Online Access to Consolidated Information on Serials for the Middle East (OACIS)
What is OACIS?
Initiated by Yale University Library,  OACIS creates a publicly and freely available electronic union list of serials  and journals from or about the Middle East.  The mission of OACIS is to improve access to Middle Eastern serials in  libraries in the United States,  Europe, and the Middle East, and to make scholarly literature from, and about,  the Middle East widely and easily available to  scholars around the world.
The OACIS system (http://oacis.bibalex.org) was launched in  November 2003 and currently comprises 19 partners (including 14 American, one  German, one Jordanian, one Syrian, one Lebanese and Bibliotheca Alexandrina),  42 languages (with the top collections in Arabic, Persian and Turkish) and over  38,500 unique title records.
BA's role
  BA has been acting as a major Middle East partner in OACIS since August 2004. BA  catalog records have been incorporated in the OACIS catalog with quarterly  updates since January 2005. A number of digitized documents have been  integrated into the OACIS system through a Digital Viewer. BA also directed a  digitization discovery project which has helped significantly in planning for  future online delivery of journal article content through OACIS. Scanning,  processing and OCRing of BA and Yale University Library copyright-free journal  volumes (Arabic, English and French) has also been taking place.
In January 2005, a mirror site of the  system was launched at BA. The mirror site enhances access to the OACIS  database in the Middle East region and serves  as a backup to the original. Designing and implementing an Arabic web interface  for the collection has also been completed.
Technical details
  In late April 2005, two software engineers  from BA joined Yale as interns for one month each, during which:
  - Input forms for       two Middle Eastern libraries, partners in the project, were implemented. The libraries did not own       Library Information Systems (LIS). Therefore, the forms helped them add or       update their records to the OACIS database, and helped them understand and       work with Marc 21 format.
- Additional       input forms were implemented in the aforementioned libraries for metadata       of digitized journals, for which automatic updating was implemented as       well.
- The Digital       Viewer was enhanced for better display of digitized books and navigation.       Searching within the contents of the digitized books was also implemented.
The project ended September 2005 with a  commitment from all partners to regularly update the database on a quarterly  basis. The project’s sequel is the Arabic and Middle Eastern Electronic Library  (AMEEL) project,  which commenced at the end of 2005.
Website:http://oacis.bibalex.org
                        
                        
               
 
      
                
                
        
        
             
            
                 Last updated on 29 Nov 2012