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LISA Manual
Introduction
Library
and Information Services in Astronomy (LISA) is a series of scientific
meetings for librarians and scientists that aims to provide a platform
to discuss the state of the art of information maintenance, retrieval,
delivery, and preservation and to learn from invited experts the directions
in which our profession is moving. LISA conferences cover such diverse
topics as organization and management of books, journals, and specialized
materials; electronic publishing (note that astronomy is a leader in the
field); bibliographic and full text databases of astronomical literature;
reports on collaborative projects.
Between
1988 and 2002, four LISA conferences were held:
- LISA I: July 1988, Washington
DC
- LISA II: May 1995, Munich,
Germany
- LISA III: May 1998,
Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
- LISA IV: July 2002,
Prague, Czech Republic
These are all
locations with active and respected astronomical institutions.
Typical
attendants of LISA conferences are astronomy librarians, persons in charge
of small departmental libraries, astronomers with an interest in libraries,
computer scientists working with large data sets, either bibliographic
or scientific, and publishers of professional astronomy journals. Generally
speaking, the target audience is quite small: probably less than 400 librarians
and interested astronomers world-wide. LISA conferences are usually attended
by 100-120 participants.
Not all participants
are professional librarians, and many of them have never attended an international
professional conference. However, a strong network exists among astronomy
librarians which can diminish the barrier some reluctant attendees may
feel.
Organizers
of LISA conferences have always aimed at attracting attendees from a large
variety of countries because an international range of participants widens
the scope and value of the conference. However, it also brings special
problems/considerations:
-
resources
/ funding must be available to individuals to attend (in particular
those from resource-poor countries)
-
visa-related
problems may arise
-
as
English is the conference language, non-native English speakers may
have limited capabilities in terms of administrative procedures (e.g.
registering), comprehension of distributed information, manuscript
preparation and submission for the proceedings and social interactions.
Conference organizers must always be alert for indications that people
are having language difficulties (see also SOC:
Special consideration: conference language).
- organizers and administrators
can be located geographically far apart from each other. In order to
nevertheless guarantee a successful meeting, communication (mostly by
e-mail) among the organizers must work extremely well.
Organizing
a LISA conference is a lot of fun and a great experience. Don't be intimidated
by all the details that require attention. This manual has been compiled
by previous LISA organizers. It contains lessons learned -- sometimes
the hard way, when things didn't work the way we intended them to, and
sometimes through success. It is long and detailed because we tried to
be comprehensive in order to make it easier for future organizers and
to help them avoid some mistakes we made.
The following sections are
covered:
- Preliminary
Organizing Committee (POC)
- Scientific
Organizing Committee (SOC)
- Local
Organizing Committee (LOC)
- Friends
of LISA (FOL)
- Conference
location
- Funding
- Publicity
- Conference
program
- Proceedings
These topics are listed in
the index bar on the left-hand side and can be accessed from every page.
The section New Ideas provides some
suggestions for future organizers which we think are worthwhile trying.
However, they have never been realized, so we don't know whether or not
they will work.
Each section starts with a
brief overview, e.g. the main tasks
of a committee or the most important issues to consider, and then provides
more detailed information on the individual
topics. Specific sample documents
are provided throughout the sections they refer to, more general
documents can be found at the end of each chapter. If issues
are handled by two or more committees cooperatively, links
across the manual are available. For SOC and LOC, checklists
are provided; they were derived from experience gained during
previous conferences and hopefully will help committees to get an overview
of (and adhere to) timelines.
It was a pleasure to compile
this manual, and we do hope that it will be of help to future organizers.
If you are among them, please don't forget to update these guidelines
after the meeting (via e-mail to esolib@eso.org,
see also Updates)
by adding your experiences, expertise and suggestions for improvement.
Related documents:
LISA's
history:
LISA
IV concluding remarks on "LISA Meetings, Past and Present"
by Brenda Corbin, 2003
Conference
Rationale:
LISA
II Scientific rationale and draft program, submitted to IAU
LISA
III Letter to SLA
LISA
Manual History:
version 1.0,
April 2004
version 1.1, October 2004
version 1.2, April 2006 (LISA V sample docs and ADA note added (LOC)
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