Receive the weekly sampler of posts and "Resource of the Week".
Subscribe »

Enter your
email address:

My Account »


Bookmark and Share

Testimonial?
If you find ResourceShelf useful, please supply a testimonial »








Home > ResourceBlog > Article

« All ResourceBlog Articles

 

Bookmark and Share   Feed

Monday, 27th October 2008

Resources of the Week: UK and European Factsheets

Resources of the Week: UK and European Factsheets
By Adrian Janes, Information Services Librarian, London Borough of Havering, UK

Editor's note: We are very pleased that Adrian is now a regular contributor to DocuTicker, our sister blog. He adds a steady stream of UK and EU documents, and we know these are useful to researchers on both sides of "the pond." This week, Adrian shares some of his favorite resources.

Following on from the Resource Shelf collections of factsheets derived from US sources, this article will give a taste of some of the similarly high quality documents, on various subjects, which can be obtained from UK and European sites.

The Economic and Social Resource Council gives information on broad areas of life in Britain. Topics include Economic Performance and Development; Governance and Citizenship; and Social Stability and Exclusion.

Taking a wider European view, one of the key ways in which the European Union (EU) fashions policy is from a regional perspective. The overall aim is to make the EU a coherent network of regions without such great economic disparities as currently exist. Inforegio offers an archive of factsheets on regional policy, covering programmes from the late 1990s through to the current funding period of 2007-2013.

In terms of the governance of the EU, there is an excellent collection of periodically updated factsheets from the European Parliament. The headings are How the European Union Works; Citizens' Europe; The Internal Market; Common Policies; Economic and Monetary Union; and the EU's External Relations. Each heading in turn is broken down into detailed accounts of particular aspects of the subject (e.g. within How the European Union Works there are descriptions of each of the main EU institutions).

As noted, factsheets can be found on all manner of subjects. An interesting set is provided by Sport England, in its Promoting Sport Toolkit. This covers all the main aspects of how a sports club might publicise itself. However, what makes this collection particularly useful is the fact that, with a little adaptation, most of it can be employed for needs other than sport. For example, there are explanations of how to write a press release, how to embed Google Maps in a web page, and how to create a website. The Case Studies section explains the characteristics of potential participants in sport or exercise. Again, such information could easily be transposed -- in this case for other sorts of campaigns aimed at British consumers.

Factsheets ostensibly intended for children and young people are often very good basic primers or refreshers for adults too. The Born Free Foundation's Kids' Club has well-illustrated and informative Animal Factsheets on creatures such as lions, basking sharks, polar bears and elephants. In a similar vein, the Young People's Trust for the Environment has a wide range under the two major headings of Animal Facts and Environmental Facts. Although some topics are peculiar to Britain (e.g. Britain's Disappearing Habitats), in the environmental field many necessarily have wider relevance (e.g. Climate Change). Some animals covered, for example bison, are also not native to the UK.

The UK Government's Environment Agency site is truly packed with information, although not all of it comes in the form of a factsheet. The information on Waste is typical, being a mixture of factsheet, webpages and links. In this case, much is aimed at business disposal of waste and the legal obligations involved. One particular area covered is the important WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) Regulations, which in turn derive from the EU's WEEE Directive that came into force in 2007. Factsheets can actually be located for just about any area of the Agency's work, but finding them often involves proceeding through a chain of links.

This is just a sampling of the remarkable amount of worthwhile information, in concise format, located on the websites of trustworthy UK and European sources. Even if people or organisations may not think of their efforts in terms of Open Access, having a Web presence certainly inspires some with the desire to share their knowledge more widely, and factsheets achieve this aim admirably.

Adrian Janes is an Information Services Librarian with the London Borough of Havering in England, where he has particular responsibility for Government and European Information. He has also contributed to Free Pint and FUMSI, and is a contributor to DocuTicker.


Category:

Views: 636




blog comments powered by Disqus

« All ResourceBlog Articles

 

Read about the FreePint FamilyFreePint Family

A family of resources to help information workers be more effective, raise the value of information in their organisations and contribute to success. Read more »


FeedLatest Family Articles:


Click to view the article Quilting big data threads
Thursday, 24th May 2012

Recently I have found myself cooing over visualisation maps (and heat maps) of health and well being resources. The content rich data is overlayed with mapping technologies, and some interesting themes and patterns are emerging.


Click to view the article The fallacy of information overload
Wednesday, 23rd May 2012

A lot of the talk around social media in the last year has been around information overload. Social media has provided us with new and exciting ways to create content. But it has also meant learning new ways to manage and engage with social media tools. Are we teetering on the edge of an information overload precipice?


Click to view the article Information overload: fact, fantasy or filter failure?
Wednesday, 23rd May 2012

Information overload is a figment of your imagination. Or a failure of your filter. Or a symptom of your technological submissiveness. Depends on who you ask.


Click to view the article Newsdesk: tracking millions of pieces of information a day
Tuesday, 22nd May 2012

What if you had to sort through 3.5 million articles and social media posts a day and try to pull out the most relevant items for your organisation? What if you then had to cobble it all together into something readable for your top groups and executives in your organisation?


Click to view the article Alacra Compliance adds managerial oversight
Tuesday, 22nd May 2012

Alacra Compliance saves time by aggregating information from both free and fee-based sources and enabling users to conduct an accurate federated search across these sources (coined “simultaneous search” by Alacra).


All Family Articles »
Family Articles by Category »


Tell us what you're working on,
and we'll talk to you about how FreePint can help »


FreePint Family Testimonials

"Fabulous resource to learn of unique tools and insights. Very useful." Manager, Futures and Forecasting, Virginia, USA

More testimonials »






Subscribe

Subscribe to the ResourceShelf Newsletter and receive the weekly sampler of posts and Resource of the Week.

Find out more »

ResourceShelf sponsored by:

Article Categories

All Article Categories »

Archive

All Archives »