Cover image for Disaster management for libraries and archives
Title:
Disaster management for libraries and archives
Publication Information:
Aldershot, Hampshire : Ashgate Pub., 2003
ISBN:
9780754609179

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30000010082631 Z679.7 D57 2003 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Disaster planning might not seem a pressing concern - until disaster strikes. Recent events have reminded us that any collection or service may be at risk, and libraries and archives must have prevention and recovery measures in place. Written by academics and practitioners, drawing on firsthand experience and research worldwide, including Australia, Scandinavia and the USA, Disaster Management for Libraries and Archives reviews and explains the importance and scope of disaster management planning, and what can be done before, during and after incidents. The book begins by explaining how to develop a disaster control plan, outlining the different phases from prevention to recovery, and goes on to provide guidance on risk assessment and management methods which should underpin disaster planning. Individual chapters then focus on fire and flooding, bringing together lessons learned from recent disasters in the UK with case study material including information on prevention systems and reaction and recovery measures. A chapter on cooperative projects in the USA follows, providing examples of how collaborative partnerships and networks can be organized so that help, expertise and resources can be shared to facilitate management of disasters. The effect on people, both employees and users, must never be overlooked; this is the emphasis of the second half of the book. Research on the impact of a major library fire in Sweden forms the basis of the next chapter, which explains how the psychological impact of disasters on both staff and the local community can be managed. The following chapter describes the devastating effects on cultural institutions and their staff of war in Croatia in the early 1990s and extraordinary achievements against the odds. Ways of maintaining immediate, temporary service continuity along with planning for long-term restoration of services are exemplified by a case study of the fire at the Central Library of Norwich. Disaster Management for Libraries and Archives offers advice and insight for managers beginning to work on or reviewing disaster management within their organizations. The accounts of actual events highlight the real-life challenges faced and the effectiveness of appropriate solutions, while the guide to information sources at the end of the book signposts readers to a wealth of other useful material.


Author Notes

Graham Matthews is Professor of Information and Library Management and Director of Research, Faculty of Computing Information and English at the University of Central England in Birmingham, UK
John Feather has been Professor of Library and Information Studies at Loughborough University in the UK since 1988


Table of Contents

Disaster management for libraries and archives - an introductionGraham Matthews
The disaster control planHeather Mansell
Risk managementAlice Cannon
In case of fireBill Jackson
Flood prevention and recoveryChristine Wise
Cooperative activity in the USA, or misery loves companySheryl Davis and Kristen Kern
Psychological aspects of disaster managementMaj Klasson
The Croatian experience 1991-1995Kornelija Petr
Aftermath - service continuity and recoveryJohn Creber
A guide to sources of informationGraham Matthews
Index