Garibyan / McLeish / Paschoud | Access and Identity Management for Libraries | Buch | 978-1-78330-310-6 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

Garibyan / McLeish / Paschoud

Access and Identity Management for Libraries

Controlling Access to Online Information

Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN: 978-1-78330-310-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis


Practical guidance to ensuring that your users can access and personalise the online resources they are entitled to use with the minimum of fuss.

With the rapid increase in the use of electronic resources in libraries, managing access to online information is an area many librarians struggle with. Managers of online information wish to implement policies about who can access the information and under what terms and conditions but often they need further guidance.

Written by experts in the field, this practical book is the first to explain the principles behind access management, the available technologies and how they work. This includes an overview of federated access management technologies, such as Shibboleth, that have gained increasing international recognition in recent years. This book provides detailed case studies describing how access management is being implemented at organizational and national levels in the UK, USA and Europe, and gives a practical guide to the resources available to help plan, implement and operate access management in libraries.
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Zielgruppe


Professional Practice & Development

Weitere Infos & Material


Foreword - Clifford Lynch 1. What is access management and why do libraries do it? Historical role of libraries in managing access to information The role of libraries in the 21st century The history of access management of online information resources The role of e-commerce in library access management The ‘birth’ of access management principles – Clifford Lynch’s white paper 2. Electronic resources: public and not so public Managing access to electronic collections How and where users may want to access e-resources What needs to be protected, and why Commercially produced resources that need to be protected Publicly available information that may also require access management Publishers and licensing issues Library management of licences Summary References 3. Principles and definitions of identity and access management Introduction Managing access?. or identities?. or both? The business relationships The processes of identity and access management Identifying the person using a resource – or not Obligations to protect personal data about users Summary References 4. Current access management technologies IP address Barcode patterns Proxy servers Shared passwords User registration with publishers Federated access Summary 5. Authentication technologies ‘Something you know, something you have, or something you are’ Authentication technologies overview Authentication by third parties Choosing an authentication system 6. Authorization based on physical location: how does the internet know where I am? Introduction Domains and domain names (How) is all this governed? IP addresses IP spoofing Benefits and problems of using IP address-based licensing Summary References 7. Authorization based on user identity or affiliation with a library: who you are? or what you do? Basing access on identity, or on affiliation with a library Role-based authorization Matching roles against licence conditions Benefits of role-based authorization Summary References 8. Federated access: history, current position and future developments Single sign-on and the origins of federated access management The development of standards Federated access in academia Future of federated access References 9. How to choose access management and identity management products and services Introduction Identity management and access management solution capabilities Establishing requirements with suppliers Asserting library requirements in a wider-scale system procurement Implementation options The range of access and identity management products Conclusion References 10. Internet access provided by (or in) libraries Introduction Wired access Wireless access Public access issues Summary References 11. Library statistics Why libraries collect electronic resource usage statistics Challenges in collecting electronic resource usage data How libraries collect usage data Concluding thoughts References 12. The business case for libraries Introduction Key benefits of quality identity management Designing an IdM project Putting together a business case Conclusion References and further reading Afterword References Appendix 1: Case studies Extending access management to business and community engagement activities at Kidderminster College, UK Moving from Athens to Shibboleth at University College London, UK Online reciprocal borrowing registration for Western Australian University Libraries Library and IT collaboration: driving strategic improvements to identity and access management practices and capabilities Managing affiliated users with federated identity management at UNC-Chapel Hill, USA Tilburg University and the SURFfederatie, the Netherlands Delivering access to resources in a joint academic and public library building Single sign-on across the USMAI Consortium, USA Appendix 2: A White Paper on Authentication and Access Management Issues in Cross-organizational Use of Networked Information Resources


Masha Garibyan began her involvement in access management in 2004 when she joined the London School of Economics Library Projects Team. She has been involved in several access management projects.

Simon McLeish is Resource Discovery Architect at the Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, and previously worked at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) and as an independent IT professional, specializing in Identity and Access Management.

John Paschoud has been an IT professional since 1972. As Projects Manager at the LSE Library he led a series of projects which identified and established the technologies for federated access that are now most widely used by academic libraries.


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