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Resource description & access / developed in a collaborative process led by the Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA (JSC), representing: The American Library Association ; The Australian Committee on Cataloguing ; The British Library ; The Canadian Committee on Cataloguing ; CILIP: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals ; Deutsch Nationalbibliothek ; The Library of Congress.

Ebook Central Academic Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA, author.
American Library Association, author.
Australian Committee on Cataloguing, author.
British Library, author.
Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, author.
Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (Great Britain), author.
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, author.
Library of Congress, author.
Contributor:
Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA, author.
American Library Association, author.
Australian Committee on Cataloguing, author.
British Library, author.
Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, author.
Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (Great Britain), author.
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, author.
Library of Congress, author.
Standardized Title:
Resource description & access. 2013 revision.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Resource description & access--Handbooks, manuals, etc.
Resource description & access.
Descriptive cataloging--Standards--Handbooks, manuals, etc.
Descriptive cataloging.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (various pagings) : digital, PDF file(s).
Edition:
1st ed.
Other Title:
RDA: Resource, Description & Access, 2013 Revision
Place of Publication:
Chicago : Published by American Library Association, Canadian Library Association, CILIP, 2013.
Summary:
Designed for the digital world and an expanding universe of metadata users, RDA: Resource Description and Access is the new, unified cataloguing standard. Benefits of RDA include: a structure based on the conceptual models of FRBR (functional requirements for bibliographic data) and FRAD (functional requirements for authority data) to help catalogue users find the information they need more easily; a flexible framework for content description of digital resources that also serves the needs of libraries organizing traditional resources; a better fit with emerging technologies, enabling institutions to introduce efficiencies in data capture and storage retrieval. The online RDA Toolkit (www.rdatoolkit.org) provides a one-stop resource for evaluating and implementing RDA, and is the most effective way to interact with the new standard. It includes searchable and browseable RDA instructions; two views of RDA content, by table of contents and by element set; user-created and sharable Workflows and Mappings—tools to customize RDA to support your organization's training, internal processes, and local policies; Library of Congress Policy Statements (LCPS) and links to other relevant cataloguing resources; and the full text of AACR2 with links to RDA. This full-text print version of RDA offers a snapshot that serves as an offline access point to help solo and part-time cataloguers evaluate RDA, as well as to support training and classroom use in any size institution. An index is included. The online RDA Toolkit includes PDFs, but purchasing the print version offers a convenient, time-saving option. Keep up with our update schedule. A new print accumulation of RDA will be issued once all of the reworded chapters are complete (expectd September 2013). All changes made to RDA up to and including the 2013 RDA Update will be included. Annual print updates are expected to this accumulation beginning in mid 2014 and every year thereafter.
Contents:
Cover; Title Page and Front Matter; Table of Contents; 0: Introduction; Section 1: Recording Attributes of Manifestation & Item; 1: General Guidelines on Recording Attributes of Manifestations and Items; 2: Identifying Manifestations and Items; 3: Describing Carriers; 4: Providing Acquisition and Access Information; Section 2: Recording Attributes of Works and Expressions; 5: General Guidelines on Recording Attributes of Works and Expressions; 6: Identifying Works and Expressions; 7: Describing Content; Section 3: Recording Attributes of Person, Family and Corporate Body
8: General Guidelines on Recording Attributes of Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies9: Identifying Persons; 10: Identifying Families; 11: Identifying Corporate Bodies; Section 4: Recording Attributes of Concept, Object, Event, & Place; 12: General Guidelines on Recording Attributes of Concepts, Objects, Events, and Places; 13: Identifying Concepts; 14: Identifying Objects; 15: Identifying Events; 16: Identifying Places; Section 5: Recording Primary Relationships between Work, Expression, Manifestation, & Item; 17: General Guidelines on Recording Primary Relationships
Section 6: Recording Relationships to Persons, Families, & Corporate Bodies18: General Guidelines on Recording Relationships to Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with a Resource; 19: Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with a Work; 20: Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with an Expression; 21: Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with a Manifestation; 22: Persons, families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with an Item; 23: General Guidelines on Recording the Subject of a Work
Section 7: Recording Relationships to Concepts, Objects, Events, & PlacesSection 8: Recording Relationships between Works, Expressions, Manifestations, & Items; 24: General Guidelines on Recording Relationships between Works, Expressions, Manifestations, and Items; 25: Related Works; 26: Related Expressions; 27: Related Manifestations; 28: Related Items; Section 9: Recording Relationships between Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies; 29: General Guidelines on Recording Relationships between Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies; 30: Related Persons; 31: Related Families
32: Related Corporate BodiesSection 10: Recording Relationships between Concepts, Objects, Events, & Places; 33: General Guidelines on Recording Relationships between Concepts, Objects, Events, and Places; 34: Related Concepts; 35: Related Objects; 36: Related Events; 37: Related Places; Appendices; A: Capitalization; B: Abbreviations and Symbols; C: Initial Articles; D: Record Syntaxes for Descriptive Data; E: Record Syntaxes for Names of Persons; F: Additional Instructions on Names of Persons; G: Titles of Nobility, Terms of Rank, Etc.; H: Dates in the Christian Calendar
I: Relationship Designators: Relationships between a Resource and Persons, Families, and Corporate Bodies Associated with the Resource
Notes:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jul 2018).
ISBN:
9781856047517
1856047512
9781856047159
1856047156
OCLC:
879550793

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