Scarecrow Press
Pages: 464
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-0-8108-4259-5 • Hardback • April 2002 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
Ralph D. Winter has served as a Peace Corps volunteer librarian at Northern Illinois University, Western Illinois University, Eureka College (Illinois), and Westfield State College (Massachusetts). Currently he is a freelance writer.
Chapter 1 1 Prologue
Chapter 2 2 The National Library Collection: Mr. Justice Story
Chapter 3 3 The National Library Collection, 1876-1920
Chapter 4 4 The National Library Collection, 1920-1942
Chapter 5 5 World War II: The New Environment
Chapter 6 6 The Farmington Meeting, October 9, 1942
Chapter 7 7 Dress Rehearsal: The Library of Congress Mission and Cooperative Acquisitions Project
Chapter 8 8 The Strategic Planning Process
Chapter 9 9 Strategies
Chapter 10 10 Programming
Chapter 11 11 The Plan in Action: Subject Responsibility, 1948-1951
Chapter 12 12 Expanding the Strategic Plan: Country Responsibility, 1950-1960
Chapter 13 13 Subject Responsibility, 1951-1959: Strategic Planning
Chapter 14 14 Subject Responsibility, 1951-1959: Management Control
Chapter 15 15 Evaluating the Farmington Plan
Chapter 16 16 The Farmington Plan Survey and Conference
Chapter 17 17 Strategic Planning, 1959-1969
Chapter 18 18 Management Control, 1959-1969
Chapter 19 19 New Cooperative Programs
Chapter 20 20 The Disappearance of the Farmington Plan, 1968-1972
Chapter 21 21 "This Poor Relation": The Reputation of the Farmington Plan
A very interesting book that answers many questions about the Farmington Plan. In a time when we are again reminded that national security and intelligence are tied to materials not actively collected by North American research libraries, it would be very timely indeed for library administrators, collection developers, bibliographers, and catalogers to re-examine the lessons of the Farmington Plan.
— Portal: Libraries and the Academy
An interesting read on the Farmington Plan. Historians of librarianship will be well rewarded by his careful compilation of material; academic librarians will be startled by the similarities to cooperative attempts in our day and in the electronic environment.
— College & Research Libraries
This is a welcome addition to the growing number of works on American library collections. All chapter essays are well crafted, solidly researched, and grounded in rigorous analysis. The work would be useful in any academic library; the ideas advanced here should prove to be springboards for new research in the field.
— Information & Culture
A History of the Farmington Plan is an enormously interesting book. Its use of primary sources gives a feeling of immediacy that draws the reader along. The book is a must-read for librarians and other scholars who have an interest in the evolving history of scholarship in the United States and where libraries fit in that evolution. This is an important volume that will be used by future scholars both for its content and for its extensive bibliographic citations.
— Technicalities