Status : Verified
Personal Name | Sandoval, Eunice S. |
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Resource Title | A citation analysis of the Philippine Law Journal on foreign and international law sources (2000-2012) towards a collection-related library approach of the University of the Philippines Law Library |
Date Issued | 23 March 2013 |
Abstract | A law librarian should be able to provide the most effective materials to answer user needs. In a time where library budgets are getting smaller and library materials are getting more expensive, a law librarian should have a collection-oriented library approach to quantitatively assess the strength of his/her law library collection. One of the methods of this approach is citation analysis. Citation analysis uses citations found from published sources, such as journals, to determine which materials are frequently cited by or referred to by UP Law Library users. It is a method that could give insight on how to build an effective collection-oriented law library collection and to determine where the users frequently get their resources. The source of citations of this study is articles citing foreign and international law sources from the Philippine Law Journal (PLJ) from 2000 to 2012. The gathered data were analyzed through descriptive statistics. Encoding and analysis of data were done through the use of Microsoft Excel, a spreadsheet software and SPSS Statistics, a statistical analysis program. The study yielded 4,335 citations from 218 articles from the period of 2000 to 2012. The major findings of the study are the following: (1) the fields of Philippine Law that cited the most foreign and international law sources were: International Law with 1,118 citations (25.79%) Constitutional Law with 502 citations (11.58%) Intellectual Property Law with 310 citations (7.15%), and Family Law with 264 citations (6.09%) (2) the most predominant countries of publication were: United States with 3,062 citations (72.80%) United Kingdom with 585 citations (13.90%) Netherlands with 157 citations (3.70%), and Germany with 118 citations (2.80%) (3) the most predominantly used language was the English language with 4,239 citations (97.80%) (4) the most predominantly used formats were: Journal articles with 2,051 citations (47.30%) books with 1,316 citations (30.40%), and book ar |
Degree Course | Bachelor of Library and Information Science |
Language | English |
Keyword | Bibliographical citations; Law periodicals; Philippine Law Journal; University of the Philippines Diliman Law Library; International law |
Material Type | Thesis/Dissertation |
Preliminary Pages
Category : F - Regular work, i.e., it has no patentable invention or creation, the author does not wish for personal publication, there is no confidential information.
Access Permission : Open Access