College and Research Libraries


By THOMAS R. CASSIDY 

United Nations Documents in the 
Medium, Sized University-
Nuisance or Necessity? 

Mr. Cassidy is reference librarian, Uni-
versity of Oregon. 

T HE WORLD, as it grows older, is be-coming ever more garrulous. By the 
middle of 1947, only two years after it had 
come into existence, the United Nations 
had spoken-and printed-more words 
than its predecessor, the League of Nations, 
produced in a quarter of a century. Today, 
the General Assembly by itself is responsi-
ble for some 1800 documents, ranging from 
one page to several thousands of .pages. 
The Security council has issued about 2000, 
the Economic and Social · Council I goo 
more. Minor divisions of the larger agen- · 
cies-commi ttees, subcommittees, drafting 
subcommittees, commissions and conferences, 
permanent and temporary-have yet other 
thousands to their credit, in some instances 
nearly as many as the parent body. 

Much of this mass of wordage is given 
over to matters in which few people are in-
terested, to questions of parliamentary pro-
cedure, to the endless, confused maneuvers 
of international politics, to the clumsy legis-
lative machinery of fifty-nine nations with 
fifty-nine separate sets of interests and 
nearly as many languages in which to voice 
them. Indeed, most United Nations docu-
ments have the single purpose of straighten-
ing out some aspect of this confusion. Of 
this genre are such titles as, "Procedure 
for handling items .proposed for insertion in 
the provisional agenda of the Council by 

APRIL, 1952 

Specialized Agencies and non-governmental 
organizations," "Memorandum, draft reso-
lutions, draft protocols and annex on trans-
fer to the United Nations of functions and 
powers exercised by the League of Nations 
under the Conventions on the traffic in 
women and children, and in obscene pub-
lications," "Summary report of financial 
implications of resolutions involving ex-
penditures from United Nations funds." 
These documents make up a detailed record 
of the United Nations at work and in this 
respe~t they are valuable, but their applica-
tiod~i~ Jimi ted and their use confined to 

··I~ 

the specialized worker following a single 
line of research. 

There are, however, scattered among 
these publications of limited value, a great 
.many reports and studies of economic and 
social matters which are international in 
scope, timely and of which fairly constant 
use can be made. Among these, to give 
only a few random samples, · are studies of 
housing, of communications, of compara-
tive marriage laws, of drug consumption, of 
the development of backward countries, of 
foreign exchange, of international law. 
Within this material-and in many libraries 
only within this material-may be found 
such varied information as the extent of 
postwar railroad construction in South 
Africa, the current production of iron ore 
in Mexico, the death rate in India, or the 
main causes of discrimination. 

All universities have some coyrses in eco-

107 



nomics, geography, history, political science, 
sociology and law; and in all these fields 
United Nations publications provide ex-
cellent source material. But not all uni-
versities will be able to make . the same 
amount of use of this material. A large 
university with a great many students and a 
correspondingly well-rounded faculty nat-
urally lends itself to a greater degree of 
specialization than a small or medium-sized 
university. Where in a large university 
there may be, as there is at New York U ni-
versity, a whole group of courses built 
around the study of the United Nations, a 
smaller institution will usually have to con-
fine itself to a single class on international 
organization. 

This, of course, affects the library. The 
library of a large university can much more 
easily provide the money, space and person-
nel for processing, storing and making 
available all the thousands of United N a-
tions documents. Probably such a library 
will even be one of the thirty-two United 
Nations depositories, receiving at no charge 
all but restricted documents. On the other 
hand, the smaller university library, even if 
it were able to bind, shelve and index the 
complete body of United Nations publica-
tions, would find that demand was not 
great enough to justify the required expense 
of money and space. 

The problem is, therefore, that while the 
medium-sized university urgently needs 
much of the material published by the 
United Nations, this material is too bulky 
and requires too much handling to warrant 
its complete acquisition. The solution, of 
course, is a policy of limited acquisition, a 
policy which is at once favored and made 
tantalizingly difficult by United Nations 
publication practices. 

This is true because United Nations pub-
lications (excluding periodicals) are issued 
in three different formats-mimeographed 

documents, the Official Records~ and the 
publications of the Secretariat. Each of 
these divisions duplicates a large amount of 
the material in the two others, and each 
contains much that appears in no other 
place. 

The mimeographed documents are the 
most inclusive, containing all published ma-
terial except the most lengthy and impor-
tant studies and reports. Since they are is-
sued when needed by the various organs, 
they are also the most up to date. How-
ever, because of their number, because each 
document appears separately and because 
they make use of a poor quality of paper, 
they are also the most fragile and the most 
generally difficult and expeDsive to handle. 
They must be sorted and arranged accord-
ing to a fairly complex and not always con-
sistent system of symbols, they must be 

·bound and some method of indexing them 
must be found. Finally, they require the 
greatest amount of space and contain the 
largest number of non-utilizable documents. 
If they are not to be tied up and put away 
in some basement stack to rot or allowed to 
become mixed-up piles of dog-eared papers, 
they will require the "full time services of 
at least one trained librarian and several 
assistants-more than the medium-sized li-
brary can allot to such a job. 

The Official Records are the printed ac-
counts, either verbatim or summary, of the 
meetings of the chief deliberative bodies 
which make up the United Nations and of 
certain of their permanent and ad hoc com-
mittees. These are issued in five sets-for 
the General Assembly, the Security Coun-
cil, the Economic and Social Council, the 
Trusteeship Council and the Atomic En-
ergy Commission. (Publications of the 
International Court of Justice are not a 
part of the 0 fficial Records and, being few 
in number and of a specialized, legal na-
ture, need not be taken up here.) In addi-

108 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



tion, many of the more important mimeo-
graphed documents are reprinted in the 
0 fficial Records.) usually as supplements or 
annexes, occasionally as a part of the 
records of the meetings. In format the 
0 fficial Records are much more permanent 
than the mimeographed documents, less 
space is required for their shelving, and 
their arrangement is simple. A little later 
we can consider a few of the difficulties they 
present. 

/ The surveys, reports · and bibliographies 
/ prepared by the Secretariat are the most 

useful of all United Nations publications 
for general reference work in questions in-
volving either United Nations activities or 
world social and economic conditions. 
Since these are issued in book or pamphlet 
form and with a ready-lpade subject classi-
ficatipn which divides them into fifteen 
broad categories, and since they are com-
paratively few in number, they offer no 
special problems. 

Acquisition of the two latter types of 
United Nations publications will probably 
be as much as the library of the medium-
sized university can manage. As far a~ 
space and expense are concerned, this is a 
good compromise, but as a complete solu-
tion it has several major weaknesses. For 
one thing, the 0 fficial Records contain 
many of the important documents, but they 
do not contain all of them. Again, the 
Economic and Social Council's resolution 
to send a group of experts to South America 
for a study of the effects of chewing coca 
leaves may, for instance, be reprinted in 
three different parts of the 0 fficial Records, 
while a much more frequently cited analy-
sis of comparative methods of compiling 

been printed because of lack of funds and 
time. Someday, of course, these will be 
available, but that is no help when a docu-
ment they are going to contain is needed 
now. 

But perhaps the greatest disadvantage of 
using the Official Records as a substitute 
for a set of mimeographed documents is the 
difficulty of locating a document which has 
been reprinted there. Nearly all citations 
to United Nations publications are made to 
mimeographed documents: except for the 
Secretariat publications and those of the 
committee reports w~ich appear in indi-
vidual Official Records supplements, refer-
ences are usually made only to document 
symbols. Thus, for instance, "Establish-
ment of relationship between the United 
Nations and the Universal Postal Union" 
may be cited in Publications of Interna-
tional Organizations simply as E / 278, with 
no indication that it has been reprinted in 
an annex to the records of the Economic 
and Social Council. And, since the Of-
ficial Records do not reproduce documents 
in accordance with the numerical order of 
the symbols, if E / 278 is wanted, all one can 
do is to hunt for it, more or less blindly 
and with no certainty that it has ever been 
reprinted. There have been published, it is 
true, a few check lists which aid in this 
search, but they are far from complete and 
are particularly weak on documents issued 
by committees, commissions and other 
minor bodies. 

For the past several sessions, however, 
the task of digging material out of the 
0 fficial Rec.ords has been growing less diffi-
cult. The General ASsembly, for example, 
now begins its annexes with location lists 

vital statistics, since it was considered by a of its documents and those of its commit-
commission rather than the whole Council, tees. Somewhat similar lists are also being 
never goes beyond the mimeographed stage. put out by the Economic and Social Coun-
There are also parts of the 0 fficial Records cil and the Trusteeship Council. The 
-a great many of them-which have not / Ul]ited Nations Documents Index, pub-

APRIL, 1952 109 



lished since January of 1950, also has a 
section devoted to republications. These 
and other improvements are still no substi-
tute for the knowledge gained by experience 
in using the 0 fficial Records, nor will they 
be of much value without such experience. 
Nevertheless, they are indicative of the 
United Nations' willingness to disseminate 
knowledge of its work as broadly as possi-
ble. They help to make it possible for 
United Nations documentation, in spite of 

its bulk and complexity, to be fitted into a 
medium-sized · library without demanding 
a disproportionate slice of budget and 
stacks. And even a limited collection of · 
these documents, aided when necessary by 
interlibrary loan from one of the depository 
libraries, can be an extremely valuable pos-
session at a time when world wide under-
standing and knowledge are needed more 
than they have ever been before. 

Union Library Catalogue: Services, 1950. Quo Vadis? 
(Continued from page 106) 

the additional task of supplying these mis-
cellaneous services to the public and in-
dustry at large? We doubt it. We feel 
that the very growth of these services 
within the four regions justifies their con-
tinuance and emphasizes the importance of 
their consideration in whatever local, 
regional or other library planning is under-
taken. 

In conclusion, this study points to a 
definite need for more careful attention to 
the potentials and values of the regional 
centers to the public, college, research and . 
industrial libraries within the area by the. 
libraries themselves. The centers have told , 
and retold their story; they have performed 
their services in peace and in war, in depres-
sion an'd · in inflation. They have set the 
pace in almost every instance. Are libraries 
leading the way to better centers, or are 
they accepting this manna as something 
quite within the ordinary? How do new 
staff members come to know and use the 
bibliographical centers? Do they visit the 
center, learn from a librarian who under-
stands and uses the center frequently, or are 

they merely told to "call this number if you 
don't know the answer." 

It is imperative that a concrete program . 
of better, even if somewhat fewer, services 
to a larger number of institutions and 
individuals be resolved. Greater coopera-
tion among librarians and business men in_ 
the activities of the regional centers should 
result in progress in solving the current 
financial needs. Where industry learns that 
bibliographical services pay in business 
profits, their financial support is forth-
coming. If interlibrary loan is the primary 
need, such services should be implemented 
and expedited. If industry has immediate 
need for technical materials, cooperation 
should be fostered to produce them 
promptly. If the National Union Catalog 
is to be expanded, ·what other libraries 
should be included? These are but a few 
of the problems to be considered, and they 
vary from center to center. There ·is a 
definite need for more community partici-
pation in the planning, or mediocrity will 
certainly result. N O'Y_, is the time for con-
certed action. 

110 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES