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Information Resources Management Committee

Report for the Ontario Council on Graduate Studies on Library Resources for Political Science
February 2007

The following is a summary of University of Waterloo (UW) Library information resources and services in support of the graduate program in Political Science, prepared by Jane Forgay, Liaison Librarian for Political Science.

Information Resources

Material is collected to support learning, teaching and research to the PhD level in Political Science with emphasis on:

  • Comparative Politics
  • Political Process
  • Public Administration, Public Law and Policy
  • International Politics / Global Governance
  • Local and Regional Politics
  • Normative Theory
  • Methodology

The decision to purchase Library materials for Political Science is the responsibility of the Liaison Librarian in consultation with the Political Science Department’s Library Representative. Selection is guided by the Collection Development Policy (http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/staff/irmc/polisci_coll_policy06.doc) which is developed by the Liaison Librarian in consultation with faculty members in the department of Political Science.  Materials are obtained in a variety ways including firm orders, open orders, approval plans, and subscriptions. 

In response to user preference, the Library obtains resources in electronic format whenever it is possible and practical to do so. Some electronic resources are obtained directly by the University of Waterloo Library and some are obtained through membership in the Ontario Council of University Libraries (OCUL) and the Canadian Research Knowledge Network. Access to and use of electronic resources is generally governed by licence agreements with the publisher or vendor.

The UW Library collection includes approximately 480 current electronic and print serials in general subject areas of possible interest to Political Science. Many of the electronic serials are paid from the central Electronic Resources library fund. The Political Science library fund supports the cost of 94 current serials subscriptions relating to political science. The collection also includes approximately 91,000 monographs in subject areas of interest to Political Science. For the most part, these monographs are in print format but an increasing number are in electronic format.

The UW Library, along with the libraries of the University of Guelph (UG) and Wilfrid Laurier University (WLU), is a member of the Tri-University Group of Libraries (TUG) consortium.  Collections from UG and WLU enhance the depth and breadth of local materials available in subject areas of interest to Political Science.

The Library has purchased or subscribes to a range of electronic resources including research databases, full text journals, monographs, numeric data, and government publications. In addition, the Library identifies and provides access to select material freely available through the Internet. Such material includes open access journals, catalogues of libraries around the world, dictionaries, encyclopaedias, and style guides.

The following are some of the electronic resources of particular interest to Political Science:

  • AccessUN
  • American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies
  • Canadian Business and Current Affairs Complete
  • Canadian Research Index
  • Columbia International Affairs Online
  • Eur-Lex
  • Factiva
  • GPO Access (US Government Printing Office)
  • HeinOnline
  • LegalTrac
  • LexisNexis Academic
  • PAIS International
  • Public Administration Abstracts
  • Scopus
  • Web of Science
  • Worldwide Political Science Abstracts

The University of Waterloo has depository status for Canadian Federal and Ontario government publications. Also available to members of the UW academic community are the data holdings of the Tri-University Group Data Resources (TDR) (http://tdr.tug-libraries.on.ca). This data service provides Web access to sources such as, for example, the Canadian Census, Statistics Canada surveys, and the data holdings of the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Services

Access to Print Collections

The Library’s print collections for Political Science are housed primarily in the Dana Porter Library.  Access to the entire Library collection, as well materials held by UG and WLU, is available through the Web accessible union catalogue known as TRELLIS (http://trellis1.tug-libraries.on.ca/).

The Library's automated circulation system allows users to charge out materials during the hours that the Library is open (every day most weeks, with some closures between terms and during the Christmas break) and to renew items online anytime. With the exception reference materials, most of the items in the Library’s collection circulate. Graduate students and faculty may borrow most monographs for a term at a time.

The Library also delivers to faculty, graduate students, and staff copies of print journal articles from any of the UW library locations and from the libraries of the UW affiliated and federated colleges and universities. Faculty, graduate students, and staff can also place holds on books from any of these libraries for pickup at any of the UW libraries’ circulation desks.  Books and journal articles not owned by the UW Library but held by UG or WLU may be requested through TRELLIS. Books and copies of journal articles are delivered to faculty, staff and students within three working days. The cost is of these services is absorbed by the Library.

In partnership with UG and WLU, the Library owns a facility, known as the Annex, which is used to house low-use research material.  In keeping with the University’s research intensive status, an agreement among the TUG libraries ensures that a last copy is maintained in perpetuity.  As with material from UG and WLU, books and copies of journal articles housed in the Annex are made available to faculty, staff and students within three working days. The cost is absorbed by the Library

In addition to the forgoing services, books and copies of articles from print journals will be sent, upon request, to students living some distance from the campus.  With the exception of return postage for books, the cost is absorbed by the Library.

Access to Electronic Resources

The primary tool for accessing electronic resources selected by the Library is its Web site (http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca). This site organizes and provides access to licensed resources available to only UW faculty, students and staff, as well as Internet resources freely available to anyone.  The site includes links to selected electronic resources available to the UW community through the Library’s participation in the OCUL Scholars Portal program (http://www.scholarsportal.info/index.html).  In addition, many of our electronic resources can be found through a search of Google Scholar and Windows Live Academic.

The Library has embedded linking technology (SFX) into research databases which allows users to link directly from the database to the UW Library full text electronic journal subscription or to the TRELLIS catalogue record for holdings and call number information.  The Library also provides access to bibliographic management software.

UW faculty, students and staff may access electronic research databases and full text electronic journals from off-campus via the Library’s Proxy Server / Connect from Home feature.

Access to Resources from Institutions other than TUG

The Interlibrary Loan/Document Delivery (ILL) service provides faculty, students, and staff with books, copies of journal articles, theses, and government documents from libraries within Canada and elsewhere. The UW Library uses OCUL’s RACER Web based interlibrary loan system (http://racer.scholarsportal.info/) to facilitate ILL access and service for users. With minor exceptions, the cost for this service is absorbed by the Library.

The UW Library also uses the CISTI Source current awareness and document delivery service (http://source.cisti.nrc.ca/index_custom.html) from the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information to provide copies of articles from journals not held by the UW Library or available via document delivery from the University of Guelph of Wilfrid Laurier libraries. Faculty and graduate students are able to search citations from over 17,000 journals in all subject areas and directly request copies of articles. Articles are generally delivered to on-campus addresses within four working days. The cost is absorbed by the Library.

Canadian university libraries extend in-person borrowing privileges to students, faculty and staff from across the country. Graduate students, faculty and staff are entitled to borrowing privileges at participating libraries (http://www.coppul.ca/rb/rbindex.html).

Information Services

Reference assistance is available in person or by telephone at the Library's Information Desks which are staffed by professional librarians and specially trained library associates. Alternatively, UW students, faculty and staff may get reference assistance via e-mail and on-line chat available through the Ask a Librarian service (http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/asklib/index.html).

UW libraries also offer general orientation programs including tours, workshops on database searching and using the Web, and seminars for graduate students.  In addition, each fall the Library participates in a campus-wide orientation program for international students.

The Liaison Librarian for Political Science is available for consultation with individuals or small groups of students. She may be contacted directly in person, by phone, and by e-mail if a personal visit to the Library is not convenient.

The Liaison Librarian is also available to work with faculty to develop course integrated library instruction in the form of lectures, hands-on instruction, Web pages, or online courseware modules. The Librarian also develops and maintains a web-based subject guide for Political Science (http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/discipline/politic/index.html).

Graduate students may keep abreast of new services and developments in the Library by reading news @ your library (http://www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/newsatlib) an electronic newsletter prepared periodically and distributed to graduate students via the University’s Graduate Studies listserv.

In a 2006 University of Waterloo Library User Satisfaction Survey, 88% of the graduate students responding to the survey indicated that they agreed with the statement that "Overall, the UW Library and its staff meet my expectations for an excellent university library".

Financial Support

During the past seven years, the Political Science library fund has spent $756,126 on information resources. In 2005/06, $19,910 was spent for current serials and $58,941 for books. Table 1 provides further details. What may appear to be a decline in serials expenditures deserves comment. Serials in an electronic format are often available for subscription in packages and the Library pays for access to these packages through a general fund for electronic resources.  As a result, many serials are no longer paid for by funds established for specific disciplines.

Electronic resources such as Worldwide Political Science Abstracts, Public Administration Abstracts, PAIS, and Canadian Business and Current Affairs are purchased from a general fund.  It should be noted that materials acquired for other departments such as History, Economics, Environmental Studies, and Sociology and well as materials obtained through the library’s government publications funds, are also of interest to Political Science.

Table 1.

FISCAL

 SERIAL

 BOOK

 APPROVAL 

 TOTAL

YEAR

 EXPENDITURE

 EXPENDITURE

 SUPPORT

 EXP. & SUP.

 

 

 

 

 

 1999/00

46,189

16,423

46,874

109,486

 2000/01

54,894

18,523

53,406

126,823

 2001/02

49,206

13,929

56,970

120,105

 2002/03

56,439

13,296

55,355

125,090

 2003/04

57,451

15,916

44,638

118,005

 2004/05

20,756

15,112

41,896

77,765

 2005/06

19,910

15,096

43,845

78,852

 

304,846

108,295

342,985

756,126

 

Conclusion

More detailed information including lists of print and electronic journals purchased for Political Science and the number of monograph titles in subject areas of interest to Political Science are available in the Library.

I would be pleased to discuss the Library's holdings and services with the appraisers at the time of a campus visit. I believe that a high level of support for the graduate programme in Political Science has been provided by the Library, both in information resources and services.


Prepared by Jane Forgay, Liaison Librarian for Political Science
Reviewed by Susan Routliffe, Associate University Librarian, Information Resources &       Services on behalf of Mark Haslett, University Librarian

February 2007

Information Resources Management Committee
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June 11, 2007