AWARDS AND ACCOLADES
COME BACK ZENODOTUSRoss
Harvey's career is noted in "Come Back Zenodotus.
All is Forgiven" by Tara Brabazon in Times
Higher Education 10 April 2008.
LIANZA Award Ceremony 2006: Ross
Harvey receives his award from LIANZA
President Moira Fraser at the LIANZA Award Ceremony, 9 October 2006
President Moira Fraser at the LIANZA Award Ceremony, 9 October 2006
FELLOWSHIP OF LIANZA
Ross
Harvey was awarded a Fellowship of LIANZA (the Library and
Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa) in 2007. The citation
reads:
"Professor Ross Harvey is one of New Zealand's most distinguished library academics, whose outstanding work as a teacher, researcher, writer and lecturer has benefited not just librarians and libraries in New Zealand but is internationally recognized and valued. His academic career includes that of Lecturer at the New Zealand Library School, Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at Monash University (Melbourne) and Nanyang Technological University (Singapore) and as Associate Professor at Curtin University of Technology (Perth) and University of California (Los Angeles). Ross is currently Professor of Library and Information Management at Charles Sturt University, in New South Wales.
Ross's career is notable for the breadth and quantity of research, teaching and publication undertaken. His research interests include: the preservation of library and archival materials, both print and digital; the history of print culture; early New Zealand and Australian newspapers and the history of music printing and publishing. He is a prolific contributor to electronics and paper journals and has served as editor of many publications, including New Zealand Libraries. Seminal publications by Ross include: Preservation in libraries (1993), Preservation for Australian and New Zealand libraries: principles, strategies and practices for librarians (1993) and Book and print in New Zealand: a guide to print culture in Aotearoa (1997), which he jointly edited.
Despite working overseas since 1987, Ross is a longstanding member of LIANZA and has held roles in the Wellington branch, the Publication Committee and the Cataloguing and Classification Committee. His role as a mentor and teacher to many New Zealand and Australian librarians and the generosity with which he shares his knowledge and often challenging thinking has meant that Ross is held in high esteem in the library profession."
"Professor Ross Harvey is one of New Zealand's most distinguished library academics, whose outstanding work as a teacher, researcher, writer and lecturer has benefited not just librarians and libraries in New Zealand but is internationally recognized and valued. His academic career includes that of Lecturer at the New Zealand Library School, Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at Monash University (Melbourne) and Nanyang Technological University (Singapore) and as Associate Professor at Curtin University of Technology (Perth) and University of California (Los Angeles). Ross is currently Professor of Library and Information Management at Charles Sturt University, in New South Wales.
Ross's career is notable for the breadth and quantity of research, teaching and publication undertaken. His research interests include: the preservation of library and archival materials, both print and digital; the history of print culture; early New Zealand and Australian newspapers and the history of music printing and publishing. He is a prolific contributor to electronics and paper journals and has served as editor of many publications, including New Zealand Libraries. Seminal publications by Ross include: Preservation in libraries (1993), Preservation for Australian and New Zealand libraries: principles, strategies and practices for librarians (1993) and Book and print in New Zealand: a guide to print culture in Aotearoa (1997), which he jointly edited.
Despite working overseas since 1987, Ross is a longstanding member of LIANZA and has held roles in the Wellington branch, the Publication Committee and the Cataloguing and Classification Committee. His role as a mentor and teacher to many New Zealand and Australian librarians and the generosity with which he shares his knowledge and often challenging thinking has meant that Ross is held in high esteem in the library profession."