Skip Navigation
    
0
ANU Home | Helpdesk | Staff | Students | Division of Information | UniSafe
The Australian National University
Library
Scholarly Information Services



STAFF PROFILE

Vic Elliott

Vic Elliot

MA (Hons 1st class) in English, Victoria University of Wellington
MLitt, University of Oxford.
 

Director, Scholarly Information Services
& University Librarian


Contents

Contact Information | Role | Professional Activities


Contact Information

Office: Level 3, JB Chifley Building (15)
Address:
Mr Vic Elliott
Director, Scholarly Information Services & University Librarian
Division of Information
JB Chifley Building (Number 15),
The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200
Telephone: 02 6125 2003
Fax: 02 6125 6662
Email: Librarian@anu.edu.au

Executive Assistant: Mrs Moyra McNamara
Telephone:
02 6125 2981
Email address: Moyra.McNamara@anu.edu.au


Role

Director, Scholarly Information Services & University Librarian



Professional Activities

Positions held in Professional Associations

Member, Executive Committee, Council of Australian University Librarians (CAUL).
Chair, CAUL Electronic Information Resources Committee (CEIRC), 2000-2001.
Member, Editorial Board, Australian Academic and Research Libraries (ALIA).
Former President, New Zealand Library and Information Association (NZLIA)
Joint Convener, ALIA/NZLIA Joint Conference, Wellington, 1994.

Related Professional Experience

University Librarian, University of Tasmania, 1997-2002
University Librarian, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Formerly of Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, and
Brunel University Library, United Kingdom.

As a member of the AVCC National Site Licence Negotiating Team,
Participating in two innovative DEST-funded projects:

  1. Australian Academic and Research Library Network (AARLIN).
  2. Collaborative Online Learning and Information Services (COLIS) project.
Top

Remote login ("Reverse proxy")

If you are away from the ANU, this login will allow you to access restricted material as though you were still on campus at Acton. This is sometimes called the "reverse proxy".