Modern Management System in Libraries
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Abstract
Libraries today are coping with change and searching for tools to assist them to deal with it, as well as creating
strategic partnerships with other libraries. Cooperation appears to be the key to library survival. Cooperation
efforts vary depending on geographic areas and cultural traditions, but they appear to be present around the
world: on the one hand, nations with strong libraries that are used to strengthen cooperation and sharing have
seen a flourishing of new cooperative initiatives and formal consortia; on the other hand, nations, where this
collaborative practise was not within their culture, have received a boast towards it. The first libraries were
repositories for the earliest sort of writing, clay tablets in cuneiform script discovered in Sumer, some dating
back to 2600 BC. These written records mark the end of prehistory and the start of history. In the 1980s, the
introduction of online searching, i.e. digital databases, began to replace the library's print indexes and
abstracting reference tools. While expensive and difficult to use, such resources were frequently mediated by
highly skilled librarians to provide broader access to print library materials (at least for the untrained).
Although this finding was touted as revolutionary once more, it simply represented a more efficient and effective
method of offering basic library services.
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