Index des revues

  • Index des revues

    Lectures conseillées


    1. Bulpitt, Graham : Making the most of what you've got: income génération in académie libraries », in Income Generation 1995: tbe cballenge ahead. Grimsby, Effective Marketing Ltd, 1996.

    2. -The development of the Adsetts Centre, Sheffield Hallam University », based on an interview with Graham Bulpitt, Director Learning Centre, in Deliberations on Teaching and Learning in Higber Education (http ://www. lgu. ac. uk/deliberations/lrc/sheffleld. html).

    3. The Effective Académie Library: a Framework for Evaluating tbe Performance ofUK Academic Libraries. A consultative document to the HEFCE, SHEFC, HEFCW and DENI : by the Joint Funding Councils'Ad-hoc Group on Performance Indicators for Libraries (une partie du rapport Follett), mars 1995.

    A. f oint Funding Councils'Libraries Review group : Report (Chairman, Professor Sir Brian Follett). Bristol : Higher Education Funding Council for England, 1993 (ce document peut être consulté sur http ://ukoln. bath. ac. uk/follett/foUett_report. html).

    5. Lyon, Elizabeth: Impact ofDevolved Budgeting on Library and Information Services in Universities in tbe UK. British Library, 1998.

    6. Standing Conference of National and University Libraries : Annual Library Statistics.

    7. Wilkinson, Jan : « Library fundraising techniques : a study based on a tour of North American libraries during July 1993 », in British Journal of Académie Librariansbip vol 8, n° 3, 1993, p. 178192.

    8. Wilkinson, Jan : Fundraising for university library development : the case of the London School of Economies in The New Review of Académie Librarianship vol 4, 1998, p. 133-146.

    9. Winkworth Ian : Turnover is vanity : how to raise cash in libraries in Library Association Record, 95 (5), May 1993, p. 290-291.

    10. Des informations sur les universités au Royaume-Uni peuvent être trouvées sur les sites Web du Committee of Vice Chancellors and Principals (www. cvcp. ac. uk), le Higher Education Funding Council for England (www. hefce. ac. uk) et le Department for Education and Employment (www. dfee. gov. uk).