Melcom International, the European Association of Middle East Libraries, is an academic professional organisation, devoted to promoting co-operation among individuals and institutions in Europe, in particular, and all over the world in general; concerned with all aspects of Middle East librarianship, book collecting, the book trade and publishing.
It pursues its aims without any discrimination on the grounds of race, religion, sex, nationality or political philosophy.
Monday, November 28, 2011
MELCom International
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Alpheios Texts
The Alpheios Project makes open source software for reading and learning languages. It currently supports Arabic, Latin and Ancient Greek texts.
Following texts are available in Arabic:
- al-Aghani (Book of Songs) [Misr Matba'at al-Taqdim. 1905.] Compiled by Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani in the tenth century. A vast collection of poems, ranging from the earliest period to his own and including invaluable biographical notices.
- Arabian Nights [Bulak. 1863. Bulak. 1935.] Compiled over many centuries by many hands.
- Arabic Reading Lessons[Duncan Forbes LL.D. London. Wm. H. Allen & Co. 1864.]
- The Autobiography Of The Constantinopolitan Story-Teller[Joseph Catafago. London. Bernard Quartich. 1877.]
- Selection From The Annals Of Tabari [ed. by. M. J. de Goeje. Leiden. Late E.J. Brill. 1902.] Passages from the work of one of the greatest Islamic historians, Abu Ja'far Muhammad Ibn Jarir al-Tabari, 838-923.
- Selections from Arabic geographical literature[Edited with notes by M. J. de Goeje. Leiden. Late E.J. Brill. 1907]
- Voyages of Ibn Batuta [C. Defrémery et Le Dr. B. M. Sanguinetti. Paris. Imprimerie Nationale. 1879.] A remarkably comprehensive survey of the world in the mid-fourteenth century by the great traveller Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta, 1304-1369.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Open Access Report: Turkey and the Arab Spring
Turkey and the Arab Spring: Implications for Turkish Foreign Policy from a Transatlantic Perspective
Source: Istituto Affari Internazionali
From the Foreword:
The Arab Spring reveals a number of contradictions, constraints as well as opportunities for Turkish foreign policy, all of which are of key relevance both to Turkey and to its transatlantic partners.
In the short-term, the Arab Spring has revealed a number of inconsistencies in and weaknesses of Turkish foreign policy, particularly when mapped against the stances of the European Union (EU) and the United States. These weaknesses and inconsistencies may be viewed as by- products of a more proactive Turkish role in its southern neighborhood. Over the last decade, Turkish foreign policy has become more open to engagement with its neighbors, more eager to resolve regional problems and less secularized in nature. Improved relations with Syria, Iraq, and Iran (as well as Russia, Armenia, and Greece) are evidence of this. But this does not mean that Turkish foreign policy has been purely idealistic and norm driven. The Arab Spring has revealed the inherent tension between the normative and realpolitik dimensions of Turkish foreign policy.
Arab Reform Bulletin changes name to Sada.
ISSN:1942-5805
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Open Access Journal: Alternatives : Turkish Journal of International Relations
Alternatives : Turkish Journal of International Relations is a journal of Yalova University and published by Center for International Conflict Resolution.
e-ISSN: 1303-5525
Published : Istanbul, Turkey
Frequency: Quarterly
Vol. 1, no. 1 (spring 2002)-
Open Access Journal: International Journal of Modern Anthropology
International Journal of Modern Anthropology
ISSN:1737-7374
eISSN:1737-8176
Association Tunisienne d’Anthropologie
Published in : Munastīr, Tunisia
Frequency: Annual
Vol. 1, (2008)-
Friday, November 18, 2011
UNESCO launches Global Open Access Portal
- the critical success factors for effectively implementing Open Access;
- each country’s strengths and opportunities for further developments;
- where mandates for institutional deposits and funding organization have been put into place;
- potential partners at the national and regional level; and
- funding, advocacy, and support organizations throughout the world.
In the Access by Region section one will find links to major Open Access projects in various countries.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Online Cataloging and Digitization for Islamic Manuscripts - RBSC Princeton University
Posting from the blog of Manuscripts Division of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
"Cataloging is now available online for most of the nearly 10,000 Islamic manuscripts in the Manuscripts Division, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library. These extraordinary holdings of Islamic manuscripts constitute the premier collection of Islamic manuscripts in the Western Hemisphere and among the finest in the world. About two-thirds of these were the gift of Robert Garrett, Class of 1897. The online records have been created as part of the Islamic Manuscripts Cataloging and Digitization Project, to improve access to these rich collections and share them worldwide through digital technology. Generous support from the David A. Gardner ’69 Magic Project has funded this ongoing effort. Researchers can now locate manuscripts by searching the Library’s online catalog. The Library has digitized 200 manuscripts in the Princeton Digital Library of Islamic Manuscripts.Over the past two years, the Princeton University Library has created online bibliographic records covering its collections of Arabic manuscripts in the Garrett and New Series. These had previously been only described in three printed catalogs: Descriptive Catalog of the Garrett Collection of Arabic Manuscripts in the Princeton University Library (P. K. Hitti, N. A. Faris, and B. ‘Abd al-Malik), Catalogue of Arabic Manuscripts (Yahuda Section) in the Garrett Collection (R. Mach), and Handlist of Arabic Manuscripts (New Series) in the Princeton University Library (R. Mach and E. Ormsby). Over two-thirds of the Library’s some 10,000 volumes of Islamic manuscripts are described in these catalogs. The catalogs were converted to XML format, and the resulting files were then edited for accuracy and consistency—they now have authorized names, properly romanized titles, and appropriate subject headings. The files were then imported into the Library’s online catalog. Still underway is an effort to link records that describe multi-text volumes.
The Third Series, comprising over 750 volumes in Arabic, Persian, Ottoman Turkish, Urdu, and Jawi, has been completely cataloged, and a finding aid has been created for the William McElwee Miller Collection of Bābī Writings and Other Iranian Texts, 1846–1923, comprised of 47 volumes of writings of the Bāb, Subḥ-i Azal, and Bahá’u’lláh, and their respective followers. The collection also includes Sufi texts and an anti-Islamic polemic writings. The Miller collection has been digitized, largely from microfilm, and is being made available online by the Library as a service to scholarship. File sizes are large (30–590 MB) and may take some time to download.
For more information about the cataloging, contact Denise L. Soufi, Islamic Manuscripts Cataloger, at delsoufi@princeton.edu; for information about the overall project, contact Don C. Skemer, Curator of Manuscripts, at dcskemer@princeton.edu."
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Explore Collections of Islamic Art
A new digital initiative offers online visitors a view of Islamic Art collections at museums from around the world. Over 40 museums in 18 countries are included in Explore Collections of Islamic Art, a resource recently launched by Museum With No Frontiers (MWNF).
Items on view range from paintings and documents to work in metal, ivory, clay and more, dating from the Umayyad dynasty to the late Ottoman period. High resolution photographs allow visitors to see the pieces in detail. The descriptions accompanying many of the collections appear in English and other languages, including Arabic, French, German and Italian.
MWNF plans to expand this resource by adding additional art collections, with objects from museums in Sharjah, Athens and Vienna slated to appear on the site soon.
Photograph: Batha Palace Museum. Image courtesy of the Fine Arts Library, Harvard University.
Contributed by ArchNet Librarian
Open Access Journal: The Washington Review of Turkish & Eurasian Affairs
The Washington Review of Turkish & Eurasian Affairs is an online journal for scholarly discussion of political, social, and economic issues affecting Turkish and Eurasian societies. The journal presents a forum on a broad range of topics and facilitates building, sharing, exchange and dissemination of ideas aimed at both professional and general audiences.
Friday, November 11, 2011
Islamic Manuscripts at Michigan Project Extension
See : http://amirmideast.blogspot.com/2011/08/collaboration-in-cataloging-islamic.html
It is good to know that the project will continue through December 2012.
"The University of Michigan Library’s “Collaboration in Cataloging: Islamic Manuscripts at Michigan” project staff are pleased to announce that our collaborative project to fully catalogue our Islamic Manuscripts Collection has been officially extended through December 2012. This extension will allow us to complete the time-consuming physical examination of those manuscripts that have thus far only been examined in the digital environment by the project cataloguer, Evyn Kropf, and by our generous colleagues around the world.
To date, this extensive digital examination - combined with physical examination efforts on the part of the project cataloguer and her cataloguing assistants, has resulted in 810 of the roughly 880 previously uncatalogued manuscripts being fully or near fully catalogued with detailed, data-rich records in our online library catalogue. 136 of these are in fact manuscripts for which digitization is not possible at this time.
The extension will also allow us to continue receiving and archiving your contributions to enhance the cataloguing as you interact with the manuscripts and their descriptions via the project website ( http://www.lib.umich.edu/islamic ).
We greatly appreciate your support for the project thus far, and would be especially grateful for any further contributions you could make to the cataloguing of the remaining manuscripts, including review of existing descriptive data where available.
These manuscripts still to be catalogued are listed on the project site here:
http://www.lib.umich.edu/islamic/archives/category/ notyetcatalogued
Your expertise remains an invaluable complement to our local cataloguing efforts. Treasures from the collection are still being unearthed, and we appreciate your continued participation in the cataloguing endeavors.
We look forward to seeing your comments posted to the project site and thank you in advance for your valuable contribution to this project.
As always, please feel free to forward any questions, comments and/or suggestions to project staff at islamic.manuscripts@umich.edu,
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Open Access Journal: İslami Araştırmalar Dergisi
ISSN:1300-0373
Türkiye Ekonomik ve Kültürel Dayanışma Vakfı (TEK-DAV)’nın bir yayın organıdır.
Türkiye Ekonomik ve Kültürel Dayanışma Vakfı adına sahibi Prof.Dr. Hikmet AKGÜL (Ankara)
It is a publication of Turkey Economical and Culturel Solidarity (TEK-DAV) Foundation.
The owner is Prof.Dr.Hikmet Akgul on behalf of Turkey Economical and Culturel Solidarity (Ankara)
Recent publications from Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit (AREU)
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Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Counter-narcotics efforts and their effects in Nangarhar and Helmand in the 2010-11 growing season
This paper contrasts the socio-economic and political developments that have taken place in the opium growing provinces ... Read More
- October 2011
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Rethinking Rural Poverty Reduction in Afghanistan
This policy note draws on the findings of AREU's Afghanistan Livelihood Trajectories project. It calls for a re-examinat... Read More
- October 2011
- Download Now
Legacies of Conflict: Healing Complexes and Moving Forwards in Ghazni Province
The third written in the series, this paper presents findings from an urban area of Ghazni City and a rural community in... Read More
- October 2011
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Legacies of Conflict: Healing Complexes and Moving Forwards in Bamiyan Province
The second written in the series, this paper presents findings from an urban area of Bamiyan City and a rural community ... Read More
- October 2011
- Download Now