Introduction
The objective of these guidelines is to provide staff of Ãå±±½ûµØlibraries engaged in subject analysis
with a comprehensive set of principles to ensure a consistent approach in indexing various types of
Ãå±±½ûµØdocuments and publications. While many of the principles may apply to cataloguing and
indexing non-Ãå±±½ûµØmaterials, the guidelines focus on indexing the Organization's documentation in its
various forms.
Important functions of indexing are to:
- Allow systematic
searching for documents that are mainly about certain subjects, or for
information or concepts contained in documents;
- Allow systematic
searching for documents based on defined search criteria (types of documents,
authors, issuing bodies, titles, publication date, etc.);
-
Identify specific
documents precisely and distinguish between similar documents;
- Provide information
about documents such as physical description, contents notes or
summary/annotation notes, notes about errors or anomalies in documents,
relationship with other documents, language versions, etc.;
-
Locate documents in the
Library collections and/or provide access to electronic text of documents when
available.
To fulfill those functions, both subject
analysis and bibliographic description are integral parts of the indexing
process, providing metadata that can be used in searches or displayed in
formatted records.
Subject analysis is the part of the
indexing process that deals with
- Translation of that
conceptual analysis into the controlled subject vocabulary (term selection)
Maintained
by the Department of Public Information (DPI), Dag Hammarskjöld
Library. Comments as well as suggestions for further
additions/enhancements may be directed to the Dag Hammarskjöld Library.
© United Nations 2005-2009. All rights reserved.
Last updated: 9 June 2009 |