CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The German Library Statistics (DBS) is the national statistics of the German library system and contains statistical key figures. It includes public libraries, scientific libraries, as well as specialized scientific libraries. More information can be found at DBS. This dataset contains the following information about public libraries in Bavaria 2010: Media as a whole - inventory, media as a whole - rentals, media in open access or 'direct access' as a whole. - Inventory, media in free-hand position or in 'direct access' in total. - Borrowings, stock of magazines - Print media and non-book media in physical units, total print media - Stock, total print media - Borrowings, ... of which: Non-fiction - Stock, ... of which: Non-fiction - loans, ... of which: Fiction - Stock, ... of which: Fiction - borrowings, ... of which: Children's and Youth Literature - Collection, ... of which: Children's and young people's literature - borrowings, ... of which: Journals in print - inventory, ... of which: Journals in print - Borrowings, non-book media as a whole - Stock, non-book media as a whole - Borrowings, ... of which: Analogue and digital media - inventory, ... of which: Analogue and digital media - borrowings, ... of which: Other non-book media (e.g. games) - inventory, ... of which: Other non-book media (e.g. games) - rentals, virtual inventory - inventory, virtual inventory - rentals, access to media units, departure to media units, databases, current newspaper and magazine subscriptions in print form, current newspaper and magazine subscriptions in electronic form, exchange/block stocks received, exchange/block stocks lent, orders in taking (passive) loan traffic, orders in giving (active) loan traffic, document deliveries to the end user
Dataset resulting from media content analysis on how the adoption of a multi-platform outlook is affecting the diversity of content output in the UK. A comparison was made how the composition of media output has changed over time during the period 2013-2015, and how strategies have moved towards multi-platform delivery. Data for content analysis was collected from eleven case study media organisations across the newspaper and magazine publishing and broadcasting sectors. Media platforms include print, online and mobile. Data were gathered from publicly available online websites, broadcasting schedules, newspaper and magazine printed and digital editions.
Coding and analysis was carried out of a sample of content outputs for selected case studies in the broadcasting, newspaper and magazine sectors in spring 2013, 2014 and 2015. The resulting dataset provides a basis for preliminary comparative analysis, across organisations, sectors of the media and time, of how the composition of media content outputs has changed while suppliers of media have migrated towards multi-platform delivery.
This project considers aspects of transformations taking place in the media industry as a result of digital convergence and growth of the internet. The study ran from July 2012 to 2015 and was led by PI Professor Gillian Doyle with a team comprising Co-I Professor Philip Schlesinger and RA Dr Katherine Champion at CCPR, University of Glasgow. It set out to analyse the recent migration of media businesses towards diversified digital distribution and multi-platform growth strategies and the impact this has had on economic efficiency, the organisation of production, and on the nature and diversity of content. What challenges are faced by public policy?
Using key a multiple case study approach, the investigation covered the following:
economic opportunities and advantages created by multi-platform expansion
the role of convergent digital technologies and the internet in encouraging such strategies
the impact of multi-platform on production of media content and on diversity and pluralism
implications for public policy and regulation.
This is a listing of Indigenous periodicals (newspapers, newsletters, magazines, and journals), arranged by title. It primarily includes material published in Canada, but also encompasses some titles from American states bordering Canada. The scope aims to include publications by Indigenous communities and organizations, and to exclude known material produced by governments and non-Indigenous organizations. The inventory represents known publications across Canada based on sources from OCLC, and known listings of these publications within the community. All items in the list are held in Canadian libraries, archives, and museums. The accuracy of these lists is unknown and not validated by Indigenous communities to our knowledge. The source data lists reflect the work of academic institutions describing the materials in their holdings. Indigenous communities may be listed as the primary creator, but this can only be validated upon investigation with the source materials and with Indigenous communities. The intent is threefold: to promote a list of Indigenous publications, and where they can be consulted or searched; to track digitization work by Canadian institutions and groups and facilitate digitization efforts in collaboration with relevant Indigenous communities; and to enable easy additions to, and corrections of, the list. It is important to note that this is not a search tool for the contents of the publications, but merely an inventory of titles, along with locations of the print and digital holdings. Data headings are Title, Title Family, In Scope, Status, Source of Information, Publisher/Issuing Org., Place of Publication, Province/State, Country, Print Run/Holdings, Notes, ISSN, OCLC Identifiers, Online, Format, Digitization Status, Canadian Repository Holdings, Language. For definitions of the headings, see The Dataset Document Workbook. This list stems from efforts by the Indigenous Historical Publications Working Group, working on behalf of the Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries (COPPUL). Input by Indigenous individuals, communities, organizations and publishers, as well as all researchers, libraries, archives, and museums is eagerly sought and welcomed. Please contact us for more information, comments, or to provide updates.
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CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The German Library Statistics (DBS) is the national statistics of the German library system and contains statistical key figures. It includes public libraries, scientific libraries, as well as specialized scientific libraries. More information can be found at DBS. This dataset contains the following information about public libraries in Bavaria 2010: Media as a whole - inventory, media as a whole - rentals, media in open access or 'direct access' as a whole. - Inventory, media in free-hand position or in 'direct access' in total. - Borrowings, stock of magazines - Print media and non-book media in physical units, total print media - Stock, total print media - Borrowings, ... of which: Non-fiction - Stock, ... of which: Non-fiction - loans, ... of which: Fiction - Stock, ... of which: Fiction - borrowings, ... of which: Children's and Youth Literature - Collection, ... of which: Children's and young people's literature - borrowings, ... of which: Journals in print - inventory, ... of which: Journals in print - Borrowings, non-book media as a whole - Stock, non-book media as a whole - Borrowings, ... of which: Analogue and digital media - inventory, ... of which: Analogue and digital media - borrowings, ... of which: Other non-book media (e.g. games) - inventory, ... of which: Other non-book media (e.g. games) - rentals, virtual inventory - inventory, virtual inventory - rentals, access to media units, departure to media units, databases, current newspaper and magazine subscriptions in print form, current newspaper and magazine subscriptions in electronic form, exchange/block stocks received, exchange/block stocks lent, orders in taking (passive) loan traffic, orders in giving (active) loan traffic, document deliveries to the end user