
COLLOQUIUM ON ACADEMIC LIBRARY INFORMATION RESOURCES FOR SOUTHEAST ASIAN SCHOLARSHIP (3 - 5 NOVEMBER 1997 : KUALA LUMPUR) A Report Chan Sai Noi Research and Information Management Division University of Malaya Library The two and half day Colloquium was organised 2. Information Seeking Strategies in Research by the University of Malaya Library to 3. University Presses .. commemorate the opening of the Library's New • Wing. The Colloquium received generous 4. Documentation of Current Research in sponsorship from the Toyota Foundation and the Universities Japan Foundation Asia Center. Donations were 5. Human Resource Development also received from a number of local and foreign 6. Resource Sharing : Access and Collection companies. Development The main objectives of the Colloquium were: 7. Resource Sharing: Networking and IT . 1. To establish an effective working The first session on Scholarly Publishing was a relationship among the university libraries, meeting of minds on knowledge creation, university presses and schools of library. and scholarly book trade and library acquisitions. The information science in the region. paper that set the tone for the Colloquium was 2. To facilitate and promote the free flow and presented by Professor Dr. Sham sui Amri exchange of academic information resources Baharuddin . from the National University of among the universities in the region. Malaysia. He spoke on the urgency and 3. To contribute towards the systematic importance of indigenous knowledge III development of Southeast Asian collections Knowledge Creation, the Social Science and in university libraries. Scholarship on Southeast Asia. In the same session, Mrs. Lim U Wen Lena (Select Books, Participants (inclusive of speakers and observers) Singapore) discussed some general characteristics totalling 125 came from Australia, Cambodia, of scholarly publishing in Southeast Asian England, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, universities, problems faced by scholarly Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, publishers and ways of overcoming some of these the United States and Vietnam. The major problems. Ms. Yasuko Kitano discussed the participants were from Gadjah Mada University, acquisition of Southeast Asian scholarly University of Indonesia, University of Malaya, publications as practised in the Center for University of the Philippines Diliman and Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University. Thammasat University which had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for The second session focused on the library's academic exchange and cooperation in March clientele - the scholars and researchers - to find 1996. The presence of scholars, library and out about their information seeking strategies in information professionals provided both a research. This is highly pertinent since librarians regional as well as an international perspective to need to understand the actual information needs a largely Southeast Asian regional issue on of their clients to plan and provide relevant scholarship and dissemination of scholarly services to fulfil these needs. Dr. Paul H. information. Kratoska (National University of Singapore) presented a very practical and provoking paper on A total of 30 papers were presented at the Cross-cultural studies in Southeast Asia. following 7 sessions: Professor Muhammad Kamal Hassan (Malaysian 1. Scholarly Publishing Visiting Professor in Georgetown University, 12 Kekal Abadi 16 (4) Disember 1997 u.S.A.) also presented his personal experience its effort to upgrade human resource and observations on Gathering information on develop,?lent, in particular library professional Islam and modernisation in Southeast Asia. A development. Mr. Zulfikar Zen from the common area of Southeast Asian studies -migrant Department of Library Science, University of labour - and the problems of gathering Indonesia, gave an indepth discussion on various information for this study in the Philippines was types of library science degree programmes, both shared by Dr. Maruja Milagros B. Asis undergraduate and postgraduate courses offered (University of the Philippines Diliman). in Indonesia. The Thai scenario was delivered by Ms. Supapom Patharakom of Thammasat University Presses formed the main theme of the University who described the various third session. The heads of the university presses programmes offered by the library schools in of the University of Malaya, the University of Thailand. Finally Dr. Zaiton Osman (University Indonesia, Gadjah Mada University, the of Malaya) spoke on the potential of library University of the Philippines and Thammasat exchange programmes as a tool of human University presented state of the art reports on resource development for the library profession, their presses, including both their achievements in particular the exchange and sharing of and problems. Ms. Laura L. Samson of the expertise amongst Southeast Asian librarians University of the Philippines Press painted an such as language expertise' for cataloguing and interesting picture of the dynamics of her press classification of library materials. and how sheer hard work and determination helped to rejuvenate a dying press. These presses The sixth and seventh sessions looked at were highlighted in particular because their resource sharing in libraries. Resource sharing Universities have signed a MoU with each other. through access and collection development and providing access to library collections through In the fourth session, speakers from Malaysia, document supply and exchange, supply and Thailand, the Philippines and Indonesia discussed exchange of data records were discussed in the issues on documentation of current research in sixth session. Mrs. Belen B. Angeles (University" their countries. Altogether five papers were of the Philippines Library) described the various presented. The first paper by Professor Dato' Dr. special collections held in her library while Ms. Khoo Kay Kim (University of Malaya) was Margaret Nicolson explained the origins of the intended to have a researcher relate his extensive Southeast Asian collection in the experience in obtaining information for research Brynmor Jones Library in the University of Hull. on Southeast Asia. The other four speakers Mr. Dady Rachmananta (National Library of described comprehensively how documentation Indonesia) explained the role of the National of research was done in their respective countries Library in supporting academic library resources or institutions. in Indonesia. Fellow Indonesian librarians, Ms Human Resource Development was the topic of Nawang Purwanti described the situation in the fifth session and papers were presented by Gadjah Mada University Library while Mr. three academics from the library schools and one Mohamad Aries (University of Indonesia) spoke from the chief librarian, University of Malaya. on the role of Discipline Service Centers in the Associate Professors Herminia H. Santos and provision of information and the difficulties faced Josephine C. Sison of the Institute of Library by the Central Library in coordinating the various Science, University of the Philippines, presented centers in the university set up. a joint paper entitled Collaboration in The objective of the session on Resource Postgraduate Librarianship. The first part of the sharing through networking and IT was to paper delved into the experience of the Institute invite discussion on regional networking through of Library Science, University of the Philippines the sharing of existing national databases and in implementing a regional programme in the early 1980s aimed at training library networks. National networks and databases have been developed by the MoU universities and professionals from Southeast Asia, and other institutions in their countries, but are still eventually to extend this programme to South and not fully developed, and may not be widely East Asia as well. The second section looks at accessible and known to their Moll. partners current initiatives of UNESCO in the region and because of technical limitations. Dr. Matthew 13 Ciolek (Australian National University) gave a Establishment of a Document Delivery Unit for detailed account of collaborative strategies and Southeast Asian scholarly publications efforts to provide Internet linkages to Southeast A Document Delivery Unit for Southeast Asian Asian scholarly networks. scholarly publications will be set up in each MoU The highlight of the Colloquium was the Forum institution for processing requests for Southeast on Regionalism within Globalization: the Asian materials and fulfilling such requests for Future of Southeast Asian Scholarship in texts, and articles from journals or books. which four distinguished speakers gave their Workshop on Bibliographic Standards views. While the Forum was being held, three Roundtable sessions were concurrently held The objective of the Workshop, which may be where the five MoU partners met to discuss three held in any of the MoU countries, would be to major areas of cooperation - depository system formulate basic standards for cataloguing for the publications of the five university presses, Southeast Asian materials. • resource sharing of unique collections and data ill. Resource Sharing records and librarians exchange programmes. Document supply Roundtable Decisions and Formulation of Strategies for Implementation MoU partners agree to supply upon request copies in any format of unique materials (e.g. The decisions made at the Roundtable sessions by theses, manuscripts, rare
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