NZ Libraries Collaborate
NZ Libraries Collaborate To Enhance Access To Information For Maori
The launch last night of Nga Upoko Tukutuku
/ Maori Subject Headings marks an exciting development in
the library world, says National Librarian Penny
Carnaby.
The launch of was timed to coincide with
Matariki, the traditional start of the Maori new year, to
symbolise the way the Nga Upoko Tukutuku / Maori Subject
Headings project is incorporating a Maori perspective into
the way information is described and accessed in libraries.
'Nga Upoko Tukutuku / Maori Subject Headings will
enable the National Library, and all New Zealand's
libraries, to enhance their services for Maori clients by
incorporating a sense of the Maori world view into the way
that information can be described and searched for,' says Ms
Carnaby.
Speaking at the launch, the Hon Judith
Tizard, Minister Responsible for the National Library, said
'I am proud that Aotearoa New Zealand is the first country
in the world to develop a system based on a traditional
indigenous worldview. Up until two weeks ago, an information
seeker entered "Maori postural dance" into the catalogue to
search for "haka".'
'Maori Subject Headings represents
a huge leap forward in terms of providing subject access in
te reo to materials for and about Maori,' said the Minister.
The Nga Upoko Tukutuku / Maori Subject Headings
project is a collaborative venture between the Library and
Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa (LIANZA), Te
Ropu Whakahau (Maori in Libraries and Information Management
Association) and the National Library of New Zealand. The
aim of the project was to provide a structured set of terms
in te reo that Maori library customers can relate to and use
to find material in libraries.
'The terms used in the
library profession to describe and find information tend to
be very monocultural, as consistency is necessary in the
library environment,' says Ms Carnaby. 'Together, we have
worked to develop an internationally-recognised method of
describing material either in or about Maori that
acknowledges both traditional and contemporary Maori
perspectives on the relationships between people, the
environment and the spiritual world.'
The Nga Upoko
Tukutuku / Maori Subject Headings project team was drawn
from around New Zealand, and comprises librarians with Maori
language skills and knowledge of the Maori world view, along
with librarians skilled in the development of subject
headings. The project team has developed more than 1000
Maori Subject Headings and their associated references,
which can be used when cataloguing books and other library
materials.
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