All Stories

  1. Staff engagement and perceptions of video games in public libraries in Aotearoa New Zealand
  2. Mobile Libraries and Digital Inclusion: A Study from Aotearoa New Zealand
  3. Students' engagement with university library social media
  4. Community participation in digital community archives.
  5. Management strategies for using social media for marketing in academic libraries
  6. 13 The Impact of Evaluation: The Use of Evidence for Decision-Making and Service Development in Public Libraries
  7. Professional Identity as Gateway to Critical Practices: Identity Negotiations of Public Librarians in New Zealand with Implications for LIS Education and Practice
  8. The impact of digital technology and platforms on indigenous culture
  9. Digital media in children's storytimes in public libraries
  10. The placement of Library and Information Studies within universities.
  11. Preschool storytimes and early literacy in public libraries
  12. Developing Inquiring Minds: Public Library Programming for Babies in Aotearoa New Zealand
  13. Grounded theory and ethnography combined
  14. Narratives and stories that capture the library’s worth
  15. Distributed Leadership and Library Service Innovation
  16. The Big Society and English public libraries: where are we now?
  17. Virtually homosexual: Technoromanticism, demarginalisation and identity formation among homosexual males
  18. The Children Sat and Listened: Storytelling on Children's Mobile Libraries
  19. Recreational Reading in University Libraries in The United Kingdom
  20. Public libraries in the recession: the librarian's axiom
  21. The Importance of political and strategic skills for UK library leaders
  22. Edward Dudley: An appreciation
  23. Editor’s Note
  24. Editorial
  25. Engaging with community engagement: public libraries and citizen involvement
  26. Libraries and Cultural Capital
  27. Searching for a research agenda for the Library and Information Science community
  28. Public Libraries in England: A valuable public service or a service in distress?
  29. Learner support in UK public libraries
  30. Editorial
  31. Changing public library service delivery to rural communities in England
  32. Exploring the attitudes of public library staff to the Internet using the TAM
  33. The power of influence: what affects public library staff's attitudes to the Internet?
  34. Editorial
  35. Information and reference services in the digital library
  36. Research-Led Teaching in Librarianship and Information Studies
  37. The People’s Network and Cultural Change
  38. Books to rural users: public library provision for remote communities
  39. Women and the Information Society: barriers and participation
  40. ICT and change in UK public libraries: does training matter?
  41. Editorial. Online communication: for good or evil?
  42. Editorial: Putting research into practice
  43. Editorial: Public libraries and reading
  44. Higher education libraries and SENDA
  45. Editorial: The future of undergraduate librarianship degrees
  46. Information Poverty or Overload?
  47. English public library services and the Disability Discrimination Act
  48. Internet perception and use: a gender perspective
  49. Setting the Standard for Comprehensive and Efficient Public Library Services
  50. Information: Commodity or Social Good
  51. Motivation Management20013Sheila Ritchie and Peter Martin. Motivation Management. Aldershot: Gower 1999. 320 pp., ISBN: ISBN 0566081024 £55
  52. Influencing Eve and Jackie: A comparative analysis of feminist influences in girls’ magazines and comics of the first and second wave feminist periods
  53. Management – How to Do it20002John Payne and Shirley Payne. Management – How to Do it. Gower, 1999. 256 pages, ISBN: ISBN: 0 566 08094 X £18.99
  54. Homework clubs in public libraries
  55. Split personalities: The job satisfaction of learning centre support staff at a multi‐site university
  56. Performance appraisal in public libraries
  57. Scottish/National Vocational Qualifications: views on the ground
  58. Training the flexible library and information workforce: problems and practical solutions
  59. Joking, being aggressive and shutting people up: the use of focus groups in LIS research
  60. Current practice in training flexible information workers
  61. Training and Flexible Workers in the New Information and Library Environment
  62. Local government reorganisation and the management of public library staff
  63. “An Inappropriate Appetite for Training”? Equal Opportunities and Training for Flexible Information Workers
  64. Focus groups: their use in LIS research data collection
  65. Part of the job: violence in public libraries
  66. Flexible information workers: training and equal opportunities
  67. Flexible working in libraries: profit and potential pitfalls
  68. Investing in public library people
  69. All change? Public library management strategies for the 1990s
  70. Distributed Leadership and Library Service Innovation
  71. WOMEN AND THE INFORMATION SOCIETY BARRIERS AND PARTICIPATION
  72. GENDER AND EQUITY IN THE LIBRARY AND INFORMATION STUDIES CURRICULUM BUILDING CONFIDENCE FOR THE FUTURE
  73. CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL· DEVELOPMENT AND FLEXIBLE INFORMATION WORKERS: PROBLEMS AND OPPORTUNITIES