodies in the region supporting open access and the book strives to illustrate some of the South Asian open access initiatives currently under way. The book contains sections listing and briefly describing a selection of digital library and open courseware initiatives, national and institutional repositories, open access journals and metadata harvesting services. Each entry briefly describes the type of initiative, the implementing agency, supporting agencies, allied projects, software used, web address and a brief description of resources included. The inclusion of the web address makes one wonder whether perhaps HTML would have been a better delivery mechanism than PDF, although the PDF is handy for libraries who may wish to print out a copy for their shelves.
It is not clear to the reader if the open access initiatives reported are the total number of initiatives at the time of publication, or perhaps a selected sample. If they are a sample; on what basis they were selected? There are also some small grammatical and typesetting errors, for example page 14 finishes mid‐sentence and the sentence is not continued on page 15. In addition, the volume would benefit from an index.
That said, some very interesting open access initiatives are reported. National repositories such as The Librarians' Digital Library which collects and disseminates articles, conference papers, theses, reports and has a self‐archiving facility for registered users; and OpenMED, an initiative to encourage self‐archiving among Biomedical researchers are examples. Similarly interesting institutional repositories such as the Indian Institute of Science's Research Publications Repository and their Electronic Thesis and Dissertations Repository are described.
This volume goes beyond scholarly publishing and reports open access digital libraries that are working to provide open access to South Asian documentary heritage items such as the Archives of Indian Labour, and the Digital e‐library where the mission is to be an “Internet enabled Mobile Digital Library brought to use of common citizen for promoting literacy”. Some resources listed in the work are not truly open access, or are at least not openly accessible to this reader in Australia, such as the HEC National Digital Library in Pakistan. Some items in their collection are OA, for example the theses and dissertations, but others require a login and password. This mislabeling does not diminish the excellent work performed by this Digital library in facilitating access to peer reviewed journals, online databases and e‐books to researchers in Pakistan's university and research sector.
The book concludes with the acknowledgement that open access has far to go in South Asia (indicating that South Asia has much in common with the rest of the world in this regard). It brings to the readers' attention some of the interesting and useful open access initiatives that are underway in South Asia at the present time, thus increasing their visibility, accessibility and global recognition. Furthermore, the book practices what it preaches, being freely available online as an open access e‐book from: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0015/001585/158585e.pdf
We begin by investigating the uniqueness of an optimal mass transport problem with $N$ marginals for $N\geq 3$ by transforming it into a lower marginal optimal transportation problem. Specifically, for a family of probability spaces $\{(X_k,\mathcal{B}_{X_k},\mu_k)\}_{k=1}^N$ and a cost function $c: X_1\times\cdots\times X_N\to \mathbb{R}$, we consider \[\tag{\textbf{MKP}}\label{T1} \inf_{\lambda\in\Pi(\mu_1,\ldots,\mu_N)}\int_{\prod_{k=1}^N X_k}c\,d\lambda. \] Then, for each ordered subset $\mathcal{P} of \{1,...,N\}$, we create a new cost function $c_\mathcal{P}$ corresponding to the original cost function $c$ defined on $\prod_{k=1}^p X_{i_k}$. This new cost function $c_\mathcal{P}$ possesses many of the features of the original cost $c$, while having the property that any optimal plan $\lambda$ of \eqref{T1} restricted to $\prod_{k=1}^p X_{i_k}$ is also an optimal plan to the problem \[\label{T2} \inf_{\tau\in\Pi(\mu_{i_1},\ldots\mu_{i_p})}\int_{\prod_{k=1}^p X_{i_k}}c_{\mathcal{P}}\,d\tau. \] Our main contribution is to demonstrate that, for appropriate choices of the index set $\mathcal{P}$, one can recover the optimal plans of \eqref{T1} from \eqref{T2}. We examine situations in which the problem \eqref{T1} admits a unique solution depending on the uniqueness of the solution for the lower marginal problems of the form \eqref{T2}. This allows us to establish numerous uniqueness results for multi-marginal problems, even when the unique optimal plan is not necessarily induced by a map. To achieve this, we extensively employ disintegration theorems and the $c$-extremality notions. Furthermore, we demonstrate several new applications to illustrate the applicability of this approach. Next, we deal with the case $N=2$. For $X,Y\subseteq\mathbb{R}^{n+1}$, for Borel probability spaces $(X,\mathcal{B}_X,\mu)$ and $(Y,\mathcal{B}_Y,\nu)$ and the cost $c:X\times Y\to\mathbb{R}$, we study \[\tag{\textbf{2-MKP}}\label{T3} \inf\left\{\int_{X\times Y} c(x,y)\,d\lambda\ :\ \lambda \in\Pi(\mu,\nu) \right\}. \] We first consider an optimal transport problem with a multi-layers target space for the cost $c(x,y)=h(x-y)$ with $h$ being strictly convex and differentiable. Namely, we assume \[ X=\overline{X}\times\{\overline{x}\},\quad\text{and}\quad Y=\bigcup_{k=1}^K \left(\overline{Y}_{k}\times \{\overline{y}_k\}\right), \] We also assume that $\mu|_{\overline{X}}\ll\mathcal{L}^n$, but $\mu\perp\mathcal{L}^{n+1} $. We show that for $K\geq 2$, the solution to \eqref{T3} is unique but it concentrates on the graph of several maps. Secondly, for general closed subsets $X\subseteq \mathbb{R}^{n+1}$, we consider the case where the first marginal of the form \[ \int_X f(x)\,d\mu(x)=\int_X f(x)\alpha(x)\,d\mathcal{L}^{n+1}(x)+\int_{X_0} f(x_0)\, d S(x_0),\quad \forall f\in C_b(X), \] where $X_0\subseteq X$ is an $n$-dimensional manifold.