German National Library of Economics
ZBW main building in Kiel | |
Country | Germany |
---|---|
Type | National library, Research library |
Scope | Economics, Finance, Business |
Established | 1919 |
Location |
Düsternbrooker Weg 120, 24105 Kiel Neuer Jungfernstieg 21, 20354 Hamburg |
Collection | |
Items collected | books, journals, electronic media |
Size |
4.40 million items[1] 26,750 journal titles |
Access and use | |
Population served | researchers, business clients, students, public |
Other information | |
Budget | € 22.71 million[1] |
Director | Klaus Tochtermann |
Staff | 276[1] |
Website | http://www.zbw.eu/ |
The German National Library of Economics (German: Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften), abbreviated ZBW, is the world's largest library for economics.[2][3] It also bears the suffix "Leibniz Information Centre for Economics" and is part of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Scientific Community (WGL). The headquarters of the ZBW is in Kiel, Germany with additional offices in Hamburg.[1]
The ZBW is jointly funded by the German Federal Government and States of Germany. Its mission is to procure, index, archive and provide literature on economics and business fields to researchers and the general public. It is a depositary library of the World Trade Organization and maintains a European Union Documentation Centre at both locations.[4] It also collects all official publications of the United Nations, OECD, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.[5] The ZBW is headed by Klaus Tochtermann.
History
The ZBW has its roots in a library established in 1919 at the "Royal Institute for Maritime Traffic and World Economy" (German: Königliches Institut für Seeverkehr und Weltwirtschaft), which later became the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. The institute’s founder, Bernhard Harms, intended for the library to contribute to research in economic geography, trade politics, colonial economics and transport policy. By 1924, the collection had already reached 70,000 volumes.[6]
After the Nazi Seizure of Power in 1933, "Jewish" and social democratic workers were expelled from the Institute under the "Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service." The National Socialist regime did permit the library to keep its collections and even continue the procurement of foreign literature.[7] Unlike many libraries during World War II, it did not suffer any losses thanks to the books being moved to safety into the Cathedral of Ratzeburg. As a result, in postwar-torn Germany it had a uniquely comprehensive and valuable collection. In 1966 the German Research Foundation (DFG) designated the ZBW as the central library for economics in the Federal Republic of Germany. Since 1980 it has been a member of the Leibniz Association.[6]
In 2007 the library of the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWA) merged with the ZBW, creating the largest economics library and information provider in the world.[8] At the same time, the ZBW was incorporated as a foundation under public law independent of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. Since then, the ZBW is additionally known as the "Leibniz Information Centre for Economics".[6]
Collection
The ZBW acquires theoretical and empirical literature in economics, business and related disciplines such as economics education and psychology. All economics-related literature published in Germany is purchased, as well as most of the literature from the United States and the United Kingdom. Publications from other countries are purchased selectively. One emphasis of the ZBW is to acquire all publications of the world’s leading business schools and economic research institutes. In 2015 the collection consisted of:[1]
- Books and other publications: 4.40 million
- Current journal subscriptions: 26,750 titles
- Increase in books per year: 36,813
- Increase in working papers per year: 19,655
The library's physical collection occupies nearly 80 kilometers of shelf space and 37,000 volumes are added each year.[9] Anyone may visit the library site, read journals and borrow books free of charge. Users can also access databases and electronic journals which are not freely available on the internet. Document delivery services are available to deliver books and articles directly to users' workplaces, homes, or local libraries.[10]
Services
Official depository library
The ZBW is a depository library of the World Trade Organization. All WTO publications are collected and made available.[11] It is also designated a European Documentation Centre (EDC), receiving all official publications of the European Union and its organs, including the European Commission, European Central Bank (ECB) and European Court of Justice (ECJ).[12] The ZBW also collects and makes available the publications of the United Nations Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.[5]
Research Guide EconDesk
The ZBW offers EconDesk, a free reference desk that will answer short, factual economics questions via phone, email, or online chat. Questions can be about statistical data, economic definitions, or specific country information. This service is available to the public worldwide without charge.[13]
EconBiz
EconBiz is a search portal for economics. It aims to support research in and teaching of economics with a central entry point for all kinds of subject-specific information and direct access to full texts.[14]
ECONIS
ECONIS is the ZBW's online catalog of indexed economics literature. It includes title records for books, journals, papers, dissertations, statistics, and as well as subject-specific data. In 2015 ECONIS had 5.42 million datasets.[1] Over 208,000 titles in ECONIS are linked to full-text, permitting library users to access them over the internet.[15]
Digital Object Identifier registration
The ZBW operates da|ra, a service operated through the DataCite consortium, to provide Digital Object Identifier (DOI) registration for all German research centers in the fields of social sciences and economics. It also operates a comprehensive metadata schema to ensure proper citation of registered social and economic data.[2]
Open Access
With its publication server EconStor the ZBW provides an infrastructure for the free publication of scholarly literature in economics and business administration. The mission of EconStor is to make research findings in economics accessible in Open Access and thus internationally visible. In addition, the ZBW produces the peer-reviewed journal Economics in cooperation with the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. The Journal is based on the principle of Open Access and Open Assessment and listed in SCCI. The ZBW is active in national and international bodies in order to foster the idea of free dissemination of research findings. Among these bodies are COAR, DINI or the Priority Initiative "Digital Information".[16]
ZBW Journal Data Archive
The ZBW Journal Data Archive is a service for editors of journals in economics and management. It offers the possibility for journal authors of papers containing empirical work, simulations or experimental work to store the data, programs, and other details of computations, to make these files publicly available and to support confirmability and replicability of their published research papers.[17]
Publications
Since 1 January 2007 the ZBW serves as editor of two economic journals:
Wirtschaftsdienst
Wirtschaftsdienst – The Journal for Economic Policy (German: Wirtschaftsdienst – Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftspolitik) is an academic journal that has existed since 1916. It is published monthly by Springer Science+Business Media (ISSN 0043-6275) in German. The journal presents articles on current issues in German and European economic and social policy.[18]
Intereconomics
Intereconomics – Review of European Economic Policy publishes papers dealing with economic and social policy issues in Europe. It has existed since 1966 and is one of the oldest journals covering macroeconomics. It is published bimonthly by Springer Science+Business Media (ISSN 0020-5346) in English. Since 2009 it is edited in cooperation with the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) in Brussels.[19]
Partnerships
Goportis library network
The ZBW is one of three partners in the Goportis consortium, the Leibniz Library Network for Research Information, which includes the German National Library of Medicine (ZB MED) and the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB). This initiative develops and operates online search services, online full-text delivery services, licensing agreements, non-textual materials, document preservation efforts, data storage, and open access.[20]
International cooperation
Cooperation partners in the EU project EEXCESS:[21]
- Archäologie and Museum Baselland
- bit media
- Collections Trust
- INSA de Lyon (Institut National des Sciences Appliquées)
- Joanneum Research
- Know-Center GmbH
- Mendeley
- University of Passau
- wissenmedia
Important cooperation partners in other research projects include:[21]
- MIMOS: the largest information technology research institute in Malaysia
- South East European University-SEEU, Macedonia
- Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM), Malaysia
EconBiz Partner Network:[21]
- American University, Nigeria
- Bank of Finland, Finland
- BIBADM - School of Management's Library of the Federal University of Rio Grande Do Sul, Brasil
- CIRANO, Canada
- Corvinus University Library, Hungary
- Economic Faculty of the "St. Kliment Ohridski" University in Sofia, Bulgaria
- Graz University of Technology and Graz University, Austria
- HongKong Polytechnic University, China
- IAE Business School, Buenos Aires, Argentina
- Institute of Economic Research IER, Hitotsubashi University HIT, Japan
- Jaipuria Institute of Management, India
- Koç University Suna Kiraç Library, Turkey
- South East European University-SEEU, Macedonia
- S P Jain School of Global Management, Australia, Dubai Singapore
- Trakya University, Turkey
- Universiteti i Prishtines, Kosovo
- Universiteti i Shkodres, Albania
- Universiteti i Tiranes, Albania
- University Library of Svetozar Markovic, Serbia
- University of Latvia
- University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Administration, Slovenia
- Universiti Teknologi Mara, Malaysia
Other affiliations
The ZBW is a member of a variety of national and international organizations, including:[22]
- Association for Information Science and Practice (DGI)
- Association of European Research Libraries (LIBER)
- Association of Special Libraries and Information Bureaux (ASLIB)
- Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR)
- DataCite
- German Library Association (DBV)
- International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA)
- Leibniz Association (WGL)
- Middle East Virtual Library (MENALIB)
- subito – Documents from libraries society
Projects
As part of the German national research infrastructure, the ZBW also conducts its own applied research. Some of the more notable projects include:[23]
- EEXCESS: The vision of this European project is to reveal and interconnect the treasures of European culture, science and education. [24]
- EDaWaX: A project which deals with the management of research data in economics journals.
- ZBW Labs: a workshop for development of applications and services
- GeRDI GeRDI – Generic Research Data Infrastructure: The project aims to develop a distributed and linked infrastructure system for research data, Generic Research Data Infrastructure (GeRDI).
- LOC-DB Linked Open Citation Database (LOC-DB): The project LOC-DB will develop tools and processes based on linked data technologies that will enable individual libraries to participate in an open, distributed infrastructure for the indexation of citations.
- metrics metrics: MEasuring The Reliability and perception of Indicators for interactions with sCientific productS: The main focus of “*metrics” is on gaining a deeper understanding of alternative indicators for measuring scientific performance. It looks at the quality and reliability of indicators, but also whether they take account of discipline-specific characteristics.
- MOVING The vision of the MOVING project is to develop an innovative training platform that enables people from all societal sectors (companies, universities, public administration) to fundamentally improve their information literacy by training how to use, choose, reflect and evaluate data/text mining methods in connection with their daily research tasks. [25]
See also
- EconBiz – Virtual Library for Economics and Business Studies
- Econstor
- Klaus Tochtermann
- German National Library of Medicine
- German National Library of Science and Technology
- List of libraries in Germany
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 German National Library of Economics: Facts and Figures retrieved 22-November-2016
- 1 2 DataCite retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ Dagmar Giersberg: Wherever the User Is – The ZBW. (Munich: Goethe-Institut, 2011) online (English) retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ Innovations Report: The German National Library Economics online summary retrieved 02-Jun-2012
- 1 2 German National Library of Economics: Collection Criteria retrieved 24-June-2015
- 1 2 3 German National Library of Economics: History retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ Ash Working Group: Antifaschistische Stadtführungen: Kiel 1933-1945. Stations in the History of National Socialism in Kiel. Kiel 1998, p. 38f
- ↑ Weltweit größte Zentralbibliothek jetzt noch größer. Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften integriert die Bibliothek des Hamburgischen-Welt-Wirtschafts-Archivs, in: Zeitschrift für Bibliothekswesen und Bibliographie, 54, 2007, 3, p. 143 (German)
- ↑ Zahlen und Fakten (German) retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ German National Library of Economics: Search retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ World Trade Organization: Depository Libraries online listing retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ German National Library of Economics: European Documentation Centre retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ Research Guide EconDesk retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ EconBiz retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ German National Library of Economics: Annual Report (German) retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ Access retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ retrieved 22-November-2016
- ↑ Springer Verlag: Wirtschaftsdienst – The Journal for Economic Policy retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ Springer Verlag: Intereconomics retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ German National Library of Science and Technology: Goportis details retrieved 28-May-2012
- 1 2 3 The German National Library of Economics: Cooperation partners retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ The German National Library of Economics: Affiliations retrieved 24-June-2015
- ↑ The German National Library of Economics: Research Projects retrieved 28-May-2012
- ↑ The German National Library of Economics: Science 2.0 retrieved 22-November-2016
- ↑ The German National Library of Economics: MOVING retrieved 22-November-2016
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Wirtschaftswissenschaften. |
- EconBiz Virtual Economist portal (English)
- EconDesk (English)
- German National Library of Economics official website (English)
- Nereus Consortium (English)
- Intereconomics - Review of European Economic Policy (English)
- Wirtschaftsdienst - Journal for Economic Policy (German)
Coordinates: 54°20′18″N 10°09′22″E / 54.3383°N 10.1561°E