International Standard Music Number (ISMN).
Unger, Carolin
Some news from the International ISMN Agency: The next Annual
General Meeting will take place in September 2014 in Istanbul by kind
invitation of the Turkish ISMN agency which belongs to the Ministry of
Culture. For the first time we will have kind of a joint venture since
the three major publication standards will convene consecutively in one
week at one place: ISMN, ISBN and ISSN. Many of the delegates of one
standard are also responsible for one or both other standards. So we
expect some synergetic effects.
We currently have 56 members. One of the newest is the United
States with the Library of Congress maintaining the agency. Susan Vita,
Mary Wedgewood, and their colleagues of the Music Department organised
last year's splendid ISMN Panel meeting. They showed us in how
short a time they had established the agency and developed an impressive
website which offers publishers an easy way to apply for numbers and at
the same time to deliver metadata of the publications, which is of great
use for the library work.
Other countries recently showed interest to join the ISMN system:
For example Austria, a country that is so far covered by the German ISMN
agency. From South America we have Costa Rica, Ecuador and Guatemala
that consider a membership. And also China is a longstanding prospect.
They already translated and published the ISO Standard, so we hope it
won't take very long now.
As every five years, the ISMN Standard will come up for systematic
review soon. If a ballot proves that the ISO member countries are in
favour of a revision a working group will be formed towards this end.
This would give us the possibility to update the standard a bit where
necessary.
We plan to join the Linked Content Coalition (LCC), consisting of
several stakeholders not only from international SC9 standards, like
ISNI, ISTC, ISBN, ISRC, DOI but also other interested parties as
EDItEUR, NISO, CISAC and more. LCC will try to improve the
interoperability of these standards by linking them which is not an easy
task. But the aim is to gain a better efficiency in the use of
publication standards in general.
Carolin Unger
ISMN Coordinator