Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: sources and methodologies for the history of libraries in the modern era
- 1 Libraries and the modern world
- Part One Enlightening the Masses: the Public Library as Concept and Reality
- Part Two The Voluntary Ethic: Libraries of our Own
- Part Three Libraries for National Needs: Library Provision in the Public Sphere in the Countries of the British Isles
- Part Four The Nation's Treasury: Britain's National Library as Concept and Reality
- Part Five The Spirit of Enquiry: Higher Education and Libraries
- Part Six The Rise of Professional Society: Libraries for Specialist Areas
- 31 Libraries and information for specialist areas
- 32 The scientist and engineer and their need for information
- 33 Information in the service of medicine
- 34 Lawyers and their libraries
- 35 Spreading the Word: religious libraries in the ages of enthusiasm and secularism
- 36 Government and parliamentary libraries
- 37 Company libraries
- 38 Rare-book libraries and the growth of humanities scholarship
- Part Seven The Trade and its Tools: Librarians and Libraries in Action
- Part Eight Automation Pasts, Electronic Futures: the Digital Revolution
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
36 - Government and parliamentary libraries
from Part Six - The Rise of Professional Society: Libraries for Specialist Areas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: sources and methodologies for the history of libraries in the modern era
- 1 Libraries and the modern world
- Part One Enlightening the Masses: the Public Library as Concept and Reality
- Part Two The Voluntary Ethic: Libraries of our Own
- Part Three Libraries for National Needs: Library Provision in the Public Sphere in the Countries of the British Isles
- Part Four The Nation's Treasury: Britain's National Library as Concept and Reality
- Part Five The Spirit of Enquiry: Higher Education and Libraries
- Part Six The Rise of Professional Society: Libraries for Specialist Areas
- 31 Libraries and information for specialist areas
- 32 The scientist and engineer and their need for information
- 33 Information in the service of medicine
- 34 Lawyers and their libraries
- 35 Spreading the Word: religious libraries in the ages of enthusiasm and secularism
- 36 Government and parliamentary libraries
- 37 Company libraries
- 38 Rare-book libraries and the growth of humanities scholarship
- Part Seven The Trade and its Tools: Librarians and Libraries in Action
- Part Eight Automation Pasts, Electronic Futures: the Digital Revolution
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
Summary
In terms of academic and historical study the Civil Service is like a painting, a small part of which is brilliantly lit, but the rest barely perceived among the shadows. Great attention has been paid to the policy advice role played by senior ‘mandarins’, while the much vaster administrative and support functions underpinning the edifice remain largely ignored. Peter Hennessey's magisterial Whitehall has only two extremely incidental references to government libraries in over 850 pages. Not a single article on departmental libraries (which must be distinguished from the centrally funded ‘national libraries’) has appeared in the journal Library History. Until much more research is undertaken the conclusions and even some of the facts given below must remain rather tentative. There is at present little evidence on some important issues, such as the extent to which posts were professionalised before 1939 or the entry of women (who formed some 70% of professional staff by 1993) into government libraries.
Another major difficulty arises from the frequent reorganisation of Whitehall departments (e.g. the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works was renamed five times in thirty years) and their complex internal structures (thus the Ministry of Defence had some seventy individual libraries in the early 1990s). The sheer diversity of experience between government libraries thus prevents more than the crudest analytical generalisation in the space available. Likewise our evidence as to the deployment of technology and levels of service provision is often contradictory. For example, the Foreign Office (FO) librarian preferred to use a quill pen until his death in 1943, even though steel tipped ones had been available from the 1820s.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland , pp. 482 - 493Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006