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The five laws of library science, Ranganathan, S. R.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi [India], :Ess Ess Publications ; Published for Sarada Ranganathan Endowment for Library Science, Bangalore, India, ©2006Description: 458PISBN:
  • 8170004993
DDC classification:
  • 020 RAN
Contents:
Introduction The first law The second law and its struggle The second law and its digvijaya The second law and its implications The third law The fourth law The fifth law Appendix : Specification for a teakwood book rack
Summary: S.R. Ranganathan, considered by librarians all over the world to be the father of modern library science, proposed five laws of library science in the early 1930s. Most librarians worldwide accept them as the foundations of the philosophy of their work and service in the library. These laws are: Books are for use, Every reader his or her book, Every book its reader, Save the time of the reader, and The library is a growing organism. The Five Laws of Library Science are some of the most influential concepts in the field. Since they were published in 1931, these five laws "have remained a centerpiece of professional values ..." (Rubin 2004). These basic theories of Library Science continue to directly impact the development of this discipline and the service of all libraries. [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]. The book has been reprinted over twenty-five times to meet the demand from libraries, students of library and information science and information professionals. In 2006 when DLIST (University of Arizona) placed a test version of the contents page and first chapter of the first edition of the book on the Internet, there were some 640 downloads in twenty-four hours. The "five laws" are equally valid in the present digital / information age as they have been in the conventional library environment.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Staff Special Collection IIITDM Kurnool Staff Office 020 RAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0004833

Introduction
The first law
The second law and its struggle
The second law and its digvijaya
The second law and its implications
The third law
The fourth law
The fifth law
Appendix : Specification for a teakwood book rack

S.R. Ranganathan, considered by librarians all over the world to be the father of modern library science, proposed five laws of library science in the early 1930s. Most librarians worldwide accept them as the foundations of the philosophy of their work and service in the library. These laws are: Books are for use, Every reader his or her book, Every book its reader, Save the time of the reader, and The library is a growing organism. The Five Laws of Library Science are some of the most influential concepts in the field. Since they were published in 1931, these five laws "have remained a centerpiece of professional values ..." (Rubin 2004). These basic theories of Library Science continue to directly impact the development of this discipline and the service of all libraries. [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]. The book has been reprinted over twenty-five times to meet the demand from libraries, students of library and information science and information professionals. In 2006 when DLIST (University of Arizona) placed a test version of the contents page and first chapter of the first edition of the book on the Internet, there were some 640 downloads in twenty-four hours. The "five laws" are equally valid in the present digital / information age as they have been in the conventional library environment.

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