Parliamentary Librarianship in Sierra Leone
Parliamentary Librarianship in Sierra Leone
Introduction
The
Sierra Leone Parliament library, the official repository of the records
of Parliament, is responsible for the collection, organization and
dissemination of bibliographic materials and information to further the
work of the legislation. The Parliament, which houses the library, is
situated at the summit of Tower Hill, on the second floor. It was opened
on the eve of the country's Independence day,26th April 1961. The
proximity of the library to the Chamber ensures that its existence and
services are brought close to parliamentarians and parliamentary
administrators.
The
extent and complexity of government activities create a need for the
widespread dissemination of information about those activities and for
popular interpretation of government policy. Invariably the over-riding
aim of the library is the provision of information that will enable
parliamentarians, parliamentary administrators and support staff to
carry out their duties effectively. Its objectives are:
o
The provision of information and knowledge resources vital to
parliamentarians and parliamentary administration in the performance of
their daily functions.
o To serve as archives for parliamentary and other vital government publications.
o
To acquire materials from parliaments in other countries that may be of
benefit to parliamentarians and parliamentary administrators for
routine operations.
Provisions and management
In
line with these aims and objectives the library has a small collection
of stock on Philosophy, Sociology, Political Science, Economics, Law,
Military Administration and History. Also included are Bills, Acts,
Order papers and notices, Hansard/Parliamentary debates, State Opening
programmes, Presidential addresses, Budget speeches, chronicles of
Parliamentary elections and developments, Parliamentary debates of the
House of Commons and Lords of Britain, dating back to the colonial
period, Indian Parliamentary debates and similar ones from Tanganyika
(Tanzania), Gold Coast (Ghana), Nigeria and Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), and
materials from Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) and the Commonwealth. In
addition is a collection of reference works such as encyclopedias,
dictionaries, directories, parliamentary handbooks, yearbooks, public
notices, protocols and treaties. These materials are acquired by
purchase, donation, exchange, and deposit, especially by the Government
Printing Department responsible for the printing of all government
publications in the country. The materials are classified and arranged
according to Dewey Decimal Classification Scheme (19th Edition).
A
Librarian, an Assistant Librarian and a few clerical staff man the
library. The Librarian is responsible to the Clerk of Parliament, the
chief administrator and vote controller, and overall head of the unit.
The functions of the Librarian, in addition to administering the
library, include the compilation of bibliographies and reading lists,
literature searching, summarizing facts and published information, and
obtaining information from government departments. The Assistant
Librarian performs such duties as acquisition, classification and
cataloguing of materials, answering reference queries, writing
correspondence, shelving and the general supervision of support staff.
He also computes the parliamentary index to all parliament papers and
debates, the public bill index and then international affairs index with
references taken from the daily and periodical press, government
notices and Commissions of Inquiry index. These indexes are cumulated
and reproduced photographically. Government mainly financially supports
the library.
The
Sierra Leone Parliament Library clientele are mainly parliamentarians
and parliamentary administrators. The library also extends its services
to university lecturers and students, public officials and visitors. It
has a readership of over five hundred (500). The library is open from
8:30 a.m. to 5:00p.m. from Monday through Friday and is closed during
weekends and public holidays. It offers reference and lending services
to its clientele as part of its book services. To enable a user to loan
materials a request form is issued for completion. Up to three books can
be loaned for two weeks. Users can renew their books for a further two
weeks, provided no other users request for them. However, materials like
reports, conference proceedings, parliamentary Acts, debates and
gazettes are not loaned but only consulted in the library. The library
has an Author/Title and Classified catalogue.
Services
Staff
in the Reader Service and Reference Desk handle all reference
enquiries. Reference services are provided in three ways: individually
to parliamentarians in response to a request for a 'brief' on any
subject connected to their official duties; the preparation of general
'background papers' of previous debates, especially when an MP was
absent and need an overview of what was discussed; and ad hoc services
to Committees of the House.
To
compliment the stock provision in the library current awareness
services and selective dissemination of information services are
provided on a modest scale. The current awareness service involves the
provision of the latest periodical articles, reports and documents
corresponding to specific topics of each member interest. A photocopying
service of desired publications such as news features from the files of
recent press clippings, reports and content pages of required materials
is also done. There is also a telephone service for both internal and
international calls. In order to meet the challenges of ICTs computers
have been installed in the library with Internet facility. As a way of
preserving and conserving the collection library staff frequently
fumigate the collection while the Assistant Librarian does repairs on
damaged materials. Worn out materials are taken to the Government
Printing Department for mending. To help clientele use the library user
education is given together with shelf guides.
Not
withstanding the provisions and services in the library problems abound
which serve as challenges to the staff. Notable are inadequate staff,
poor working conditions, inadequate and obsolete collection, inadequate
and untimely funding, non-performance of a survey to assess the needs of
users and the lack of a collection development policy. Little wonder
why trained and qualified staff are hardly retained to run the library.
It is however hoped that the current Parliament will revive the
situation.
REFERENCE
Sierra Leone Parliament Library manual, 1986 (Unpublished)
JOHN
ABDUL KARGBO is Senior Lecturer, Institute of Library, Information and
Communication Studies at Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone.
John is interested in varied research work in Library and Information,
Internet, ICTs, Knowledge Management, Indigenous Knowledge, and Oral
Tradition.Mail can be sent to him on johnabdulkargbo@yahoo.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/John_Abdul_Kargbo/210460
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1244160
~ (By John Abdul Kargbo).
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