Following the September 2010 earthquake and the closure of a number of campus libraries, library staff at the University of Canterbury was forced to rethink how they connected with their users. The established virtual reference service now meant library staff could be contacted regardless of their physical location. After the February earthquake, with University library closures ranging from 3 weeks to indefinite, this service came into its own as a vital communication tool. It facilitated contact between the library and both students and academics, as well as proving invaluable as a means for library staff to locate and communicate with each other. Transcripts from our post-earthquake interactions with users were analyzed using NVivo an...
At the University of Central Florida Libraries, a new alternative to traditional reference service w...
NOW THAT LIBRARIES have substantial digital collections available to users from their homes or offic...
This article was published in a newsletter for the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) Program...
References are available in a separate document.The effects of the Christchurch earthquake sequence ...
In September 2010 the Canterbury region was hit by a 7.1 magnitude earthquake. This event took place...
The effects of the Christchurch earthquake sequence are wide-ranging and have been devastating to co...
An extensive data store of graphs and themed survey comments (qualitative data) has been created, ...
Preprint from New Zealand Conservators of Cultural Materials 2018 Conference.Abstract:The National L...
The paper discusses the importance of ICT in rendering Virtual Reference Services (VRS) in libraries...
4th September 2010 a 7.1 magnitude earthquake strikes near Christchurch, New Zealand’s second larges...
On March 11, 2011, a great earthquake struck northeastern Japan. For the libraries at the two campus...
Before the pandemic, the University of Toronto was predominantly an in-person experience. The closur...
Increasingly, economic, political and human crises, along with natural disasters, constitute a recur...
With the onslaught of the global COVID19 pandemic, universities were forced to quickly pivot to excl...
Public libraries play important roles during disaster recovery, even when other government actors fa...
At the University of Central Florida Libraries, a new alternative to traditional reference service w...
NOW THAT LIBRARIES have substantial digital collections available to users from their homes or offic...
This article was published in a newsletter for the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) Program...
References are available in a separate document.The effects of the Christchurch earthquake sequence ...
In September 2010 the Canterbury region was hit by a 7.1 magnitude earthquake. This event took place...
The effects of the Christchurch earthquake sequence are wide-ranging and have been devastating to co...
An extensive data store of graphs and themed survey comments (qualitative data) has been created, ...
Preprint from New Zealand Conservators of Cultural Materials 2018 Conference.Abstract:The National L...
The paper discusses the importance of ICT in rendering Virtual Reference Services (VRS) in libraries...
4th September 2010 a 7.1 magnitude earthquake strikes near Christchurch, New Zealand’s second larges...
On March 11, 2011, a great earthquake struck northeastern Japan. For the libraries at the two campus...
Before the pandemic, the University of Toronto was predominantly an in-person experience. The closur...
Increasingly, economic, political and human crises, along with natural disasters, constitute a recur...
With the onslaught of the global COVID19 pandemic, universities were forced to quickly pivot to excl...
Public libraries play important roles during disaster recovery, even when other government actors fa...
At the University of Central Florida Libraries, a new alternative to traditional reference service w...
NOW THAT LIBRARIES have substantial digital collections available to users from their homes or offic...
This article was published in a newsletter for the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) Program...