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Interlibrary loan

Interlibrary loan (abbreviated ILL, and sometimes called document delivery, document supply, interlending, interlibrary services, interloan, or resource sharing) is a service that enables patrons of one library to borrow physical materials and receive electronic documents that are held by another library. The service expands library patrons' access to resources beyond their local library's holdings, serving as "an integral element of collection development" for libraries.[1]

Procedures and methods edit

 
Picking up books requested through interlibrary loan

After receiving a request from their patron, the borrowing library identifies potential lending libraries with the desired item. The lending library then delivers the item physically or electronically, and the borrowing library receives the item, delivers it to their patron, and if necessary, arranges for its return. In some cases, fees accompany interlibrary loan services. While the majority of interlibrary loan requests are now managed through semi-automated electronic systems, libraries can also submit requests by postal mail, fax, email, or telephone call, referred to as manual requests. Manual requests can be submitted in the United States through the American Library Association.

Interlibrary loan and resource sharing have a variety of systems and workflows, which vary based on a library's scale of service, regional networks, and library management systems. Processes are automated by electronic systems, including VDX, Tipasa, ILLiad,[2] Ex Libris Rapido, and OCLC Worldshare Management System.[3]

In the early 1990s, the Research Libraries Group released Ariel, a software that made communicating both photocopies and native digital articles more efficient.[4] In the early 2000s, Atlas Systems, creators of ILLiad, launched Odyssey, which allowed for direct communication of digital files between libraries, and ultimately direct sending of digital materials to library patrons.[5] OCLC created Article Exchange, a cloud-based article sharing platform that automatically deletes materials after a specified number of downloads and/or a number of days.[6]

With multiple interlibrary loan systems in use, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) developed ISO standards 10160 and 10161 to standardize terminology and define a set of communication protocols between various interlibrary loan systems, allowing for interoperability across platforms.[7][8]

Libraries can define what materials from their holdings are eligible for interlibrary loan. Many journal or database licenses specify whether a library can or cannot supply journal articles via ILL, with libraries negotiating for ILL eligibility.[9] With increasing demand for digital materials, libraries have begun exploring the legal, technical, and licensing aspects of lending and borrowing ebooks through interlibrary loan.[10]

History edit

Informal borrowing and lending between libraries has a long history, with examples in Western Europe as early as the 8th century CE.[11] In the 16th century, Nicolas Claude Fabri de Peiresc unsuccessfully attempted to establish an interlibrary loan system between the Royal Library at the Louvre Palace in Paris and the Vatican Library in Rome.[12]

 
Joseph C. Rowell

In 1876, Massachusetts librarian Samuel Swett Green published a proposal for an interlibrary loan system modeled on European examples, writing, "It would add greatly to the usefulness of our reference libraries if an agreement should be made to lend books to each other for short periods of time."[13]

In 1886, Joseph C. Rowell, librarian at the University of California, Berkeley, sought permission to begin an interlibrary loan program. In 1894, Rowell initiated U.C. Berkeley's first program of interlibrary lending with the California State Library.[14] In 1917, the American Library Association established a national code for interlibrary loan in the United States.[15]

In China, formalized interlibrary loan policies were established as early as 1924 through the Shanghai Library Constitution.[16]

In 1927, an increase in international lending and borrowing between libraries following the First World War led to the establishment of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA). IFLA would go on to publish the "International Resource Sharing and Document Delivery: Principles and Guidelines for Procedure" in 1954. These guidelines, which saw major revisions in 1978 and 2001, provided recommendations for countries to develop national policies for international resource sharing and document delivery across the globe.[17]

In Great Britain, Kate Edith Pierce became the chair of the newly formed East Midlands Regional Library Bureau in 1935. Enabled by Carnegie Trust funding, the Bureau introduced formalized "Inter-Library Lending" to the region for the first time.[18]

The Ohio State University and others in Ohio began integrating campus library systems at an early date. In the 1960s, state funds supported development of the Ohio College Library Center (now the Online Computer Library Center). OCLC has since grown into an international organization with a database of 30 million entries representing materials held in more than 10,000 libraries.

In 1994, the Reference and User Services Association (RUSA) of the ALA (America Library Association) formed an ALA Interlibrary Loan Code for the United States, which sought to establish resource sharing as a core service and to provide guidelines for libraries.[19] The RUSA section on Resource Sharing has also engaged in initiatives to expand resource sharing, including the Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative[20] and Committee.[21]

In 1997, following a flash flood that significantly damaged its physical journal holdings, Colorado State University developed RapidILL as a resource sharing solution for expedited article delivery.[22] The service has since grown to include over 300 member libraries internationally, with most member libraries concentrated in the United States. Recent expansions of the service include RapidR, which supports the lending of returnables such as physical books. In 2019, Ex Libris acquired RapidILL from CSU.[23]

Resource sharing networks edit

Libraries have established voluntary associations for resource sharing, organized on a regional or national basis, or through other affiliations such as university systems with multiple campuses, communities of libraries with related holdings and research interests, or established library consortia.

Resource sharing networks can provide an online union catalog of all items held by member libraries to facilitate interlibrary loan transactions. These networks also can provide the benefit of reduced fees, expedited turnaround times for requests, interoperable automated systems, or shared courier services for physical items.

The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) guides interlibrary loan policies internationally. Because financial transactions between libraries in different countries can at times prove difficult, IFLA developed the International Interlibrary Voucher Scheme. Libraries can exchange "IFLA vouchers" in lieu of physical cash or electronic payments for interlibrary loan requests.[24]

North America edit

In the U.S., OCLC is used by public and academic libraries. Formerly, another network RLIN (Research Libraries Information Network) was used primarily by academic libraries but merged with OCLC on October 1, 2007. The Center for Research Libraries is a major resource sharing network in North America with a buy-in membership system. Other large resource sharing networks include Libraries Very Interested in Sharing (LVIS)[25] and Amigos,[26] which offers members its Trans-Amigos Express courier network.[27]

Medical libraries in the United States participate in the National Network of Libraries of Medicine to share resources. The National Library of Medicine developed the request routing system DOCLINE for this purpose.[28]

Northeast edit

Midwest edit

  • Mid-America Association of Law Libraries (MAALL)[29]
  • OhioLINK, the system used in Ohio, where the catalogs and databases of state libraries are joined electronically.[30]

South edit

  • Florida Library Information Network
  • TexShare, the statewide resource sharing network of Texas

West edit

Africa edit

The South African Bibliographic and Information Network (SABINET) was developed in 1983 for the purposes of collection development and resource sharing across libraries in South Africa.[33]

In Ghana, the Ghana Inter-Library Lending and Document Delivery Network (GILLDDNET) pioneered resource sharing in West Africa. The network was replaced in 2004 by the Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries (CARLIGH).[34]

Central and South America edit

Consorcio Iberoamericano para la Educación en Ciencia y Tecnología (ISTEC) is a consortium and resource sharing network of 50 institutions across 17 countries in Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula, with a focus on sharing science and technology materials.[35] Many ISTEC member libraries use the ILL software Celsius, which was developed as part of the consortium initiative.[36]

Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de El Salvador (CBUES) is a resource sharing consortium of institutions on the Atlantic coast, including libraries from Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Mexico and Panama.

Europe edit

In France, the PEB interlibrary loan network services over 300 libraries using the SUPEB ILL software.[37]

In Germany, Gateway Bayern is the interlibrary loan network and tool for Bavarian libraries, including the Bavarian State Library.

Asia edit

DELNET, the Developing Library Network (formerly the Delhi Library Network), is a large resource sharing network connecting more than 7,700 institutions across India and South Asia.[38][39]

The National Diet Library of Japan serves as a resource sharing hub for Japanese-language materials domestically and internationally.

Launched in 2000, China Academic Library and Information System (CALIS) is a Beijing-based academic library consortium that facilitates interlibrary loan among research libraries in China.

Oceania edit

Australia uses Libraries Australia, and New Zealand utilizes the New Zealand Libraries' Catalogue.[40]

References edit

  1. ^ lnterlibrary Loan Committee, Management and Operation of Public Services Section, Reference and Adult Services Division, American Library Association, National lnterlibrary Loan Code for the United States, 1993. RQ 33 no. 4 (Summer 1994).
  2. ^ "ILLiad: Atlas Systems". www.atlas-sys.com. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  3. ^ "WorldShare Management Services". OCLC. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  4. ^ "Ariel".
  5. ^ "Odyssey". 25 September 2018.
  6. ^ "Article Exchange". 30 April 2020.
  7. ^ "ISO 10160:2015". ISO. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  8. ^ "ISO 10161-1:2014". ISO. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  9. ^ Croft, Janet Brennan (2005-05-31). "Interlibrary Loan and Licensing". Journal of Library Administration. 42 (3–4): 41–53. doi:10.1300/J111v42n03_03. ISSN 0193-0826. S2CID 152664274.
  10. ^ Litsey, Ryan; Ketner, Kenny (2013-11-18). "Oh the possibilities: ebook lending and interlibrary loan". Interlending & Document Supply. 41 (4): 120–121. doi:10.1108/ILDS-09-2013-0027. ISSN 0264-1615.
  11. ^ Miguel, Teresa M. (2007). "Exchanging Books in Western Europe: A Brief History of International Interlibrary Loan". International Journal of Legal Information. 35 (3): 499–513. doi:10.1017/S073112650000247X. ISSN 0731-1265. S2CID 162691373.
  12. ^ Gravit, Francis W. "A Proposed Interlibrary Loan System in the Seventeenth Century." The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy 16, no. 4 (1946): 331–34. JSTOR 4303518.
  13. ^ Green, Samuel (1876). "The Lending of Books to One Another by Libraries". Library Journal. 15 (16).
  14. ^ Nesta, Frederick (2019-01-14). "Consortia from past to future". Library Management. 40 (1/2): 12–22. doi:10.1108/LM-02-2018-0006. ISSN 0143-5124. S2CID 57969972.
  15. ^ Russell, Harold. "The Interlibrary Loan Code." ALA Bulletin 33, no. 5 (1939): 321–54. JSTOR 25690164.
  16. ^ Fang, Conghui (2007-08-21). "The history and development of interlibrary loans and document supply in China". Interlending & Document Supply. 35 (3): 145–153. doi:10.1108/02641610710780818. ISSN 0264-1615.
  17. ^ "Guidelines for Best Practice in Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery". ifla.org. 2012.
  18. ^ Kerslake, Evelyn (2014-09-25). "Pierce, Kate Edith (1873–1966), librarian". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 1 (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/70123. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  19. ^ "Interlibrary Loan Code for the United States". RUSA. June 13, 2023. Retrieved August 14, 2023.
  20. ^ "Homepage". Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  21. ^ "Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee". RUSA. 9 March 2007. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  22. ^ Breeding, Marshall (2019-08-01). "Ex Libris Acquires RapidILL". Smart Libraries Newsletter. 39 (8): 2–5.
  23. ^ "Ex Libris acquires RapidILL to help improve resource sharing among libraries | Built In Colorado". www.builtincolorado.com. Retrieved 2023-02-11.
  24. ^ "International Interlibrary Voucher Scheme". IFLA. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  25. ^ "Libraries Very Interested in Sharing". cyberdriveillinois.com.
  26. ^ "Amigos Library Services - Resource Sharing Through Technology". amigos.org.
  27. ^ "Trans-Amigos Express | Amigos Library Services". www.amigos.org. Retrieved 2020-12-16.
  28. ^ "DOCLINE® System". www.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  29. ^ "Mid-America Association of Law Libraries". Aallnet.org. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  30. ^ . ohiolink.edu. 2012. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2012. OhioLINK
  31. ^ Aggarwal, Anil (2000). Web-Based Learning and Teaching Technologies: Opportunities and Challenges. Idea Group Inc. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-878289-60-5. OCLC 43095789.
  32. ^ "Link+ Catalog". csul.iii.com. 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  33. ^ Willemse, John; United Nations. Economic and Social Council; United Nations. Economic Commission for Africa (1995-04). The South African Bibliographic and Information Network (SABINET) as a model for library and information resource sharing. UN. ECA African Regional Symposium on Telematics for Development (1995, Apr.3-7 : Addis Ababa, Ethiopia). Addis Ababa :. © UN. ECA,. hdl:10855/9068
  34. ^ Nche Che, Eugene; Njiraine, Dorothy; Makori, Elisha (2022-09-22). "Impact of Library Consortia on Resource Sharing in Academic Libraries: Evidence From the University of Nairobi Library". Library Philosophy and Practice (E-journal).
  35. ^ Marvin, Stephen G (2015-08-17). "Resource sharing in Latin America". Interlending & Document Supply. 43 (3): 138–144. doi:10.1108/ILDS-05-2015-0015. ISSN 0264-1615.
  36. ^ Schmidt, LeEtta M., "Interlibrary Lending in Mexican, Caribbean, Central American, and South American Libraries" (2014). Academic Services Faculty and Staff Publications. 172. https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/tlas_pub/172
  37. ^ Menil, Céline (1999-12-01). "Interlibrary lending in France: the situation today". Interlending & Document Supply. 27 (4): 166–170. doi:10.1108/02641619910300602. ISSN 0264-1615.
  38. ^ Kaul, Sangeeta (2010-06-01). "DELNET – the functional resource sharing library network: a success story from India". Interlending & Document Supply. 38 (2): 93–101. doi:10.1108/02641611011047169. ISSN 0264-1615.
  39. ^ "DELNET - About Us". delnet.in. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  40. ^ "Te Puna Search". National Library of New Zealand. Retrieved April 13, 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Boucher, Virginia (1997). Interlibrary Loan Practices Handbook, 2nd Edition. Chicago and London: American Library Association.
  • Frederiksen, Linda; Cummings, Joel; Cummings, Lara; Carroll, Diane (2011). "Ebooks and Interlibrary Loan: Licensed to Fill?". Journal of Interlibrary Loan, Document Delivery & Electronic Reserve. 21 (3): 117–131. doi:10.1080/1072303X.2011.585102. hdl:2376/4898. S2CID 62548634.
  • Journal of Library Administration; Volume 23, Numbers 1–2 (subscription required), 1996: A special issue devoted to ILL.
  • Levine-Clark, Michael (2011). "Whither ILL? Wither ILL: The Changing Nature of Resource Sharing for E-Books". Collaborative Librarianship. 3 (2): 71–72. doi:10.29087/2011.3.2.01. ISSN 1943-7528.
  • Newcombe, Luxmoore. Library Co-operation in the British Isles. Practical Library Handbooks series, no. 4. London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1937.
  • 2008 Document Delivery - Best Practices and Vendor Scorecard—Outsell, Inc.

External links edit

  • ALA Interlibrary Loan Form
  • SHAREit by Auto-Graphics
  • Commercial document delivery vendors
  • Interlibrary Loan Application Standards Maintenance Agency
  • OCLC Resource Sharing

interlibrary, loan, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, english, speaking, world, represent, wo. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the English speaking world and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Interlibrary loan abbreviated ILL and sometimes called document delivery document supply interlending interlibrary services interloan or resource sharing is a service that enables patrons of one library to borrow physical materials and receive electronic documents that are held by another library The service expands library patrons access to resources beyond their local library s holdings serving as an integral element of collection development for libraries 1 Contents 1 Procedures and methods 2 History 3 Resource sharing networks 3 1 North America 3 1 1 Northeast 3 1 2 Midwest 3 1 3 South 3 1 4 West 3 2 Africa 3 3 Central and South America 3 4 Europe 3 5 Asia 3 6 Oceania 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksProcedures and methods edit nbsp Picking up books requested through interlibrary loanAfter receiving a request from their patron the borrowing library identifies potential lending libraries with the desired item The lending library then delivers the item physically or electronically and the borrowing library receives the item delivers it to their patron and if necessary arranges for its return In some cases fees accompany interlibrary loan services While the majority of interlibrary loan requests are now managed through semi automated electronic systems libraries can also submit requests by postal mail fax email or telephone call referred to as manual requests Manual requests can be submitted in the United States through the American Library Association Interlibrary loan and resource sharing have a variety of systems and workflows which vary based on a library s scale of service regional networks and library management systems Processes are automated by electronic systems including VDX Tipasa ILLiad 2 Ex Libris Rapido and OCLC Worldshare Management System 3 In the early 1990s the Research Libraries Group released Ariel a software that made communicating both photocopies and native digital articles more efficient 4 In the early 2000s Atlas Systems creators of ILLiad launched Odyssey which allowed for direct communication of digital files between libraries and ultimately direct sending of digital materials to library patrons 5 OCLC created Article Exchange a cloud based article sharing platform that automatically deletes materials after a specified number of downloads and or a number of days 6 With multiple interlibrary loan systems in use the International Organization for Standardization ISO developed ISO standards 10160 and 10161 to standardize terminology and define a set of communication protocols between various interlibrary loan systems allowing for interoperability across platforms 7 8 Libraries can define what materials from their holdings are eligible for interlibrary loan Many journal or database licenses specify whether a library can or cannot supply journal articles via ILL with libraries negotiating for ILL eligibility 9 With increasing demand for digital materials libraries have begun exploring the legal technical and licensing aspects of lending and borrowing ebooks through interlibrary loan 10 History editInformal borrowing and lending between libraries has a long history with examples in Western Europe as early as the 8th century CE 11 In the 16th century Nicolas Claude Fabri de Peiresc unsuccessfully attempted to establish an interlibrary loan system between the Royal Library at the Louvre Palace in Paris and the Vatican Library in Rome 12 nbsp Joseph C RowellIn 1876 Massachusetts librarian Samuel Swett Green published a proposal for an interlibrary loan system modeled on European examples writing It would add greatly to the usefulness of our reference libraries if an agreement should be made to lend books to each other for short periods of time 13 In 1886 Joseph C Rowell librarian at the University of California Berkeley sought permission to begin an interlibrary loan program In 1894 Rowell initiated U C Berkeley s first program of interlibrary lending with the California State Library 14 In 1917 the American Library Association established a national code for interlibrary loan in the United States 15 In China formalized interlibrary loan policies were established as early as 1924 through the Shanghai Library Constitution 16 In 1927 an increase in international lending and borrowing between libraries following the First World War led to the establishment of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA IFLA would go on to publish the International Resource Sharing and Document Delivery Principles and Guidelines for Procedure in 1954 These guidelines which saw major revisions in 1978 and 2001 provided recommendations for countries to develop national policies for international resource sharing and document delivery across the globe 17 In Great Britain Kate Edith Pierce became the chair of the newly formed East Midlands Regional Library Bureau in 1935 Enabled by Carnegie Trust funding the Bureau introduced formalized Inter Library Lending to the region for the first time 18 The Ohio State University and others in Ohio began integrating campus library systems at an early date In the 1960s state funds supported development of the Ohio College Library Center now the Online Computer Library Center OCLC has since grown into an international organization with a database of 30 million entries representing materials held in more than 10 000 libraries In 1994 the Reference and User Services Association RUSA of the ALA America Library Association formed an ALA Interlibrary Loan Code for the United States which sought to establish resource sharing as a core service and to provide guidelines for libraries 19 The RUSA section on Resource Sharing has also engaged in initiatives to expand resource sharing including the Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative 20 and Committee 21 In 1997 following a flash flood that significantly damaged its physical journal holdings Colorado State University developed RapidILL as a resource sharing solution for expedited article delivery 22 The service has since grown to include over 300 member libraries internationally with most member libraries concentrated in the United States Recent expansions of the service include RapidR which supports the lending of returnables such as physical books In 2019 Ex Libris acquired RapidILL from CSU 23 Resource sharing networks editLibraries have established voluntary associations for resource sharing organized on a regional or national basis or through other affiliations such as university systems with multiple campuses communities of libraries with related holdings and research interests or established library consortia Resource sharing networks can provide an online union catalog of all items held by member libraries to facilitate interlibrary loan transactions These networks also can provide the benefit of reduced fees expedited turnaround times for requests interoperable automated systems or shared courier services for physical items The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA guides interlibrary loan policies internationally Because financial transactions between libraries in different countries can at times prove difficult IFLA developed the International Interlibrary Voucher Scheme Libraries can exchange IFLA vouchers in lieu of physical cash or electronic payments for interlibrary loan requests 24 North America edit In the U S OCLC is used by public and academic libraries Formerly another network RLIN Research Libraries Information Network was used primarily by academic libraries but merged with OCLC on October 1 2007 The Center for Research Libraries is a major resource sharing network in North America with a buy in membership system Other large resource sharing networks include Libraries Very Interested in Sharing LVIS 25 and Amigos 26 which offers members its Trans Amigos Express courier network 27 Medical libraries in the United States participate in the National Network of Libraries of Medicine to share resources The National Library of Medicine developed the request routing system DOCLINE for this purpose 28 Northeast edit Boston Library Consortium Minuteman Library Network Partnership for Academic Library Collaboration and Innovation PALCI formerly the Pennsylvania Academic Library Consortium Washington Research Library ConsortiumMidwest edit Mid America Association of Law Libraries MAALL 29 OhioLINK the system used in Ohio where the catalogs and databases of state libraries are joined electronically 30 South edit Florida Library Information Network TexShare the statewide resource sharing network of TexasWest edit Bibliographical Center for Research Washington County Cooperative Library Services Whatcom County Library System Link an interlibrary loan scheme in California and Nevada 31 32 Greater Western Library AllianceAfrica edit The South African Bibliographic and Information Network SABINET was developed in 1983 for the purposes of collection development and resource sharing across libraries in South Africa 33 In Ghana the Ghana Inter Library Lending and Document Delivery Network GILLDDNET pioneered resource sharing in West Africa The network was replaced in 2004 by the Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries CARLIGH 34 Central and South America edit Consorcio Iberoamericano para la Educacion en Ciencia y Tecnologia ISTEC is a consortium and resource sharing network of 50 institutions across 17 countries in Latin America and the Iberian Peninsula with a focus on sharing science and technology materials 35 Many ISTEC member libraries use the ILL software Celsius which was developed as part of the consortium initiative 36 Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de El Salvador CBUES is a resource sharing consortium of institutions on the Atlantic coast including libraries from Costa Rica Nicaragua Mexico and Panama Europe edit In France the PEB interlibrary loan network services over 300 libraries using the SUPEB ILL software 37 In Germany Gateway Bayern is the interlibrary loan network and tool for Bavarian libraries including the Bavarian State Library Asia edit DELNET the Developing Library Network formerly the Delhi Library Network is a large resource sharing network connecting more than 7 700 institutions across India and South Asia 38 39 The National Diet Library of Japan serves as a resource sharing hub for Japanese language materials domestically and internationally Launched in 2000 China Academic Library and Information System CALIS is a Beijing based academic library consortium that facilitates interlibrary loan among research libraries in China Oceania edit Australia uses Libraries Australia and New Zealand utilizes the New Zealand Libraries Catalogue 40 References edit lnterlibrary Loan Committee Management and Operation of Public Services Section Reference and Adult Services Division American Library Association National lnterlibrary Loan Code for the United States 1993 RQ 33 no 4 Summer 1994 ILLiad Atlas Systems www atlas sys com Retrieved 2016 03 24 WorldShare Management Services OCLC Retrieved April 13 2022 Ariel Odyssey 25 September 2018 Article Exchange 30 April 2020 ISO 10160 2015 ISO Retrieved 2023 03 12 ISO 10161 1 2014 ISO Retrieved 2023 03 12 Croft Janet Brennan 2005 05 31 Interlibrary Loan and Licensing Journal of Library Administration 42 3 4 41 53 doi 10 1300 J111v42n03 03 ISSN 0193 0826 S2CID 152664274 Litsey Ryan Ketner Kenny 2013 11 18 Oh the possibilities ebook lending and interlibrary loan Interlending amp Document Supply 41 4 120 121 doi 10 1108 ILDS 09 2013 0027 ISSN 0264 1615 Miguel Teresa M 2007 Exchanging Books in Western Europe A Brief History of International Interlibrary Loan International Journal of Legal Information 35 3 499 513 doi 10 1017 S073112650000247X ISSN 0731 1265 S2CID 162691373 Gravit Francis W A Proposed Interlibrary Loan System in the Seventeenth Century The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 16 no 4 1946 331 34 JSTOR 4303518 Green Samuel 1876 The Lending of Books to One Another by Libraries Library Journal 15 16 Nesta Frederick 2019 01 14 Consortia from past to future Library Management 40 1 2 12 22 doi 10 1108 LM 02 2018 0006 ISSN 0143 5124 S2CID 57969972 Russell Harold The Interlibrary Loan Code ALA Bulletin 33 no 5 1939 321 54 JSTOR 25690164 Fang Conghui 2007 08 21 The history and development of interlibrary loans and document supply in China Interlending amp Document Supply 35 3 145 153 doi 10 1108 02641610710780818 ISSN 0264 1615 Guidelines for Best Practice in Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery ifla org 2012 Kerslake Evelyn 2014 09 25 Pierce Kate Edith 1873 1966 librarian Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 70123 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Subscription or UK public library membership required Interlibrary Loan Code for the United States RUSA June 13 2023 Retrieved August 14 2023 Homepage Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative Retrieved April 13 2022 Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee RUSA 9 March 2007 Retrieved April 13 2022 Breeding Marshall 2019 08 01 Ex Libris Acquires RapidILL Smart Libraries Newsletter 39 8 2 5 Ex Libris acquires RapidILL to help improve resource sharing among libraries Built In Colorado www builtincolorado com Retrieved 2023 02 11 International Interlibrary Voucher Scheme IFLA Retrieved 2023 03 12 Libraries Very Interested in Sharing cyberdriveillinois com Amigos Library Services Resource Sharing Through Technology amigos org Trans Amigos Express Amigos Library Services www amigos org Retrieved 2020 12 16 DOCLINE System www nlm nih gov Retrieved 2016 03 24 Mid America Association of Law Libraries Aallnet org Retrieved 2013 12 31 What Is OhioLINK ohiolink edu 2012 Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2012 OhioLINK Aggarwal Anil 2000 Web Based Learning and Teaching Technologies Opportunities and Challenges Idea Group Inc p 21 ISBN 978 1 878289 60 5 OCLC 43095789 Link Catalog csul iii com 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2012 Willemse John United Nations Economic and Social Council United Nations Economic Commission for Africa 1995 04 The South African Bibliographic and Information Network SABINET as a model for library and information resource sharing UN ECA African Regional Symposium on Telematics for Development 1995 Apr 3 7 Addis Ababa Ethiopia Addis Ababa c UN ECA hdl 10855 9068 Nche Che Eugene Njiraine Dorothy Makori Elisha 2022 09 22 Impact of Library Consortia on Resource Sharing in Academic Libraries Evidence From the University of Nairobi Library Library Philosophy and Practice E journal Marvin Stephen G 2015 08 17 Resource sharing in Latin America Interlending amp Document Supply 43 3 138 144 doi 10 1108 ILDS 05 2015 0015 ISSN 0264 1615 Schmidt LeEtta M Interlibrary Lending in Mexican Caribbean Central American and South American Libraries 2014 Academic Services Faculty and Staff Publications 172 https digitalcommons usf edu tlas pub 172 Menil Celine 1999 12 01 Interlibrary lending in France the situation today Interlending amp Document Supply 27 4 166 170 doi 10 1108 02641619910300602 ISSN 0264 1615 Kaul Sangeeta 2010 06 01 DELNET the functional resource sharing library network a success story from India Interlending amp Document Supply 38 2 93 101 doi 10 1108 02641611011047169 ISSN 0264 1615 DELNET About Us delnet in Retrieved 2023 03 13 Te Puna Search National Library of New Zealand Retrieved April 13 2022 Further reading editBoucher Virginia 1997 Interlibrary Loan Practices Handbook 2nd Edition Chicago and London American Library Association Frederiksen Linda Cummings Joel Cummings Lara Carroll Diane 2011 Ebooks and Interlibrary Loan Licensed to Fill Journal of Interlibrary Loan Document Delivery amp Electronic Reserve 21 3 117 131 doi 10 1080 1072303X 2011 585102 hdl 2376 4898 S2CID 62548634 Journal of Library Administration Volume 23 Numbers 1 2 subscription required 1996 A special issue devoted to ILL Levine Clark Michael 2011 Whither ILL Wither ILL The Changing Nature of Resource Sharing for E Books Collaborative Librarianship 3 2 71 72 doi 10 29087 2011 3 2 01 ISSN 1943 7528 Newcombe Luxmoore Library Co operation in the British Isles Practical Library Handbooks series no 4 London G Allen amp Unwin 1937 2008 Document Delivery Best Practices and Vendor Scorecard Outsell Inc External links editALA Interlibrary Loan Form SHAREit by Auto Graphics Commercial document delivery vendors Interlibrary Loan Application Standards Maintenance Agency OCLC Resource Sharing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interlibrary loan amp oldid 1192142048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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