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- Functionally, librarians may think of this as a "shelf location". Examples might include stacks, reserves, closed materials.
- Each location must have at least one service point associated, and designated as primary.
- Locations may also have additional service points that are non-primary.
- When an item is returned at another service point that is not associated to the location, it is put in transit to the primary service point.
- When an item is checked in at a non-primary service point, it is NOT put in transit to the primary service point.
- The four pieces of the location hierarchy are available criteria to use in circulation rules.
In addition, FOLIO has concepts of permanent location, temporary location, and effective location.
- Holdings and Items may have permanent and/or temporary location values.
- See Effective Location Logic for more information on how Effective Locations are calculated.
- Circulation rules will use an item's Effective Location when applying business logic to transactions.
Permissions
Describe permissions that apply to the app or section you are outlining. Include default permissions and permission sets; dependencies that exist with permissions in other apps/parts of FOLIO.
Describe action-based permissions (if any) that apply to the app or section you are outlining, including permission dependencies and associated functional workflows.
Describe what each permission does, in language accessible to non-IT library staff.
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