Title: Acquisitions Guidelines, 1973-1998
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by publication date
Administrative History
While acquisitional activities always have seemed to be of a interest to ALA, the immediate precursors of the RTSD Resources Section are relatively recent. The Council action of July 13, 1951 that created the Board on Acquisition of Library Materials ended the work of a Special Committee in Acquisitions (1). This presumably may be equated with the "acquisitions Committee," listed with other ALA boards and committees in 1950 ALA Bulletin, but without a date of any establishment given. This committee included ex officio members from the Acquisitions Department Heads of Research Libraries Round Table, Book Acquisition Committee, Order and Book Selection Section of the Division of Public Libraries, Board on Resources of American Libraries, and the Serials Round Table (2). Discussion of acquisitions issues were becoming less book-centered and more inclusive of the wide-range if items collected by libraries. At the creation of the Resources and Technical Services Division by action of Council on January 1, 1957, the former Board on Acquisitions of Library Materials became the Acquisitions Section of the new division (3); in 1973 it merged with the Resources Committee and took on its present name (4).
The 1951 Board had as its stated purposes " the coordination of acquisitional activities with the ALA..., to serve as a liaison group between the ALA and its various acquisitional activities and other groups such as publisher and booksellers organizations outside the profession interested in the library acquisitions...., to serve as a clearing house for acquisitional information (particularly cooperative enterprises) of all types of interest to libraries (but exclusive of participation in actual acquisition activities)...," and "to undertake other appropriate responsibilities in the field of library acquisitions unless such responsibilities have been delegated by the Council or the Executive Board to some other group within the ALA" (5). The Resources Division's (1988-89) charge is "To contribute to library service and librarianship through encouragement, promotion of, and responsibility for those activities of the Resources and Technical Division of the American Library Association relating to collection development including selection, acquisition, and evaluation of library materials in all types of institutions" (6).
Organization (as of 1988-1989)
1 - Executive Committee
2 - Acquisitions Committee
Guidelines (subcommittee)
Regional Institute (subcommittee)
3 - Blackwell/North America Scholarship Award Committee
4 - Collection Management and Development Committee
Budget Allocation (subcommittee)
Collection Management and Development Florida Institute
Planning (ad hoc subcommittee)
Collection Management and Development Midwest Institute
Planning (ad hoc subcommittee)
Continuing Education (ad hoc subcommittee)
Guide to Review of Collection (ad hoc subcommittee)
Guidelines for Collection Development (ad hoc subcommittee)
Selection Tools, Vol. IV (ad hoc subcommittee)
5 - Conference Program Planning Committee
6 - Library Material Price Index Committee
7 - Micropublishing Committee
8 - Nominating Committee
9 - Policy and Research Committee
10 - Discussion Groups
Acquisition Librarians/Vendors of Library Materials
Chief Collection Development Officers of Large Research Libraries
Serial Costs (task force)
Collection Management/Selection for Public Libraries
Gifts and Exchange
Sources:
1. ALA Council Proceedings, 75th Anniversary Conference, 1951, p. 94.
2. ALA Bulletin, 44 (1950), p. 400.
3. ALA Bulletin, 51 (1957), pp. 862-63.
4. ALA Council Minutes, 1973 Annual Conference, vol. I, p. 39.
5. ALA Bulletin, 51 (1957), op cit.
6. ALA Handbook, 1988-89, p. 147.