As under the previous legislation there are six libraries entitled to printed works. The
British Library is entitled to a copy of every printed work published in the United Kingdom. A publisher must send a copy to the British Library within a month of the work being published. The copy sent to the British Library must be of the same quality as the best copies published in the UK at the time. The other five libraries, the
Bodleian Library, the
Cambridge University Library, the
Library of Trinity College, Dublin, the
National Library of Wales and the
National Library of Scotland are not automatically entitled to be sent a copy of the printed works. However, the five libraries have the right to send a publisher a request for a printed work within twelve months of the publication of the work. The publisher must deliver a copy within a month of receipt of the request. The quality of works sent to any of the five libraries must be of the same quality as the largest number of copies of the work published in the UK at the time of the request. Trinity College Dublin is included in the act despite it being outside the UK's jurisdiction, as the act continued the more ancient right bestowed on the college in 1801, when
Ireland was part of
the Union. Each of these five libraries sends requests via the
Agency for the Legal Deposit Libraries, who receives copies of the works and distributes them to the individual libraries. Publishers may also send copies to the Agency in advance of a request being submitted to them. ==Non-print publications==