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Perspectives on geographic location: The Muslim West in two classification systems by Heather Lea Moulaison, PhD October 15, 2010 Conversation de la recherche - Researchconversation School of Information Studies, University of Ottawa
Bias in classification When humans intervene and begin grouping “like” things together (Olson), we expect a certain amount of bias in the end product Patterns identified (Bates, 2005) and “buckets” construed  Can be linked to sense making (Weick, 1995 cited in Lambe, 2007) Babel Instinct “when we can organise things around us differently from other people, we will do so” (Lambe, 2007, p, xvi) Few classification systems are completely independent of human interpretation  Modern biologists care about spines, but others have divided the animal kingdom in different ways based on other characteristics (blood?, etc.) Shirky (2005) claims that not all elements of the Periodic Table fit neatly
The imprecise science of location: the Local Weather phenomenon Despite seeming absolute, geography may be approached differently by different cultures “I” am in the middle of the map for most societies And  my country is the biggest, best, most important, etc. Physically pointing to one’s chest indicates “me” and not a cardinal direction, etc. Interesting exception of people cited in Deutscher (2010) The geographic buckets may be different from culture to culture Number of continents Local Weather phenomenon and travel in North Africa Fulbright in 2008-2009 Sony VAIO’s Windows 7 pop-up screen http://www.ecoles.cfwb.be/empescfkain/unioneurope07/index.html#
Ibn Rushd Thesaurus (IRT) Created to support access to theIbnRushdcollection Maintained by the library of the “Fondation” for Islamic studies and the humanities Devoted to the “Muslim West” Composed of monographs, theses, journals, articles, and other documents Is a bilingual thesaurus of descriptors and class numbers Tête-becheformat for paper thesaurus, by language Online access also by language Created and published by educated Moroccans Built according to AFNOR standards, I believe AFNOR (Association françaisede Normalisation) French version of the NISO Used by trained paraprofessionals/technicians in providing access to the collection Not librarians
Research questions What differences exist in the way that IRT and the DDC provide intellectual access to geographic locations in the Muslim West? Can a universal classification scheme like DDC offer adequate geographic access to a specialized collection focusing on a non-Western culture?
Assumptions In devising a classification scheme treating geographic location, the biases of the creators of that scheme will be present.  This is not necessarily a bad thing if it is intuitive in terms of: Users accessing system Materials being classed Western classification systems will reflect Western culture and approaches Non-Western classification systems will reflect Non-Western cultures and approaches Lee (2008) discusses ancient Chinese approaches to classification A thesaurus for a specialized collection can provide access to the materials in that collection if it is well-constructed and systematically implemented.
Assumptions, cont. Classification schemes will adopt different approaches based on their purpose  Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC)/Universal Decimal Classifiation (UDC) are “universal”  IRT is meant to class a certain collection (personal communication, 2009) Example: Edward Sapir, anthropologist, worked with Marius Barbeau at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in 1910 to devise a taxonomy of Amer-Indian peoples.  Peoples were primarily grouped by language and location Letters of the alphabet were used to indicate class Those of European descent were classed “Z”
Geography in the IRT Preliminary observations The Muslim West is the first class (of 8) designated in the geography portion of the classification system Muslim West = North Africa and Moorish Iberian Peninsula Historically, parts of Spain were Muslim before the Arabs were driven  Some of the approach to creating classes sees Western or French  groupings by continents he Americas as one continent Other groupings are by alliances, proximity, etc. (OPEC countries,  Scandinavia, etc.) Seems consistent with  a worldview of a collectivist culture
Review of the Lit: Criticism of Dewey and DDC DDC has been criticized for having a Western bias (e.g. Olson, 2001)  Results in the needless and arbitrary dispersal of national literatures in the collection Canadian literature-English 810 Canadian literature-French 840 Canadian literature-Inuit 897.12 (Olson, 2001, p. 119) Shirky (2005) reminds us that classification schemes like DDC are created to provide a physical shelf location.  In the digital world, there is no shelf. Weinberger (2007) makes fun of the pigeonholes and finds Dewey’s “original schema […] embarrassing in the modern era” (p. 48).
Use and appeal of DDC Possible reasons for use and appeal outside of Western cultures Non-Western cultures may be adequately represented in the schedules and tables number-building permits the creation of sufficiently close classification numbers  for the breadth and depth of library collections The publications collected and made available may  reflect more or less the publishing patterns evidenced in Anglo-American libraries Be few enough that close classification is not necessary. Ex: Morocco published 918 books in 1996; Egypt published 2215 books in 1995 (UNESCO) There is something fundamentally appealing about arranging the world into compartments of ten (Bates) Schemes based on DDC have been successful UDC A Classification System for Libraries of Judaica(3rd edition) by David and Daniel Elazar. Editors at DDC are constantly trying to update and include other worldviews, provide extension tables, allow for local creation of numbers, etc.
Methodology Goal: To compare the treatment of the geography of the Muslim West in the IRT and DDC Geographic terms from the IRT “N” class (Muslim West) were listed in a spreadsheet  Corresponding classification notation was indicated one letter and a series of meaningful numbers based on the level of hierarchy represented Classification notation explicitly showed the hierarchies underlying the order in the list In practice, these thesaurus terms can be used as descriptors in the database and can accompany other descriptors bringing out additional facets The Iberian Peninsula and Morocco/Western Sahara were selected for further study Iberian Peninsula = Europe (covered well in DDC?) Morocco/Western Sahara = Africa (not covered well in DDC?)
Methodology, cont. Classification notations from IRT for the selected areas were compared directly with the notation in the DDC Auxiliary Table 2  DDC auxiliary tables allow for number building in the DDC system Numbers from the tables are added to a base number taken from the schedules When in doubt, locations from the IRT were searched in the Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN) maintained by the Getty
Results: Identifying the Muslim West ‘N’ class (Muslim West) 438 notations representing Muslim West locations  Composed of 12 present-day countries and political areas:  Morocco, n=114 Spain, n=100 Algeria, n=93 Tunisia, n=57  Mauritania, n=32 Libya, n=22 Western Sahara, n=8 Portugal, n=6 Mali, n=2 Niger, n=1 Ghana, n=1 Italy (Sicily), n=1 http://www.moulaison.net/MoroccanMuslimWest.html
Locations in IRT and their frequency in DDC
Moroccan and Western Saharan locations in the DDC ,[object Object]
Primarily new (young) cities,[object Object]
Intersection of the old and the new? Mixing the past and present, former dynasties and modern locations is evident in the IRT’s taxonomy of geographic location.  The Arab Knowledge Report (2009) issues a call for Arabs to move beyond tradition and the past to “fuller reconciliation with the values of the world we belong to” (p. 17) as a way of tempering religious extremism.  Chavan, Apala Lahiri, & Gorney, Douglas. (2008). The dilemma of the shared mobile phone: Culture strain and product design in emerging economies. Interactions, 15(4), 34-39. DOI 10.1145/1374489.1374497
Question 2 Can a universal classification scheme like DDC offer adequate geographic access to a specialized collection focusing on a non-Western culture?  RESPONSE: Tentative yes.  DDC is able to represent closely 80% of the locations of interest in Morocco and over 90% of locations important to Western Islamic studies on the Iberian Peninsula without requiring the use of a thesaurus other than the TGN The assumption is that at least these percentages of library materials would be classed closely and correctly in a library using full Dewey.  The need for such close classification, even very specialized libraries can be discussed In light of publishing patterns on specialized topics. Even in a specialized collection, somewhat broad classification can be argued as a means of shortening otherwise overly-precise and long call numbers and facilitating user access.
Discussion Extent of adequacy of DDC to class places of importance in the Muslim West Surprisingly extensive Does better than the 80/20 rule Continued question of how adequate this schema is for users Anecdotal approval by students at ESI Reality of access in the developing world Problems of collection development, unmechanized libraries (3 ILSs in 2009), and limited access to technology require that shelf locations work
Limitations to the study Two systems not designed to be used in the same way  IRT terms may be used as descriptors DDC notation primarily meant to be added to base numbers to provide closer notation The bilingual nature of the Moroccan work Thesaurus is bilingual, created by and accessible to educated Moroccans (i.e. bilingual) The collection is multilingual
Summary and conclusions This research presents a comparison of terms and intellectual access for geographic location in the Muslim West through the DDC and the IRT, a specialized classification scheme.  The DDC has been criticized for being overly culturally biased, not providing equitable access to non-Western ideas Like the IRT, it has a goal of providing a physical location for materials in libraries DDC’s access, although more inclusive of European locations than African ones, appears to be sufficient for geographic access despite fundamental differences in the underlying approaches to perceiving location in space and time
Future study based on this project Related study: Uses of DDC in non-Western collections vs others Content analysis of DDC adaptations made by non-Western peoples (e.g. Egyptian efforts) Whether discovery for Muslim Arab researchers in Western libraries is hindered by Western biases in class schemes Can and should information policies in Arab countries incorporate Western distinctions between past and present when addressing the question of geography? If we accept that classification is less important in online environments, and that DDC is able to provide access across different worldviews, is it possible to build an internationally viable verbal subject access tool based on a decimal approach?  Can location be accessed via map interfaces?
Acknowledgements Travel and stay in Morocco during the 2008-2009 academic year were funded by a Fulbright Scholar grant from the US Dept. of State.  The Fondation Al Saoud in Casablanca graciously provided me with a copy of their IbnRushdthesaurus. OCLC generously donated two full copies of DDC 22nd for teaching.
Bibliography Aman, M. M. (2006). The impact of technology on libraries and collection in the Arab countries of the Middle East and North Africa. In R. N. Sharma (Ed.), The impact of technology on Asian, African, and Middle Eastern library collections. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.  ANSI/NISO Z39.19-2005 (2005). Guidelines for the construction, format, and management of monolingual controlled vocabularies. Bethesda, MD: National Information Standards Organization. Retrieved from http://www.niso.org/kst/reports/standards?step=2&gid=None&project_key=7cc9b583cb5a62e8c15d3099e0bb46bbae9cf38a Arab knowledge report 2009: Towards productive intercommunication for knowledge. (2009). Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Foundation (MBRF) and the United Nations Development Programme/Regional Bureau for Arab States (UNDP/RBAS). Retrieved from http://www.mbrfoundation.ae/English/Documents/AKR-2009-En/AKR-English.pdf Bates, M. J. (1998). Indexing and access for digital libraries and the internet: Human, database, and domain factors. Journal of the American Society for Information Science 49(13), 1185-1205. Bates, M. J. (2005). Information and knowledge: An evolutionary framework for information science. Information research, 10(4). Retrieved from http://informationr.net/ir/10-4/paper239.html Countries with UDC users. (2009). UDC Consortium. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.udcc.org/countries.htm Dewey decimal classification and relative index. (2003). Mitchell, J. S., Beall, J., Martin, G., Matthews, W. E., & New, G. R. (Eds.). 22nd ed. Dublin, OH: OCLC.
Bibliography, cont. Dewey is the world's most widely used library classification system. (2010). OCLC. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.oclc.org/ca/en/dewey/about/translations/default.htm Hodge, G. (2000). Systems of knowledge organization for digital libraries. Washington, DC: Digital Library Federation and the Council on Library and Information Resources. Retrievedfromhttp://www.diglib.org/pubs/dlf090/dlf090.pdf Ibn Rushd: Thésaurus arabe-français relatif au Maghreb et à son environnement historico-culturel andalou et africain. (1998). 1ère éd. Casablanca, Maroc: Fondation du Roi Abdul-Aziz Al Saoud pour les Etudes Islamiques et les Sciences Humaines. Partially available online: http://www.fondation.org.ma/fonda/ibnrushd/bibomw.asp?lango=2 Lambe, P. (2007).  Lee, H.-L. (2008). Origins of the main classes in the first Chinese bibliographic classification. In C. Arsenault & J. T. Tennis (Eds.), Culture and identity in knowledge organization: Proceedings of the Tenth International ISKO Conference, 5-8 August 2008, Montréal, Canada (pp. 275-281). Würzburg, Germany: ErgonVerlag. Olson, H. A. (2001). Sameness and difference: A cultural foundation of classification. Library Resources & Technical Services 45(3), 115-122. Présentation de la Fondation. (2003). Fondation du Roi Abdul Aziz Al Saoud pour les Etudes Islamiques et les Sciences Humaines. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.fondation.org.ma/fondlatin/fondatio.htm Shirky, C. (2005). Ontology is overrated: Categories, Links, and Tags. Clay Shirky's Writings About the Internet. Retrieved from http://www.shirky.com/writings/ontology_overrated.html Weinberger, D. (2007). Everything is miscellaneous: The power of the new digital disorder. New York: Times Books.

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ESIS Research Conversation Presentation

  • 1. Perspectives on geographic location: The Muslim West in two classification systems by Heather Lea Moulaison, PhD October 15, 2010 Conversation de la recherche - Researchconversation School of Information Studies, University of Ottawa
  • 2. Bias in classification When humans intervene and begin grouping “like” things together (Olson), we expect a certain amount of bias in the end product Patterns identified (Bates, 2005) and “buckets” construed Can be linked to sense making (Weick, 1995 cited in Lambe, 2007) Babel Instinct “when we can organise things around us differently from other people, we will do so” (Lambe, 2007, p, xvi) Few classification systems are completely independent of human interpretation Modern biologists care about spines, but others have divided the animal kingdom in different ways based on other characteristics (blood?, etc.) Shirky (2005) claims that not all elements of the Periodic Table fit neatly
  • 3. The imprecise science of location: the Local Weather phenomenon Despite seeming absolute, geography may be approached differently by different cultures “I” am in the middle of the map for most societies And my country is the biggest, best, most important, etc. Physically pointing to one’s chest indicates “me” and not a cardinal direction, etc. Interesting exception of people cited in Deutscher (2010) The geographic buckets may be different from culture to culture Number of continents Local Weather phenomenon and travel in North Africa Fulbright in 2008-2009 Sony VAIO’s Windows 7 pop-up screen http://www.ecoles.cfwb.be/empescfkain/unioneurope07/index.html#
  • 4. Ibn Rushd Thesaurus (IRT) Created to support access to theIbnRushdcollection Maintained by the library of the “Fondation” for Islamic studies and the humanities Devoted to the “Muslim West” Composed of monographs, theses, journals, articles, and other documents Is a bilingual thesaurus of descriptors and class numbers Tête-becheformat for paper thesaurus, by language Online access also by language Created and published by educated Moroccans Built according to AFNOR standards, I believe AFNOR (Association françaisede Normalisation) French version of the NISO Used by trained paraprofessionals/technicians in providing access to the collection Not librarians
  • 5. Research questions What differences exist in the way that IRT and the DDC provide intellectual access to geographic locations in the Muslim West? Can a universal classification scheme like DDC offer adequate geographic access to a specialized collection focusing on a non-Western culture?
  • 6. Assumptions In devising a classification scheme treating geographic location, the biases of the creators of that scheme will be present. This is not necessarily a bad thing if it is intuitive in terms of: Users accessing system Materials being classed Western classification systems will reflect Western culture and approaches Non-Western classification systems will reflect Non-Western cultures and approaches Lee (2008) discusses ancient Chinese approaches to classification A thesaurus for a specialized collection can provide access to the materials in that collection if it is well-constructed and systematically implemented.
  • 7. Assumptions, cont. Classification schemes will adopt different approaches based on their purpose Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC)/Universal Decimal Classifiation (UDC) are “universal” IRT is meant to class a certain collection (personal communication, 2009) Example: Edward Sapir, anthropologist, worked with Marius Barbeau at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in 1910 to devise a taxonomy of Amer-Indian peoples. Peoples were primarily grouped by language and location Letters of the alphabet were used to indicate class Those of European descent were classed “Z”
  • 8. Geography in the IRT Preliminary observations The Muslim West is the first class (of 8) designated in the geography portion of the classification system Muslim West = North Africa and Moorish Iberian Peninsula Historically, parts of Spain were Muslim before the Arabs were driven Some of the approach to creating classes sees Western or French groupings by continents he Americas as one continent Other groupings are by alliances, proximity, etc. (OPEC countries, Scandinavia, etc.) Seems consistent with a worldview of a collectivist culture
  • 9. Review of the Lit: Criticism of Dewey and DDC DDC has been criticized for having a Western bias (e.g. Olson, 2001) Results in the needless and arbitrary dispersal of national literatures in the collection Canadian literature-English 810 Canadian literature-French 840 Canadian literature-Inuit 897.12 (Olson, 2001, p. 119) Shirky (2005) reminds us that classification schemes like DDC are created to provide a physical shelf location. In the digital world, there is no shelf. Weinberger (2007) makes fun of the pigeonholes and finds Dewey’s “original schema […] embarrassing in the modern era” (p. 48).
  • 10. Use and appeal of DDC Possible reasons for use and appeal outside of Western cultures Non-Western cultures may be adequately represented in the schedules and tables number-building permits the creation of sufficiently close classification numbers for the breadth and depth of library collections The publications collected and made available may reflect more or less the publishing patterns evidenced in Anglo-American libraries Be few enough that close classification is not necessary. Ex: Morocco published 918 books in 1996; Egypt published 2215 books in 1995 (UNESCO) There is something fundamentally appealing about arranging the world into compartments of ten (Bates) Schemes based on DDC have been successful UDC A Classification System for Libraries of Judaica(3rd edition) by David and Daniel Elazar. Editors at DDC are constantly trying to update and include other worldviews, provide extension tables, allow for local creation of numbers, etc.
  • 11. Methodology Goal: To compare the treatment of the geography of the Muslim West in the IRT and DDC Geographic terms from the IRT “N” class (Muslim West) were listed in a spreadsheet Corresponding classification notation was indicated one letter and a series of meaningful numbers based on the level of hierarchy represented Classification notation explicitly showed the hierarchies underlying the order in the list In practice, these thesaurus terms can be used as descriptors in the database and can accompany other descriptors bringing out additional facets The Iberian Peninsula and Morocco/Western Sahara were selected for further study Iberian Peninsula = Europe (covered well in DDC?) Morocco/Western Sahara = Africa (not covered well in DDC?)
  • 12. Methodology, cont. Classification notations from IRT for the selected areas were compared directly with the notation in the DDC Auxiliary Table 2 DDC auxiliary tables allow for number building in the DDC system Numbers from the tables are added to a base number taken from the schedules When in doubt, locations from the IRT were searched in the Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN) maintained by the Getty
  • 13. Results: Identifying the Muslim West ‘N’ class (Muslim West) 438 notations representing Muslim West locations Composed of 12 present-day countries and political areas: Morocco, n=114 Spain, n=100 Algeria, n=93 Tunisia, n=57 Mauritania, n=32 Libya, n=22 Western Sahara, n=8 Portugal, n=6 Mali, n=2 Niger, n=1 Ghana, n=1 Italy (Sicily), n=1 http://www.moulaison.net/MoroccanMuslimWest.html
  • 14. Locations in IRT and their frequency in DDC
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17. Intersection of the old and the new? Mixing the past and present, former dynasties and modern locations is evident in the IRT’s taxonomy of geographic location. The Arab Knowledge Report (2009) issues a call for Arabs to move beyond tradition and the past to “fuller reconciliation with the values of the world we belong to” (p. 17) as a way of tempering religious extremism. Chavan, Apala Lahiri, & Gorney, Douglas. (2008). The dilemma of the shared mobile phone: Culture strain and product design in emerging economies. Interactions, 15(4), 34-39. DOI 10.1145/1374489.1374497
  • 18. Question 2 Can a universal classification scheme like DDC offer adequate geographic access to a specialized collection focusing on a non-Western culture? RESPONSE: Tentative yes. DDC is able to represent closely 80% of the locations of interest in Morocco and over 90% of locations important to Western Islamic studies on the Iberian Peninsula without requiring the use of a thesaurus other than the TGN The assumption is that at least these percentages of library materials would be classed closely and correctly in a library using full Dewey. The need for such close classification, even very specialized libraries can be discussed In light of publishing patterns on specialized topics. Even in a specialized collection, somewhat broad classification can be argued as a means of shortening otherwise overly-precise and long call numbers and facilitating user access.
  • 19. Discussion Extent of adequacy of DDC to class places of importance in the Muslim West Surprisingly extensive Does better than the 80/20 rule Continued question of how adequate this schema is for users Anecdotal approval by students at ESI Reality of access in the developing world Problems of collection development, unmechanized libraries (3 ILSs in 2009), and limited access to technology require that shelf locations work
  • 20. Limitations to the study Two systems not designed to be used in the same way IRT terms may be used as descriptors DDC notation primarily meant to be added to base numbers to provide closer notation The bilingual nature of the Moroccan work Thesaurus is bilingual, created by and accessible to educated Moroccans (i.e. bilingual) The collection is multilingual
  • 21. Summary and conclusions This research presents a comparison of terms and intellectual access for geographic location in the Muslim West through the DDC and the IRT, a specialized classification scheme. The DDC has been criticized for being overly culturally biased, not providing equitable access to non-Western ideas Like the IRT, it has a goal of providing a physical location for materials in libraries DDC’s access, although more inclusive of European locations than African ones, appears to be sufficient for geographic access despite fundamental differences in the underlying approaches to perceiving location in space and time
  • 22. Future study based on this project Related study: Uses of DDC in non-Western collections vs others Content analysis of DDC adaptations made by non-Western peoples (e.g. Egyptian efforts) Whether discovery for Muslim Arab researchers in Western libraries is hindered by Western biases in class schemes Can and should information policies in Arab countries incorporate Western distinctions between past and present when addressing the question of geography? If we accept that classification is less important in online environments, and that DDC is able to provide access across different worldviews, is it possible to build an internationally viable verbal subject access tool based on a decimal approach? Can location be accessed via map interfaces?
  • 23. Acknowledgements Travel and stay in Morocco during the 2008-2009 academic year were funded by a Fulbright Scholar grant from the US Dept. of State. The Fondation Al Saoud in Casablanca graciously provided me with a copy of their IbnRushdthesaurus. OCLC generously donated two full copies of DDC 22nd for teaching.
  • 24. Bibliography Aman, M. M. (2006). The impact of technology on libraries and collection in the Arab countries of the Middle East and North Africa. In R. N. Sharma (Ed.), The impact of technology on Asian, African, and Middle Eastern library collections. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. ANSI/NISO Z39.19-2005 (2005). Guidelines for the construction, format, and management of monolingual controlled vocabularies. Bethesda, MD: National Information Standards Organization. Retrieved from http://www.niso.org/kst/reports/standards?step=2&gid=None&project_key=7cc9b583cb5a62e8c15d3099e0bb46bbae9cf38a Arab knowledge report 2009: Towards productive intercommunication for knowledge. (2009). Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Foundation (MBRF) and the United Nations Development Programme/Regional Bureau for Arab States (UNDP/RBAS). Retrieved from http://www.mbrfoundation.ae/English/Documents/AKR-2009-En/AKR-English.pdf Bates, M. J. (1998). Indexing and access for digital libraries and the internet: Human, database, and domain factors. Journal of the American Society for Information Science 49(13), 1185-1205. Bates, M. J. (2005). Information and knowledge: An evolutionary framework for information science. Information research, 10(4). Retrieved from http://informationr.net/ir/10-4/paper239.html Countries with UDC users. (2009). UDC Consortium. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.udcc.org/countries.htm Dewey decimal classification and relative index. (2003). Mitchell, J. S., Beall, J., Martin, G., Matthews, W. E., & New, G. R. (Eds.). 22nd ed. Dublin, OH: OCLC.
  • 25. Bibliography, cont. Dewey is the world's most widely used library classification system. (2010). OCLC. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.oclc.org/ca/en/dewey/about/translations/default.htm Hodge, G. (2000). Systems of knowledge organization for digital libraries. Washington, DC: Digital Library Federation and the Council on Library and Information Resources. Retrievedfromhttp://www.diglib.org/pubs/dlf090/dlf090.pdf Ibn Rushd: Thésaurus arabe-français relatif au Maghreb et à son environnement historico-culturel andalou et africain. (1998). 1ère éd. Casablanca, Maroc: Fondation du Roi Abdul-Aziz Al Saoud pour les Etudes Islamiques et les Sciences Humaines. Partially available online: http://www.fondation.org.ma/fonda/ibnrushd/bibomw.asp?lango=2 Lambe, P. (2007). Lee, H.-L. (2008). Origins of the main classes in the first Chinese bibliographic classification. In C. Arsenault & J. T. Tennis (Eds.), Culture and identity in knowledge organization: Proceedings of the Tenth International ISKO Conference, 5-8 August 2008, Montréal, Canada (pp. 275-281). Würzburg, Germany: ErgonVerlag. Olson, H. A. (2001). Sameness and difference: A cultural foundation of classification. Library Resources & Technical Services 45(3), 115-122. Présentation de la Fondation. (2003). Fondation du Roi Abdul Aziz Al Saoud pour les Etudes Islamiques et les Sciences Humaines. Retrieved May 28, 2010 from http://www.fondation.org.ma/fondlatin/fondatio.htm Shirky, C. (2005). Ontology is overrated: Categories, Links, and Tags. Clay Shirky's Writings About the Internet. Retrieved from http://www.shirky.com/writings/ontology_overrated.html Weinberger, D. (2007). Everything is miscellaneous: The power of the new digital disorder. New York: Times Books.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Generally acknowledged that human beings organize (e.g. Hodge, 2000; Taylor & Joudrey, 2009, etc.)Pattern identification may be an evolutionary feature in animal brains (Bates, 2005)Organization permits retrieval at a later timeCan be linked to sense making (Weick, 1995 cited in Lambe, 2007)Both involve “ordering things, explaining deviations, simplification and explaining relationships” (Lambe, 2007, p. 26)One aspect of organization is classificationGrouping together like things based on shared characteristicsPlacing them in a “bucket”
  2. The library of the “Fondation” for Islamic studies and the humanitiesResearch library attached to a Saudi-sponsored foundation for Islamic studies and the humanities in Casablanca, MoroccoAutomated library using MARC 21Creators of Moroccan “index”Non-circulating collections Open stacksMaintains collections such as the
  3. What differences exist in the way that IRT and the DDC provide intellectual access to geographic locations in the Muslim West?Can a universal classification scheme like DDC offer adequate geographic access to a specialized collection focusing on a non-Western culture?