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UNVA Library Collection Development Policies
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Collection Development Policy
Statement
School of Management:
Financial Management
University of Northern Virginia
Library
Dr. Dastmalchi, Dean of School of Management
Linda Nainis, Dean, Learning and Instructional Resources
Antje Mays, Consultant (email)
I. Purpose
The purpose of the Financial
Management collection
development policy is to guide the library's support of UNVA's present needs and
anticipate future program growth and changes. Financial Management supports the MBA
in
Finance and the
BS
in Business Administration. Areas covered include money and banking,
capital, investment, taxation, and regulation to the extent that it applies to
banking and financial industries.
Students learn theoretical concepts
and practical applications, to emerge as financial managers, advisors, market
analysts, investment professionals in business, the non-profit world, public
sector, and international development. The coursework also provides students a
foundation to progress into education or advanced graduate school and become
teachers or professors.
II. Scope
Language
The materials are almost exclusively English or translations into English.
Geographical Areas
Emphasis is on both U.S. and International Business. Material with a strictly
local emphasis, other than the Virginia/D.C. area generally is not acquired.
Chronological Periods
Material from the twenty-first century predominates. Earlier centuries' imprints related to specific industries and
companies and pre-1800 business history are collected only when they support
undergraduate history courses or specific research or teaching interests of UNVA
faculty.
III. Types of Material and Formats
Given the geographically dispersed locations of UNVA, subject-supporting
scholarly e-book collections and full-text databases of journals, trade
magazines, and business profiles & data are the best way to ensure that all
students from all campus have access to equal library resources. As financial
management students are enrolled on-site in Virginia and in distance programs
worldwide, the primary emphasis should be on in-depth electronic resources to serve the finance research needs of UNVA communities,
including distance learners. Through electronic resources the library can
provide more recent company and industry financial information. Electronic products are generally preferred over print equivalents, all else being equal. There is
an ever increasing demand for online resources with remote access. This is an
area with unlimited growth potential, and the library will meet that challenge.
Thus, electronic resources are actively purchased.
For online materials, the purchasing
preference is the subscription basis. Perpetual use purchases are generally
discouraged. Given a choice between similar databases when selecting new
content, it is preferred to stay with the same vendor, unless there is a strong
reason such as truly unique content which only another vendor can provide. Many
databases from few vendors keeps the database interface more consistent for
students and faculty.
Print may be purchased selectively,
as appropriate, on a small scale, mostly for reference materials such as
dictionaries, encyclopedias, and certain types of directories and handbooks.
The most appropriate scenario which could occur that might justify campus-specific exclusivity
of materials not available to other locations would be materials of strictly local
importance.
IV. Strengths & Weaknesses
The online collection supporting Financial Management is strong; over 110,000 e-books are provided by EBL and ebrary. Of these, about
13% support Business and Financial Management. A rich collection of
databases includes ABI Complete (including ABI Global),
Business Source Complete, General Business File ASAP and LegalTrac.
Additional databases may be added in the future.
The print collection is small, but in light of UNVA's multi-campus research environment, the collection-building emphasis should continue to be on electronic resources.
V. Related Resources
Additional library collections pertaining to other aspects of business are
described in the all-encompassing General Business library collection development policy
as well as collection-development policies for the separate programs within the
School of Management.
VI. Subjects and Collection Levels:
Subject collecting is characterized by levels 1-5, with Level 1 representing the
most intensive buying, and level 5 representing the lowest level of buying.
1. Research Level: Advanced
and comprehensive collection supporting doctoral dissertations and independent
research, as well as support for faculty in their doctoral-level course
preparation and specialty-related research. Materials at this level should
include research reporting, new findings, scientific experimental results, and
other primary documents and/or original research dissemination. Other resources
at this level include all important reference works, a wide selection of
specialized books, e-books, instructional videos and/or streaming web-based
instructional A/V materials, an in-depth collection of journals, e-journals, major in-depth full-text databases for indexing, abstracting, and full-text journal content.
2. Study Level: Thorough collection supporting baccalaureate and master's
level coursework, master's theses, and project-based independent study, as well
as support for faculty in their baccalaureate and master's level course
preparation and specialty-related research. This level supports general subject
overview and some specialized knowledge, but is not as in-depth as the Research
level. Materials include a wide range of books, e-books, workbooks (for example
teacher's workbooks, lab manuals), A/V materials where appropriate to the
academic discipline, core journals, e-journals, electronic full-text
databases, and reference works providing study foundations.
3. Basic Level: Introductory collection to provide a basic subject
overview. May include some resources for faculty course preparation and
research. Materials include major encyclopedias, dictionaries, important
bibliographies, a few major journals / e-journals and possibly drawing from
general academic full-text databases already purchased for other subject areas.
4. Minimal Level: Few selections of either very basic works or occasional selections of specialized works in a narrow sub-field, but no systematic support of the subject area.
5. Not collected
Subject emphasis: Materials should be primarily chosen for their emphasis by subject, keeping in mind that English is a second language for most undergraduate and graduate students. The subject list below
is a starting point for selecting new materials and a guidepost in case of
withdrawal projects.
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Subject |
Collection Depth |
See also in other policies |
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Business Ethics |
2 - Study Level |
Accounting, Business Law, Management, Marketing |
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Business Law and Regulation |
2 - Study Level |
Accounting, Business Law |
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Business Statistics |
2 - Study Level |
Business Statistics, Economics,
Financial Management, Management, Marketing |
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Finance (business finance) |
1 - Research Level |
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Financial Markets |
1 - Research Level |
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Insurance |
2 - Study Level |
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Investment |
1 - Research Level |
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Trade Policy (international trade and economic relations) |
1 - Research Level |
Economics, Management |
Pertinent LC Call Number Areas
Although UNVA's library does not
actively pursue print collections where call-numbers are traditionally
emphasized, the Library of Congress (LC) call-number classification system has
great value in drilling down with precision to the curricular areas to be
supported, even with e-book collections. Similar to a taxonomy, the LC call
numbers classify knowledge consistently. This systematic language for coding
subjects supports several important library roles: (1) retrieving library holdings by classification ranges of e-books from the online catalog to assess where collections need to be
enhanced or pared down; (2) coding curriculum-support profiles for e-book
vendors and approval plans; (3) teaching students an additional way to
search with precision for library resources on their research topics.
Titles pertaining to Financial
Management can
fall into the following LC call number ranges:
H
HD61 Risk management
HF1017 Business Statistics
HF5387-5391 Business ethics
HG1- HG9999 -- Finance: money,
banking, savings, foreign exchange:
HG1-177 Finance
HG179 Personal finance
HG201-1496 Money
HG1501-3550 Banking
HG3691-3769 Credit. Debt. Loans
HG3810-4000 Foreign exchange. International finance.
HG4001-4285 Finance management. Business finance.
HG4501-6051 Investment, capital formation, speculation
HG8011-9999 Insurance
HJ9-HJ9995 -- Public finance:
HJ9-99.8 Periodicals. Serials. By
region or country
HJ241-1620 By region or country
HJ2005-2216 Income and expenditure. Budget
HJ2240-5908 Revenue. Taxation. Internal revenue
HJ6603-7390 Customs administration
HJ7461-7980 Expenditures. Government spending
HJ8001-8899 Public debts
HJ9103-9695 Local finance. Municipal finance
HM263 Publicity and Public relations
K
K579 Business services - law and
legislation (liability)
K1003-1036 International trade law,
international finance, international commercial agreements, commercial law,
export sales contracts
K1066-1135 Financial regulation:
banking law, international banking, money laundering, international lending,
securities, financial statements / accounting - law and legislation
K1188-1322 Laws governing: Shipping
finance, joint ventures, international business enterprises, multinational
corporations, transnational business
K1327-1378 Laws concerning: Corporate
governance, auditing, accounting, mergers and acquisitions, bankruptcy and
insolvency, secured debt (domestic and international)
K3921-3978 International trade
regulation (by industry), International business and investment regulation,
foreign trade regulation, export regulation, antitrust law
K4430-4452 Money - law and
legislation (banking, U.S., international, currency exchange)
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