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Feasibility Study of Document Delivery Services in Special Libraries in Tehran

Authors :
Assiyeh Pour- Emam- Ali
Mehrdokht Vazirpour Keshmiri
Source :
Iranian Journal of Information Processing & Management, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 59-75 (2006)
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Iranian Research Institute for Information and Technology, 2006.

Abstract

The present study investigates the feasibility of establishing document delivery services in special libraries in Tehran. Document delivery services is copyright-cleared hard copy or electronic copy supply to individuals or corporations on a non-profit or for-profit basis. A descriptive survey was conducted over 105 special libraries located within Tehran. Capabilities studied included manual and automated equipments, skilled and motivated manpower, adequate budget and etc. Investigations show that 8.42% of these libraries use web-sites for resource location. 5.43% employ bibliographies. 5.36% of users lodge their requests by phone. 2.32% of the libraries receive requests in person. 3.14% of librarians are familiar with English while 6.28% are familiar with IT. 5.27% of the libraries studied use British library Document Supply Center at Boston Spa as their primary source of Foreign Document acquisition. 5.32% of the libraries consider membership in Interlibrary Cooperative Schemes as appropriate means of meeting patrons’ information needs. Maximum request response time is 3-4 weeks. 3.28% of the requests are for books. 6.88% of the special libraries, lack staff training courses for skill acquisition in the area of document delivery. 8.29% of libraries cite lack of adequate equipment as the main document delivery obstacle. The findings demonstrate the document delivery service among special libraries in Tehran is not appropriate given the existing capabilities.

Details

Language :
Persian
ISSN :
22518223 and 22518231
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Iranian Journal of Information Processing & Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.24ca8fdafa5f4f7e8cdc188a8cb42456
Document Type :
article