BRITISH LIBRARIANSHIP AND INFORMATION WORK 2001–2005
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BRITISH LIBRARIANSHIP AND INFORMATION WORK 2001–2005
Edited by J. H. BOWMAN University College London, UK
© J. H. Bowman 2007 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher. J. H. Bowman has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the editor of this work. Published by Ashgate Publishing Limited Gower House Croft Road Aldershot Hampshire GU11 3HR England
Ashgate Publishing Company Suite 420 101 Cherry Street Burlington, VT 05401-4405 USA
Ashgate website: http://www.ashgate.com British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data British librarianship and information work 2001-2005 1. Libraries - Great Britain 2. Library science - Great Britain I. Bowman, J. H. 027'.041'09049 ISSN 1752-556X ISBN: 978-0-7546-4778-2
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Antony Rowe Ltd, Chippenham, Wiltshire.
Contents Contributors Preface 1 National libraries Stephen Bury
vii xi 1
2 Public libraries Richard Ward
12
3 From social inclusion to community cohesion John Pateman and John Vincent
29
4 Community information Helen Leech
50
5 University libraries Jeremy Atkinson and Steve Morgan
57
6 Colleges of further education Andrew Eynon
82
7 Services to children, young people and schools Lucy Gildersleeves
90
8 Government libraries Peter Griffiths
109
9 Learned, professional and independent libraries Mary Nixon with Carol Allison
121
10 Library and information history Peter Hoare
138
11 Rare book librarianship and historical bibliography K. E. Attar
149
12 Art libraries Erica Foden-Lenahan
173
13 Music libraries Pamela Thompson
188
14 Media libraries Katharine Schöpflin and Richard Nelsson
198
British librarianship and information work 2001–2005
vi
15 Map libraries Robert Parry
214
16 Local studies Ian Jamieson
231
17 Archives Elizabeth Shepherd
248
18 British and European Union official publications Howard Picton and others
266
19 Patents Stephen Adams
299
20 The book trade Iain Stevenson
312
21 The internet and libraries Phil Bradley
328
22 Education and training Marion Huckle and Margaret Watson
340
23 Research David Nicholas
360
24 Library buildings Michael Dewe and Alan J. Clark
372
25 Cooperation Linda Berube
390
26 Marketing Linda M. Smith
400
27 Information literacy David Streatfield and Sharon Markless
413
28 Library management systems Lucy A. Tedd
431
29 Cataloguing J. H. Bowman
454
30 Classification and subject organization and retrieval Vanda Broughton
467
31 Indexing and abstracting J. H. Bowman
489
32 Preservation Alison Walker
501
Index
519
Contributors Stephen Adams, MRSC, CChem, MCLIP Director, Magister Ltd, Reading Carol Allison, BSc, DipLib, MA, MCLIP Librarian, Nottingham Subscription Library Jeremy Atkinson, BSc, MPhil, DipLib, MCLIP Director of Learning and Corporate Support Services, University of Glamorgan K. E. Attar, BA, PhD, MA Rare Books Librarian, Senate House Library, University of London Linda Berube, BA, MA, MS, MCLIP Co-East Regional Manager J. H. Bowman, MA, MA, PhD, MCLIP, FRSA Lecturer in Library and Information Studies, School of Library, Archive & Information Studies, University College London Phil Bradley Internet Consultant Vanda Broughton, MA Lecturer in Library and Information Studies, School of Library, Archive & Information Studies, University College London Stephen Bury, MA, MA, PhD, DipLib, FCLIP Head of European and American Collections, British Library David Butcher, BA, MCLIP Editor, Refer Alan J. Clark Co-ordinator, Designing Libraries Project, University of Wales Aberystwyth Michael Dewe Library Buildings Consultant Andrew Eynon, BA, Dip LIS, MCLIP, PhD Library Resource Manager, Coleg Llandrillo Cymru; Chair of CoFHE
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Erica Foden-Lenahan, MA, MCLIP Acquisitions Librarian, Tate Library & Archive Lucy Gildersleeves, MA, MCLIP Lecturer in Library and Information Studies, School of Library, Archive & Information Studies, University College London Peter Griffiths, BA, FCLIP Head, Information Services Unit, Home Office Peter Hoare, MA, FSA, HonFCLIP formerly Librarian, University of Nottingham Marion Huckle, BSc, MCLIP Head of Qualifications and Professional Development, CILIP Grace L. Hudson, MA, MPhil, MIL, MCLIP Deputy University Librarian (Academic Services), University of Bradford Jane Inman, BA, DipLib, MCLIP Technical Librarian, Warwickshire County Council Ian Jamieson, FCLIP Editor, The local studies librarian; formerly lecturer at University of Northumbria Helen Leech, BA, MA, DipLIS, MCLIP Area Librarian, Gillingham, Kent Sharon Markless Lecturer in Higher Education, King’s College London; Senior Associate, Information Management Associates Steve Morgan, BA, MBA, MEd, FCLIP Head of Learning Resources, University of Glamorgan Richard Nelsson Information Manager, Guardian Newspapers Ltd; Chair-elect, Association of UK Media Librarians David Nicholas, MPhil, PhD, MCLIP Director, School of Library, Archive & Information Studies, University College London Mary Nixon, BA, MA, DipLib, MCLIP
Librarian, Goldsmiths, University of London Valerie Nurcombe, BA, MCLIP Publications Secretary, SCOOP
Contributors
ix
Robert Parry, BA Senior Research Fellow, Department of Geography, University of Reading, and Curator of the University’s Map Collection, until 2004 John Pateman, MBA, DipLib, FCLIP Head of Libraries, Lincolnshire County Council, 2003– ; Head of Libraries, Hackney 1995–1998; Head of Libraries, Merton 1998–2003 Howard Picton, BA, MCLIP Parliamentary Affairs Manager, Bank of England; Secretary, Standing Committee on Official Publications (SCOOP) Chris Pond, OBE, MA, PhD, HonFCLIP, ACIPR Head of Reference Services, Department of the Library, House of Commons Katharine Schöpflin, MA, MA, MCLIP BBC Information & Archives 1996–2005; Chair, Association of UK Media Librarians Elizabeth Shepherd, BA, MA, PhD, DMS, DAS, RMSA Senior Lecturer in Archives and Records Management, School of Library, Archive and Information Studies, University College London Linda M. Smith, MCLIP Publications Manager, Libraries and Learning Resources, Nottingham Trent University; Chair, Publicity and Public Relations Group, CILIP Iain Stevenson Professor of Publishing, Centre for Publishing, University College London David Streatfield Principal, Information Management Associates Lucy A. Tedd, BSc, MCLIP Lecturer, Department of Information Studies, University of Wales Aberystwyth; editor of Program: electronic library and information systems Pamela Thompson, BA, HonRCM Chief Librarian, Royal College of Music, London John Vincent Networker, The Network tackling social exclusion in libraries, museums, archives and galleries; until 1996 a senior manager in the London Borough of Lambeth Library Service Alison Walker, MA, BLitt, DipLib Head, National Preservation Office Richard Ward, MLib Head of Library and Information Services, Hampshire County Council
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Margaret Watson, BA, MA, MCLIP formerly Acting Head of Department, University of Northumbria; President, CILIP 2003–2004; Chair, CILIP’s Qualifications Framework Steering Group
Preface This volume now supplants its predecessor as the latest in a long line. The first volume of The year’s work in librarianship covered 1928 and was published in 1929. Coverage was international, and the intention was chiefly to provide a review of the literature rather than an account of events. With some disruption to the sequence during the Second World War, the annual volumes continued until v. 17, which covered 1950. From 1951 the plan changed, largely because of the inception of Library science abstracts: the intention became the recording of major trends and developments, though still with a focus on publications, and the volumes covered five years at a time, under the title Five years’ work in librarianship. The first of these, for 1951–1955, was published in 1958. After three such compilations the focus changed again and the field was narrowed to Britain, the title becoming British librarianship and information science. From 1976–1980 onwards the book was divided into two volumes and was called British librarianship and information work. The five-yearly publication schedule continued and the last pair of volumes, covering 1986–1990, was published in 1993. All those volumes were published by the Library Association. Its successor CILIP, however, did not wish to continue them, and it was therefore a great delight to find that Ashgate were willing to take them up. It was an added delight that they wished not only to catch up with a 1991–2000 volume but to continue the series with the present one. As in the last volume, it is necessary to point out that inclusions of subjects have always varied from volume to volume and that this one is no exception. Regrettably, a few authors found that when the time came they were unable to furnish their contributions. There are therefore no chapters on industrial and commercial libraries, management, medical and health libraries, or multimedia, all of which had been originally agreed. On the other hand, some subjects, such as community information, colleges of further education, children’s services, and library buildings, make a welcome return this time; information literacy replaces user education and user studies. Contributors were given the same word limit as in the previous volumes, namely 7,500 words, but were encouraged to include as many bibliographic references as possible, so that readers may follow up topics that interest them. I have made no attempt to impose a uniform style on their writing, but I have tried to standardize spelling and have done my best to impose a uniform system of citation, though I have not tried to standardize every entry across all the chapters. This
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period particularly saw a very large number of government initiatives, projects and frameworks, many of which originated as reports, and I have again agonized repeatedly over capital letters and italics. I know that I have not achieved total consistency. Contributors were asked to provide any post-nominal letters that they wanted included. Some specifically asked for such letters to be omitted, but I can assure readers that they nevertheless possess appropriate qualifications. It is perhaps worth referring again to a body which appears many times in these pages. In April 2000 an organization was formed which was fleetingly called the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLAC). Within less than a month it had changed its name to Resource: The Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries, and remained so until February 2004 when it took again the name Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (now abbreviated as MLA). I have usually retained the form used by the author wherever it occurs. Re:source often appeared thus, with a colon, but I have taken the liberty of removing it. In conclusion I should like to thank my head of department, Professor David Nicholas, for his continued encouragement in this project, and to reiterate my thanks to all the contributors for providing material of such quality and for making it all such fun, and such an education. J.H.B.
1
National libraries Stephen Bury
Between 2001 and 2005 the world of information changed at an unprecedented rate: for example, in 2001 it would have been hard to predict the panoply of Google services from Google Scholar to Google Earth, or that Amazon would be selling the chapters of individual books over the web. This would pose great problems for any library but national libraries, relatively large, laborious in their governance structures, and with very large legacy systems, faced particular difficulties. This chapter will outline how the three national libraries of Britain responded to these challenges. It is written by a member of British Library staff, and it reflects his personal view. It is emphatically not the viewpoint of the British Library. Strategy All three national libraries undertook strategic reviews during this period, not only to meet the changes in scholarly communications but also to adjust to the revival of the Scottish Parliament and the creation of the Welsh Assembly, and to cope with a raft of governmental legislation: the Freedom of Information Act (in force from January 2005), the Disability Discrimination Act and the implementation of the European Copyright Directive. In 2001 the British Library launched a major consultation with its users with its New strategic directions for the British Library.1 There were over 5,000 responses, which largely endorsed the themes of working in collaboration and partnership, increasing the understanding of user needs, widening access to collections and services and accelerating the Library’s e-strategy. The leitmotif of the hybrid library was also present in the National Library of Scotland’s public consultation ‘A National Library for the 21st Century’ (2000/01), leading up to the ‘Breaking through the walls’ strategy, launched in March 2004,2 and in the National Library of Wales earlier consultation ‘Choosing the future’ (1999), with its emphasis on both physical and virtual access (the Visitor Centre and the Digital Library), resulting in its corporate plan 2000/01 ‘Digital Library, Open Library’. The Welsh Assembly’s strategic documents, Wales: a better country, Creative future and Making the connections also modulated the strategy of the National Library of Wales in 2004/05.3
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If a strategy was needed for national libraries to meet the demands the 21st century, it was felt at the British Library that a capacity to develop strategy as and when required was also needed. In May 2003 the Library appointed its first Head of Strategy and Planning, Caroline Pung. Early fruits of this development were the formulation of Redefining the library and Measuring our value.4 The former redefined the British Library’s role in the research information cycle and outlined the its strategies for research in science, technology and medicine in higher education and industry; the social sciences in higher education and the practitioner communities; and research in the arts and humanities in higher education and the creative industries. It also defined the strategic priorities of enriching the user’s experience, building the digital research library, transforming search and navigation, growing and managing the national collection, developing its people and guaranteeing financial sustainability. Economic impact assessment Measuring our value deployed the contingent valuation method (CVM) championed by the Nobel Prize-winning economists, Kenneth Arrow and Robert Solow, to determine the direct and indirect value – economic, cultural, social and intellectual – added by the British Library to the nation.5 Traditionally, this had used the qualitative method of case studies. A carefully designed questionnaire measured the consumer surplus value of the British Library’s reading rooms, the document supply service and the very existence of the British Library: over 2,000 people were asked: x how much they would be willing to pay for the Library’s continued existence x what was the minimum payment they would be willing to accept to forgo the Library’s existence x how much they invested in terms of time and money to make use of the Library x how much they would have to pay to use alternatives to the Library, if such alternatives could be found. The conclusions were that the total value each year of the British Library was £363 million (of which £304 million was indirect value and £59 million direct value); for every £1 of public funding the British Library received annually, £4.40 was generated for the UK economy; and if the British Library did not exist, the UK would lose £280 million of economic value per annum.6 Management 2001–2005 saw further changes in the management structures of all three libraries. In 2001 Lynne Brindley, appointed in July 2000, completed a top-tier restructuring, abolishing the posts of director-general and introducing an executive team consisting of directors of Operations and Services, Scholarship and Collections,
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Strategic Marketing and Communications, e-Strategy, Finance and Corporate Resources. Within Scholarship and Collections the distinct focus on special collections was replaced by a structure based on three areas: British, European & American, and Asia, Pacific and Africa. In February 2004 the new post of Head of Higher Education was created. The National Library of Wales completed its restructuring in January 2002 with the creation of three departments: Collection Services, Corporate Services and Public Services. It also abolished so-called ‘curatorial’ departments based on differentiation by medium of material. At the National Library of Scotland, Ian McGowan was replaced as Director by Martyn Wade in September 2002. In 2003 a new departmental structure was implemented with four directorates: Collection Development, Corporate Services, Customer Services (including cataloguing, education, reference services and interlibrary loans) and Development and Marketing. Staff development The strategies of all three national libraries prioritized their staff and their development as keys to delivering strategy. Each library had a different approach: the National Library of Wales gained Investors in People accreditation in November 2003, whilst in 2004 the British Library introduced a radical competency-based performance system which was intended to be eventually linked to performance pay: objectives were to be modulated by the way they had been achieved. The 21st Century Curator Project 2002 saw the launch of the British Library’s 21st Century Curator Project in order to explore how content experts could straddle traditional expertise in palaeography, historical bibliography etc., with skills in digitization, writing for the web, project management and the emerging new forms of scholarly communication – institutional repositories for pre- and post-print research papers, blogs, wikis, mash-ups, folksonomies, etc. Between 2003 and 2004 there was an Andrew W. Mellonfunded project with the New York Public Library to use curatorial exchanges, benchmarking and a conference, including an international panel of curators, librarians, and archivists, to see if there were common solutions to common problems.7 Research breaks, a research register, an externally validated research assessment exercise, an institutional repository, and professional competencies for the new performance management system were just some of the results of this initiative. On-site services All three libraries saw efforts to improve the reader and visitor experience. June 2004 saw the opening at the National Library of Wales of the Drwm, the second phase of a £5 million visitor experience project, funded by the National Lottery Fund. Phase 1 had been improved accommodation for the National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales. Phase 2 created an air-conditioned 100 person space for
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films, live performances and lectures. Above the Drwm, the Hengwrt gallery was opened to allow such treasures as the Black book of Carmarthen, The book of Llandaf, Turner’s painting of Dolbadarn Castle or George Owen’s map of Pembrokeshire to be displayed to the highest possible conservation standard. Meanwhile, the Peniarth Room was refurbished for temporary exhibitions.8 In October 2004 the South Reading Room was re-opened with refurbished accommodation for manuscripts, maps and microforms. At the National Library of Scotland planning took place in 2004 to open up the front hall of the George IV Bridge building, long perceived as a barrier to access. Completion was planned for mid-2006 with further enhancements such as a selfregistration scheme for readers, smartcard technology and wireless broadband internet. The changes in the information patterns for science, patents and business led to different approaches by national libraries to reading room provision in these areas. The National Library of Scotland closed its separate science and business reading rooms in December 2001: physical materials would now be consulted in the general reading rooms, whilst SCOTBIS provided a virtual business information service.9 Meanwhile the British Library repurposed one of its Patents reading rooms into an enlarged Social Sciences Reading Room, and planned a Business and Intellectual Property Centre in the remaining Patents Reading Room. A pilot for this latter began in May 2004 with a planned building of training rooms and a networking area, funded by the London Development Agency, for an April 2006 opening. In the interests of social inclusion, the British Library simplified its admissions rules: what was required was a need to use the Library, proof of address and signature. A store directory and new signage were introduced. A series of events, performances and concerts were arranged to enlarge the size and composition of the traditional British Library audience. Again, all three libraries tried to address the social inclusion agenda of the Labour government, by attracting new audiences and developing new services, such as roadshows and touring exhibitions. The British Library attempted to join up its services for remote and onsite readers, as the electronic blurred this dichotomy.10 The front hall become one of the largest wi-fi (wireless fidelity, a term for a wireless local area network) spaces in the UK; readers were enabled (as at the National Library of Scotland from September 2004) to order reading room items in advance from the web. And indeed exhibitions at all three libraries had virtual galleries on their respective websites. Remote services Websites The period saw the emergence of different approaches (often within the same institution) to the national library website: was it an intermediary or guide to the services of that library? Was it the virtual equivalent, down to departmental structures, of the libraries? Was it another library, offering content to many who
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would be unable to use the physical or inter-library loan facilities of that library? The 2001/02 annual report of the British Library described the website as ‘a comprehensive guide to the Library’s collections and services’: it had over 15 million ‘views of individual pages’. At the end of 2005 page hits stood at just under 41 million. The equivalent figure for the National Library of Scotland was just over 15 million. Digital content was one of the main drivers of this new traffic. For example, the addition of the original manuscript of Lewis Carroll’s Alice to the British Library’s Turning the Pages on 21 September 2005 resulted in over 1 million requests for images in both October and November. The three libraries became much more conscious of the centrality of their websites and made important developments in their appearance and functionality. In the British Library’s case British Library Direct, the application of Google’s search engine appliance to the site in 2004, the restructuring of the home page by target audience and the adaptation of the award-winning Turning the Pages format to the web were just some of the developments that moved and kept the Google ranking of the homepage at eighth. Document supply For the British Library the web offered both positives and negatives for document supply. It became possible to develop such services as ArtWeb, Articles Direct, Lexicon and British Library Direct for web ordering and electronic delivery, but at the same time it helped competitors to erode the high value segment of the document supply market that had helped cross-subsidize the broader British Library offer. A dual strategy of increasing prices (from 2001) and the radical cutting of costs (from 2003) ensured that Document Supply still made a positive contribution to British Library income in this period. It was difficult to break out of a cycle of increasing charges which might lead to a reduction in demand: for example, the British Library review of charges in 2000–01 was instrumental in the National Library of Scotland establishing SILLR – a new Scottish inter-lending rate. Digitization Each of the three national libraries was involved in preparing and then delivering digitization projects funded by the New Opportunities Fund.11 The British Library’s Collect Britain received £3,285,000 to make freely available around 100,000 maps, prints, drawings, sheet music, text and sound recordings. It was launched in October 2003 but was not fully completed until 2005. It was also a partner of the NOF-digitise project ‘Coming Here’, led by the Public Record Office (later the National Archives). The National Library of Scotland led a £4 million NOF-funded consortium to digitize Resources for Learning in Scotland (RLS), whist the National Library of Wales led a £1 million project, ‘Gathering the Jewels’, 2001 to 2003. The British Library continued to use a mixture of public and private funding of digitization, rather than grant in aid, the money provided by the Department for
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Culture, Media and Sport. The Canterbury tales and the Gutenberg Bible were digitized in collaboration with the Japanese University of Keio, whilst the Shakespeare Quartos (and the 31 quartos in the Bute Collection of the National Library of Scotland) were digitized working with the commercial publisher, Octavo, in 2004–05. Private funders enabled more treasures to be converted to Turning the Pages. The British Library’s desire to create critical masses of digitized materials was furthered when it secured £3 million from the Joint Information Systems Committee to digitize 3,900 hours of sound content, from Beethoven’s string quartets to interviews with artists, and 2 million pages of 19th-century newspapers.12 The National Library of Scotland worked closely with SCRAN (the Scottish Cultural Resources Access Network) as well as with private sponsors. Collection development e-legal deposit Perhaps the most notable achievement of this period was the entry of the Legal Deposit Libraries Act 2003 on the statute book.13 It came into force on 1 February 2004. It built on the voluntary deposit scheme which had been in operation since 2000, whereby publishers were encouraged to deposit hand-held electronic publications and microforms. This was governed by the Joint Committee on Voluntary Deposit (JCVD). Meanwhile, discussions took place with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on the introduction of legislation: it was decided that the most appropriate route was a so-called ‘hand-out’ bill. It was introduced as a Private Member’s Bill by Chris Mole, MP for Ipswich, in December 2002. The British Library with the other legal deposit libraries, led by Dr Clive Field, Director of Scholarship and Collections at the British Library, and John Byford, mounted a campaign to support the Bill: the British Library’s Press and Public Relations Department implemented its stakeholder strategy first developed during lobbying for the Comprehensive Spending Review and helped to clear the legislative hurdles. The Act extended the previous legal deposit legislation passed in 1911 and enshrined the principle that electronic or epublications and other non-print materials would be deposited in future under secondary legislation. It ensured that these publications could be saved as part of the published archive – and become an important resource for future researchers and scholars. For Lynne Brindley, Chief Executive of the British Library, this was ‘an historic piece of legislation and puts the UK among the first countries which will be collecting, by law, their electronic output’.14 Web archiving It had always been imagined that the secondary legislation for archiving websites, permitting domain harvesting, would be one of the latter ones to be introduced. But following the British Library’s pilot, Domain UK in 2001 and, for that matter, the Wales on the Web project (renamed in May 2004 as Wales on the Web – the all Wales portal), all three national libraries realized that there was a risk that much
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essential material for the documentation of culture might be lost, and teamed up with the Wellcome Institute and JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee) in UKWAC, the UK Web Archiving Consortium. This operated on a selective permissions basis.15 The British Library was also a partner of an international web archiving consortium with the Library of Congress, Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Internet Archive to develop web archiving tools. Major acquisitions This period saw major public fundraising appeals for the Royal Philharmonic Society Archive for the British Library (completed 2003) and, in April 2004, the launch of an appeal by the National Library of Scotland for £31.2 million to purchase the John Murray Publishing Archive 1768–1920, one of the world’s most important publishers’ archives with material by Byron, Scott, Carlyle, Darwin and Livingstone. Other major acquisitions for the British Library were the papers of Lord Olivier, Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir John Gielgud; correspondence between Ted Hughes and Keith Sagar, Ted Hughes and Leonard Baskin, George Eliot and Jane Senior, and the Oscar Wilde Collection belonging to Lady Eccles. Resource discovery In June 2004 the British Library launched its Aleph-based integrated library system, bringing together 30 million bibliographic records and replacing 16 legacy systems: there were in excess of 1.6 million searches on it per month. This provided the opportunity to restructure cataloguing workflows, and to conform to MARC 21. Cataloguing and retroconversion backlogs were identified and prioritized for the first time in 2002, and an action plan developed to tackle them. A wider definition of resource discovery – of items not in a library’s collection – led to the National Library of Wales developing a portal, Wales on the Web, supported by the British Library’s Co-operation and Partnership Programme, from May 2001. Collection management The British Library continued to apply its life-cycle costing approach to its collections and to consider its extension to electronic materials. It completed its preservation assessment, based on the National Preservation Office (NPO) schema, and automated its preservation bidding system. A conservation research strategy was formulated. With the Library of Congress and other libraries, the British Library instigated the Cellulose Acetate Microfiche Forum in 2002 and produced guidelines.16 Plans for a Centre for Conservation at the St Pancras site of the British Library were agreed. Planning permission was received in 2004 and the £12.5 million raised to fund it. The building was expected to be complete in early 2007, and would provide state-of-the-art technical facilities for the Sound Archive as well as a world-class facility for all aspects of book conservation, including education and training, addressing a shortage of book conservation skills nationally.
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Library security As members of LIBER (Ligue des bibliothèques européennes de recherches), the three libraries signed up with the ‘Copenhagen Principles’ of 2002 to promote international cooperation in the face of thefts of library materials on an international scale.17 Storage The lack of storage space and the increase in the number of hardcopy publications coming through legal deposit, despite expanding electronic publication, confronted all three libraries. The National Library of Scotland worked with other libraries in Scotland to frame a Collaborative Academic Store for Scotland (CASS). In 2005 the British Library piloted a study with the White Rose partnership (the universities of Sheffield, Leeds and York) which led to a joint study with the Consortium of University Research Libraries (CURL), published in September 2005, and which called for a national research reserve.18 In 2004 the British Library decided to construct a high-density, fully automated low-oxygen storage solution for its freehold property at Boston Spa in Yorkshire. At the end of 2005 funding and permissions were in place to begin building what would be the largest of its type for library and archive use in the world. It was scheduled for completion in 2008. National cooperation The National Lottery provided £7.8 million to fund a national programme to microfilm local newspapers. NEWSPLAN was completed in 2004. 1,500 UK newspaper titles and a total of 20 million pages were filmed, including over 200 Welsh newspaper titles. Research Libraries Network All three national libraries were partners, along with the three higher education funding bodies and the research councils, in the Research Libraries Network (RLN), launched in July 2004 but based on the report of the Research Support Libraries Group (RSLG) of 2003. The purpose of the RLN was ‘to lead and coordinate new developments in the collaborative provision of research information for the benefit of researchers in the UK’.19 It was renamed the Research Information Network (RIN) in 2005. SUNCAT Part of the RSLG report identified research library infrastructure as a precondition for deep sharing of resources. RSLG and JISC began a Serials Union CATalogue (SUNCAT) pilot, launched in January 2005. Other library holdings were added in 2005.20 International cooperation Library staff from all three institutions took part in international conferences of the
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Conference of European National Librarians (CENL), the Conference of Directors of National Libraries (CDNL), the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL), the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) and LIBER. The Director of the National Library of Scotland chaired the planning group for the 68th IFLA conference, held in Glasgow in 2002, and the National Library of Scotland and the British Library were joint hosts of the 2002 CDNL. The British Library hosted the 2001 LIBER conference, whilst the National Library of Scotland hosted the CERL conference in 2004. There were many bilateral contacts. For example, the British Library took part in a workshop with the National Library of Russia in 2003, whilst the National Library of Scotland had close relations with the Russian State Library. The European Library (TEL) The TEL project, funded by the European Commission, began in February 2001. Its partners were the national libraries of the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Finland, Italy, Portugal and Slovenia and it was led by the UK. TEL had the aim to create an operational virtual European catalogue of the national libraries of Europe by using a TEL library application profile and standard metadata submission. Following the development of a prototype, in June 2004 the Office of the European Library was established at the Hague and the European Library itself was softlaunched in 2005.21 Endangered Archives Programme In partnership with the Lisbet Rausing Charitable Fund, the British Library launched a £10 million joint initiative to help save the world’s endangered archives. The programme, administered by the British Library, advised by an international panel of experts allocated a first round of grants to institutions and academic researchers in 2005. Copies would be held in a master archive at the British Library.22
Notes 1 2 3
4
New strategic directions for the British Library. London: British Library, 2001. Breaking through the walls: a draft strategy for the National Library of Scotland. Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 2003. Creative future : a culture strategy for Wales. Cardiff: Welsh Assembly, 2002; Wales: a better country: the strategic agenda of the Welsh Assembly Government. Cardiff: Welsh Assembly, 2003; Welsh Assembly, Making the connections: delivering better services for Wales. Cardiff: Welsh Assembly, 2005. Redefining the library: the British Library’s strategy 2005–2008. London: British Library, 2005; Measuring our value: results of an independent economic impact study commissioned by the British Library to measure the Library’s direct and indirect value to the UK economy. London: British Library, 2004; Lynne Brindley and Elspeth Hyams, ‘A beacon for British knowledge and research’, Library + information update 5 (1/2), 2006, 24–6.
10 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13
14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21
22
British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 Keith Arrow et al., Report of the NOAA Panel on Contingent Valuation. Washington, DC: US Government, 1993 (Federal register; 58). Available at:
(accessed 31/5/06). This excludes the considerable value generated for non-UK British Library users, and the benefit to the UK economy of non-UK-domiciled users of the Reading Rooms. Twenty-first Century Curatorship: (accessed 31/5/06). Many of these temporary exhibitions also exist as a digital gallery: (accessed 31/5/06). SCOTBIS: (accessed 31/5/06). Providing services beyond the reading room. London: National Audit Office, 2004. Also available at: (accessed 31/5/06). Julie Carpenter, ‘What has NOF-digitise taught us?’, Library + information update 5 (6), 2006, 40–1. Archival Sound Recordings Project: ; British Newspapers: (accessed 31/5/06). Legal Deposit Libraries Act 2003: 2003 chapter 28. London: HMSO, 2003. Also available at: (accessed 31/5/06). (accessed 31/5/06). UK Web Archiving Consortium: (accessed 31/5/06). Cellulose Acetate Microfilm Forum: (accessed 31/5/06). Copenhagen Principles: (accessed 31/5/06). Optimising storage and access in UK research libraries: (accessed 31/5/06). Research Information Network: (accessed 31/5/06). See also Stephen Bury, ‘Joining up: national collection development in the UK’ in National policy of the library collection development to promote education and culture in society. Riga: Association of Latvian Academic Libraries, 2003, pp. 27–33. SUNCAT: (accessed 31/5/06). The European Library: (accessed 31/5/06); Stephen Bury, ‘The pre-history of the European Library: the British Library and TEL’, Alexandria 17 (3), 2005, 143–7; Jill Cousins, ‘The European Library: from project to service’, Alexandria 17 (1), 2005, 35–48. Endangered Archives: (accessed 31/5/06).
Further reading The national library websites contain much useful material, e.g. press releases for the period 2001–5: British Library: National Library of Scotland: National Library of Wales:
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The British Library twenty-eighth annual report and accounts 2000–01. London: British Library, 2001. Delivering excellence: National Library of Scotland annual review, 2004–2005. Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 2005. From knowledge to innovation: the British Library twenty-ninth annual report and accounts 2001–2002.London: British Library, 2002. Making a measurable difference: British Library annual report and accounts 2003–2004. London: British Library, 2004. National Library of Scotland: annual review 2003–2004, Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 2004. National Library of Scotland annual report. Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 2002– The National Library of Wales annual report. Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales, 2001–2004. Powering the world’s knowledge: the facts, achievements, images and figures: British Library annual report and accounts 2002–2003. London: British Library, 2003. Reaching Wales and the world: the National Library of Wales annual report 2004–5. Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales, 2005. Redefining the library: the British Library annual report and accounts 2004–5. London: British Library, 2005. ROUTES (Reaching out, extending skills): (accessed 31/5/06).
2
Public libraries Richard Ward
Introduction After several decades of gentle public disinterest and a less gentle decline in use and seeming relevance the first few years of the twenty-first century saw a massive resurgence in the attention paid to libraries. For example, in 2001 the government published the Public Library Standards giving, for the first time, real meaning to the 1964 Public Libraries and Museums Act’s requirement that library authorities should provide a ‘comprehensive and efficient service’.1 The library standards, and their role within the CPA (Comprehensive Performance Assessment) process,2 obliged library authorities to look more closely at their library services. The People’s Network, a scheme funded initially by the National Lottery, brought high-speed internet connections to every public library in the country and was one of the main reasons for the increases in library visitors at a time when most other indicators were showing significant declines in use.3 The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) published Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information for the next decade,4 and handed over responsibility for its delivery to Resource: the Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries (MLA).5 The House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee inquired into the state of public libraries and produced a major report, concluding that libraries had lost their way and should return to concentrating upon books and reading.6 During the years under review there were several other reports – of varying influence. In 2002 the Audit Commission produced Building better library services, which argued for a customer-focused approach: providing more books, improving opening hours, refurbishing buildings and increasing awareness amongst non-users.7 The Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE) published a slim pamphlet Better public libraries, which drew attention to some of the principles which should lie behind good library design. 8 In 2004 the National Foundation for Educational Research published Extending the role of libraries, which recognized that the traditional role of libraries (the mass lending of books) was in decline, and pointed to actions which could be taken.9 Amongst the actions were niche marketing, co-locations with other services and changing the ways in which staff were deployed.
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The Laser Foundation sponsored PricewaterhouseCoopers to research into the impact made by public libraries and the report was published in 2005.11 It showed that libraries made a significant impact on people’s lives and contributed to wider policy priorities at both local and national level. In 2004 Douglas Grindlay and Anne Morris published their findings on the decline in adult book lending.12 They found that the loss was mainly of adult fiction, and that the underlying causes were probably increasing affluence making book purchases more affordable, and widespread use of the internet and home PCs. Other causes could be book fund cuts and reductions in opening hours. OCLC published a major survey into people’s perceptions of libraries and information services.13 This report covered users in North America, the UK, Australia, Singapore and India. Although its methodology was self-limiting (the research was carried out via the internet, and in English) there were several key messages: the library brand is the book; there is a strong attachment to libraries but that attachment is based upon nostalgia; and Respondents do indeed have strong attachments to the idea of the ‘Library’ but clearly expressed dissatisfaction with the service experience of the libraries they use. Poor signage, inhospitable surroundings, unfriendly staff, lack of parking, dirt, cold, hard-touse systems and inconvenient hours were mentioned many many times by respondents. The overall message is clear: improve the physical experience of using libraries.
Consultants PKF were asked by DCMS and MLA to look into the efficiency of English public libraries and they paid particular attention to the stock supply chain.14 The report however raised fundamental questions which the public library movement as a whole was still grappling with at the time of writing. This work was being carried forward by PricewaterhouseCoopers. The period under review was notable for the number of polemic publications and articles. The quality newspapers regularly carried think pieces bemoaning the loss of the library as the author remembered them in his or her youth. But of more significance was the publication of Charles Leadbeater’s Overdue,15 calling, amongst other things, for a national libraries agency; John Holden’s extended essay Creative reading,16 and the report which caused the greatest splash – Tim Coates’s Who’s in charge?17 So these were five years in which an unprecedented amount of scrutiny was given to public libraries with commentators agreeing that ‘something must be done’, but no clear consensus emerged. There were practitioners who believed that the era of mass loans of mainly light, undemanding literature had gone forever and that libraries – if they were to survive – needed to transform themselves in the way that Tower Hamlets, Kent and Hampshire created Idea Stores and Discovery Centres, and those who believed that all the problems could be solved if libraries got back to basics, crammed their buildings full of books, gave them a lick of paint and opened them long hours.
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Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries: standards and assessment Chris Smith, the then Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, recognized that his duty to superintend the provision of a comprehensive and efficient public library service was hampered by a lack of any clear definition of what comprehensive and efficient actually meant.18 To help him in his task he oversaw the introduction of 19 standards. These were designed as an aid to library managers in their planning; to library authorities in reviewing their services internally; to the Audit Commission in its Best Value inspections; and to users and government so they could make more informed judgements about the quality of services provided. For the first time government specified what standard of service it expected library authorities to provide for their users: x Public Library Standard (PLS) 1 laid down what proportion of the population had to live within a certain distance of a library. These proportions varied depending upon the nature of the authority: a rural county was not expected to achieve the same standard as an inner London borough. Mention was made of ‘convenient’ opening hours: at least 5 hours per week outside 9am–5pm on weekdays. x PLS2 was concerned with unscheduled library closures and the number of mobile library stops missed. x PLS3 was to ensure libraries were open adequate hours and was measured by a formula which produced aggregate hours per thousand population. As with many standards the measure was the top quartile for all authorities. x PLS4 raised the issue of how long individual libraries were open each week. Authorities had to report on the percentage of large libraries open for more than 45 hours and to consider extended opening hours, i.e. over 60 per week for those which were the ‘service point of first choice’ for populations over 150,000. x PLS5 expected all service points open for more than 10 hours per week to provide access to online catalogues. x PLS6 laid down that there should be at least 6 public access computers per 10,000 population. x PLS7 established that a normal book issue period must be at least three weeks. x PLS8 said borrowers must be allowed at least 8 books at one time. x PLS9 set down time bands within which readers’ book requests should be met. x PLS10 measured virtual library visits. x PLS11 looked at actual visits. x PLS12 – PLS15. These standards were to be based on the Public Library User Surveys (PLUS) and covered success in finding a specific book, in gaining a specific piece of information, views on the staff’s level of knowledge, and the rating of the staff’s helpfulness.
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x PLS16 was a quality index of book stock to be worked out in detail later. x PLS17 measured the number of items added to stock per thousand population. x PLS18 looked at the number of years it would take to replenish the whole lending stock. x PLS19 was concerned with the quality of the staff employed – those with information management qualifications and those with ICT qualifications. The Standards were introduced softly: authorities were given three years to achieve them, and any sanctions for non-achievement were played down. Performance against the standards was reported through the Annual Library Plan process: but that process itself, having been introduced in 1998, was being phased out. By 2004/05 the standards had been refined to ten, covering the distance people lived from a static service point, aggregate opening hours, number of libraries with internet access, number of electronic workstations, request supply time, numbers of visits, user satisfaction, numbers of books purchased and length of time it would take to replenish the lending stock. According to the Public Library Statistics 2004–05 no English authority met all ten standards.19 A handful achieved 9, and 19 achieved 8. The majority of authorities were clustered around 3 to 7 with 5 achieving 2, and only 1 authority only achieving 1. Some standards were far easier to meet than others: for example, almost every authority was able to report 100% of libraries providing access to the internet. Opening hours gave more problems – and the gearing effect of the way this standard was measured made it very expensive to achieve if an authority’s starting position was well below the requirement. There was also the temptation to achieve this target by increasing opening hours at libraries where the cost was lowest. An hour at a branch was as valuable for the standards as an hour at a central library, but the costs, and the benefits to the community, were far different. The number of electronic workstations available to users per 10,000 population was another flawed standard. Across England the average number achieved was 6, which met the standard. Most authorities achieved the standard, with a few exceeding it by a wide margin and hardly any failing dismally. This was not surprising when it was remembered that the initial funding came from the National Lottery but it was essentially arbitrary and meaningless. A more valuable standard could have been derived from an examination of utilization rates with a standard being set at a level which would allow judgements to be made on whether the right number were available. If utilization was at 100% there would probably be unfulfilled demand with some potential users being turned away. On the other hand if utilization was at 20% then arguably too many had been provided and the resources should have been diverted elsewhere. But this is to argue over detail. The important point was that the standards existed, and flawed though they may have been they were at least an attempt to define the ‘comprehensive and efficient’ phrase from the 1964 Act. Without the standards it is less likely that cultural services overall, and library services in
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particular, would have been taken so seriously in the Comprehensive Performance Assessment. Comprehensive Performance Assessment In our over-centralized democracy, government feels it has the right to superintend the actions and performance of local government to a degree far greater than anywhere else in the western world. Despite claims that there will be greater local freedoms the centrally applied straitjacket gets tighter. During the first years of the twenty-first century central government used the Comprehensive Performance Assessment (CPA) to raise service standards across local government. CPA was administered by the Audit Commission, whose website provides links to a vast amount of detail including inspection reports of individual library authorities.20 The CPA regime enabled local people to see how their council compared to others. It created the league table for authorities similar to those used to rank schools. The tables were derived from inspection reports, and by looking at other measures, such as performance against standards. An authority’s score was judged predominately by how well its education and social services performed, and on its use of resources. However, there was a culture block, and in that culture block the performance of libraries was of key importance. If an authority was on the borderline between two categories then a good (or poor) rating for libraries, and thus culture overall, might be sufficient to tip the measure one way or another. Authorities were classified into one of five categories: poor, weak, fair, good and excellent, and a judgement was introduced as to the ‘direction of travel’ an authority was taking. The idea was to stimulate continuous improvement – not just from the authorities judged to be poor, weak or fair but also amongst those deemed to be good or excellent. To maintain a good or excellent rating an authority had to improve its performance over the previous period. In at least some authorities this was sufficient to get the library service taken seriously when bids for resources, or more cynically, places where cuts could be made, were being examined. It was at times such as this that the position in the authority’s hierarchy of the chief librarian assumed an importance beyond the mere vanity of the officer concerned. With the tendency for authorities to have a few, large, service directorates it was almost unknown for the chief librarian to be a chief officer. That in itself did not matter particularly provided that the head of the department was aware of the importance of libraries and was prepared to make the arguments in the forums to which he or she had regular access and the librarian did not. Although I do not have the evidence to prove this claim – and perhaps a longer perspective is required – it seems plausible that library services did better when they were the largest component of a cultural directorate rather than being a relatively insignificant part of an education or adult services set up. Framework for the future Tessa Blackstone, then Minister of State for the Arts, said in her introduction:
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Framework for the future is a long term strategic vision for the public library service. … The proposals are presented as a framework to encourage imaginative innovation and greater operational effectiveness and efficiency…’21
Framework for the future described the strengths of libraries: providing neutral and welcoming community spaces; the stock holdings ranging beyond books to DVDs, videos, CDs and the internet; the range of services on offer – lending books, formal and informal learning, promoting reading ‘across the age range’; and access to information and advice. It went on to say that libraries had the potential to do more in ensuring that all sectors of society have access to the full range of knowledge and information which they need. The report highlighted the needs of the disadvantaged – the less affluent and those with literacy problems. Framework considered that libraries needed a modern mission based upon four principles: evolution, public value, distinctiveness, and local interpretation of national programmes. Interestingly, the principle of local interpretation of national programmes highlighted one of the factors of the public library service which was at the same time a strength and a weakness. Public libraries in England were provided by 149 separate library authorities. This gave the local councils and the local community pride and ownership in what they were doing but it meant that it was very difficult to get national programmes going and, although in aggregate, public libraries could be very influential in practice they were fragmented and their potential influence dissipated. The report itself was interesting and well illustrated and contained many examples of good practice. Whilst it lacked a ‘killer’ application which would become the saviour of the public library movement it did nevertheless provide a vision of a library service in the opening decades of the twenty-first century. Delivery of the vision was to be handled by MLA. The Action Plan divided the tasks into work packages with nine strategic objectives. Each objective was to be achieved by actions with timescales, modest budgetary support from the DCMS, and perhaps most important, regular reporting of progress against clear targets. The four work packages were: building capacity to deliver transformation; books, reading and learning; digital citizenship; and community and civic values. Quite clearly more time would be needed to judge the success of Framework for the future. Indeed, as this chapter was being written the Tavistock Institute was undertaking a detailed review of the achievements to date. Delivering Framework for the future was an immense task. There was no single unified library service; libraries were part of local democracy. There was no strong inspection regime, and no rigorously enforced set of meaningful standards. The Framework action plan tried to overcome those difficulties with work to achieve national marketing strategies whereby a clear vision could be transmitted – but there were still citizens for whom the library service was an irrelevance, who did not know what it could do for them, and that most of it was free at the point of use. A few examples give a flavour of the action plan. Working with IdeA,22 peer reviews were introduced and seem to have been effective in the relatively small
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number of authorities fortunate enough to have been chosen. I can confirm from personal experience that the process was also of great benefit to the people carrying out the peer review. The promotion of reading and the various associated initiatives were widely welcomed. Examples included links with the Reading Agency, work with the BBC, and with publishers. The People’s Network continued to be developed – although it must not be forgotten that many library authorities felt badly let down in that there was no further National Lottery money forthcoming to enable aging equipment to be refreshed and the network expanded. Good work was done with a group set up to negotiate joint procurement deals with suppliers for electronic resources. These deals allowed the smallest branch to have access to reference works such as the Oxford dictionary of national biography which would once have been the preserve of a central reference library. Many services indeed made these resources available remotely to any patron with a library card, allowing them access at home or work, or in an internet café anywhere in the world. Under the banner of Framework for the future work began on increasing the number of books libraries could buy with their book funds. This work included an examination of the ‘impact of different models of acquisition, including benefits and barriers and potential costs’. Consultants PKF were contracted to produce a report, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review, which came out in 2005.23 Within the profession the report was broadly welcomed. Many of the issues flagged up were non-controversial – all authorities should adopt National Acquisitions Group (NAG) standard minimum servicing, for example; all authorities should review their stock procurement processes to ensure that where possible staff were re-deployed to customer facing roles; all libraries should review their support functions and understand to what extent these could be shared across local boundaries.24 The theory was impeccable but some of the other sections – on efficiency savings for example – were less impressive. This section comprises seven slight paragraphs containing assertions and hope. For example, a national agency for cataloguing and tendering was supposed to save 2% of employee costs or £8.5 million. It was blithely stated that ‘The costs of the national organisation would need to be met from re-allocating existing funding from the library authorities’ budgets’. The supplier selection part of the report was weak. Any suggestion that 100% of newly published book purchases could be placed through supplier selection was based on the flimsiest of evidence. The report ignores the fact that supplier selection had only been deemed successful in some small unitary authorities and that counties which experimented with supplier selection had since rejected it. Moreover the costs associated with supplier selection had been ignored. One of the submissions quoted in the report sums up the position admirably:
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Rationalisation of the number of consortia is needed in order for more business to be contracted by fewer consortia with fewer suppliers. Sub regional cooperation by library authorities will also help to share acquisitions costs. It will be important for any efficiency savings authorities need to make to be based on careful cost/benefit analysis. Seemingly simple solutions based round supplier selection and contracting out of essential support services may not be the best options. Growing emphasis on qualitative performance indicators eg Opening the Book stock quality health check mean that in house control of inputs and outputs will be crucial.25
Work on the stock supply chain continued into 2006 with the involvement of PricewaterhouseCoopers. It was expected that various improvement models would be considered, the one chosen being implemented from 2008. Other areas of Framework meriting mention include the work on e-government, once a priority for national government; the role of libraries as community spaces and supporting community cohesion and diversity; and the need to improve the quality of library buildings. Perhaps from a longer perspective Framework’s importance will be seen mainly as that it existed at all. It was a valiant attempt to bring coherence, consistency and a sense of future development to a fragmented sector. But, had there been a national library system would the People’s Network computerization scheme have been brought in on time and on budget? This country’s record on major national projects such as this was not good – but each separate library authority achieved its aims for its customers locally. The decline in adult book lending One of the most interesting pieces of research to be published during this period was ‘The decline in adult book lending in UK public libraries and its possible causes’ by Douglas Grindlay and Anne Morris.26 This was a key document and should be read by anyone interested in trends in public library usage over the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The authors examined the possible causes of the decline in adult book loans which, although concern was expressed as early as 1973, became noticeable in the 1980s. They noted that at a national level book issues peaked around 1980 and then began a steady decline. This decline coincided with central government pressure on local authorities’ spending and with consequent pressures on library services’ budgets. In many minds this represented a simple cause and effect – library budgets are reduced (in real terms at least), so fewer books are bought, opening hours reduced and possibly libraries are closed so it is no surprise that use, as measured by book issues, falls. If this proposition is true then reversing the fall would be a simple matter of increasing the amount of money spent on books, and increasing the opening hours of libraries. However, Grindlay and Morris examined all the factors which might be involved in a decline before reaching some tentative conclusions. While more, rather than less, people have been reading since the decline in adult book
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Decreased funding The authors noted that in the period preceding the five years under review real terms expenditure on libraries fell by 1% but there was ‘a large increase in the unit cost of employees’. Capital expenditure fell dramatically: in real terms it almost halved. There was a reasonable assumption that reduced capital expenditure meant libraries received less maintenance, fewer old buildings were replaced and fewer new libraries were built leading to shabby and unattractive surroundings not conducive to visits. When hard decisions about reducing budgets had to be made it was difficult to protect the spending power of the book fund. The ending of the Net Book Agreement enabled authorities to bargain for the best deals but Grindlay and Morris quote evidence that ‘rather than buying more books, library authorities used this as an opportunity to cut spending’.28 There is an important ‘chicken and egg’ question where book funds are concerned …; ‘Is the decrease in adult book loans caused by poorer choice and ageing stock resulting from reduced expenditure, or have library authorities reduced expenditure because people are borrowing less?’ According to Bohme and Spillar (1999) the answer is not yet clear, but the press certainly seem to believe that reduced book budgets are the cause … . While the Audit Commission (2002) believes reduced book funds have caused the decline in loans, it has acknowledged recently that book funds and opening hours may also have been cut as a response to reduced demand. Perhaps there is a vicious spiral in which one factor feeds into the other.29
Reductions in opening hours and library closures It is plausible that reductions in opening hours and the closure of libraries should lead to a fall in book issues. However, according to Grindlay and Morris, the actual impact was not clear. They report on research carried out by others30 that showed: ‘Even using time series analysis to allow for seasonal variations, there was no clear evidence that loans decreased after opening hours were cut, and in some libraries loans even increased over the period studied.’31 But there is evidence from elsewhere (e.g. Sheffield) that the effect may be noticeable over many years. As with reduced opening hours the effect of library closures was not as straightforward as might be assumed. There were library closures, and although in some cases these closures may have been mitigated by the introduction of mobile libraries, there was a clear loss of convenience of use. It was this lack of convenience – also part of the effects of the cuts in opening hours – that led people to lose what had been perhaps a fragile library-using habit. As Grindlay and Morris say: ‘Convenient location is a major factor that determines library use, particularly
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use on impulse; most users are unwilling to go out of their way and will often combine a visit to a library with other activities such as shopping.’32 Library regulations Grindlay and Morris wondered whether restricted loan times and fines for late return had played a part in deterring use. There was little research on the subject but it is clearly possible, as they said, that as standards of living rose people were less willing to borrow books (with all the drawbacks associated with having to remember to return them) when they could afford to purchase. Decreased reading of books It was an accepted fact that there was a significant number of people for whom reading had no interest and played no part in their lives beyond that needed for day-to-day living. It seems, however, that the number of people who cannot read at all was fairly small – and Grindlay and Morris, who found that the evidence for people’s reading habits was incomplete and difficult to analyse, did not feel that reduction in reading was in itself a cause of the decline in library issues. Reading of magazines increased, and there was, of course, the increase in other leisure time activities competing with reading. Television Grindlay and Morris did not find much evidence that increased watching of television contributed significantly to the decline in library book issues in the period before the five years under review. There seemed to be a natural limit on the number of hours of television watching that any one individual could cope with each week but there must be concerns – allied to increased affluence, discussed next – that the growth of satellite and digital television and the spread of intelligent video recorders allowing easy time shifting and in effect personalized television channels would lead to fewer people choosing reading as a leisure pursuit. Increased affluence and leisure opportunities This section of the report is of fundamental importance and it contains a quotation from the 1970s: I believe it is a fact that a substantial number of people, particularly fiction readers, use the public library as a last resort. This is a hard thing for a librarian to admit, but I believe it to be true. These people, if they have at their disposal the means to buy a colour television set, eat in a restaurant, drink in a pub, drive to the coast, or fly to the Bahamas, will not read books. And as affluence increases, they will use their libraries less and less; the fact will be reflected in issue statistics.33
Grindlay and Morris quoted the ‘librarian’s axiom’ from the United States which said that lending libraries prosper in times of economic downturn and do badly in
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the good times. If you have more exciting things to do with your time you are not going to read so many books – and thus it is likely that library issues will fall. Increased book purchases by readers The ending of the Net Book Agreement, leading to the wide availability of books at discounted prices; the aggressive growth of chain bookstores with attractive layouts including seating and coffee shops; the pleasure in being the first person to read a book; the ability to keep the book for re-reading or simply to cherish; and the greater disposable income available to most inevitably led to a growth in book buying and, as a natural consequence, fewer books being borrowed. This was reinforced by libraries which are perceived as shabby, ill-stocked, in the wrong place, and often closed. Computing and the internet It is commonplace to say that the internet will be viewed from a historical standpoint to have been as significant a development as the introduction of printing. Clearly, in terms of access to up-to-date information, in the ability to spread that information widely and simultaneously, traditional libraries were going to struggle in comparison. Many library authorities could now, for example, make available in all their service points expensive and sought-after reference works which would once have been limited to central reference libraries. In many cases these works could be accessed from home using a borrower number, removing even the need to make a physical visit to a library building. Librarians of thirty and more years previously would have been mystified at the need to speak of physical visits to a library and would have wondered what on earth was a virtual visit. Grindlay and Morris pointed to evidence about reading on the internet – the amount of time it takes, when it is carried out – and wondered if it had had an effect upon people’s book reading habits. The traditionalists and the modernizers Who’s in charge? Tim Coates was well known to a generation of booksellers, and lately to librarians. His passion for the public library service could not be doubted. He had shown concern over years for what he perceived to be a service which had lost its way and had neglected its core purpose. Moreover he felt that people did not want a modernized library service, merely one that was much as it always had been, only better in its essentials. He was also concerned that despite most library managers’ experience there was enough money in the system if only it were spent differently. Passionate in his beliefs though he was, the public platform on which he could air his views was limited, and he sought funding to produce a report with the aim of raising the debate. He approached Libri – a library charity – and Libri persuaded the Laser Foundation to fund the exercise. To give weight to his work he wished to
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base his report on an actual library authority and I agreed that he could use Hampshire.34 The report certainly succeeded in raising public libraries as an issue to be taken seriously and it was hard to disagree with many of the suggestions: libraries should spend more of their budgets on buying books; they should be open longer hours; they should be redecorated; there should be more market research; and there should be better governance. The report felt that there should be no distinction between professionally qualified staff and operational staff. In Coates’s view, this historic division of responsibilities meant that qualified librarians were not on the ‘opening rota’ for libraries and therefore did not add value equal to their cost. If all the staff were on this rota then library hours could be extended substantially. Similarly there were massive savings to be made in the way public libraries purchased their books – although no one in Hampshire (including our independent accountants) could agree with the ludicrous cost of purchase information given in the report. Who’s in charge? made an interesting suggestion about the management of individual libraries, recommending a very high degree of devolution with the person in charge being given total control of the budget available and within broad (but carefully monitored) performance management targets being left to get on with it. Select Committee In 2004 the House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee scrutinized the public library system. Evidence was taken from Tim Coates, Miranda McKearney of the Reading Agency, John Holden of Demos, Heather Wills of the Idea Stores, Bob McKee of CILIP, Catherine Blanshard of the Society of Chief Librarians and Bill Macnaught of the Advisory Council on Libraries. Mark Wood and Chris Batt of MLA and Lyn Brown and Tony Durcan were also interviewed, as was the children’s author Jacqueline Wilson, and three ministers including Lord McIntosh of Haringey. Having questioned the witnesses and examined written submissions a report was issued in 2005.35 This report contained over thirty recommendations but the final paragraph of its summary makes it clear that the committee came down firmly on the traditional side of the debate. Our key recommendations are designed to focus attention on libraries’ fundamental role in promoting reading and we seek to distinguish clearly between core functions and desirable add-ons (prioritising resources in favour of the former). There need to be far stronger links between national library standards (which themselves need improving) and effective mechanisms to encourage and enable library services to meet, if not surpass, them. We also wish to see an action plan for the refurbishment of the nation’s library buildings: one that includes clear indications of where the necessary resources estimated at somewhere between £240 million and £650 million, will come from.
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The Committee wished to see library standards extended to include book loans, free access to the internet, the ratio of frontline to backroom staff, extended opening hours and the provision of material for people with disabilities. There would also have to be robust mechanisms for reporting on performance and a way by which remedial action could be triggered if necessary. Although the Committee was impressed by Idea Stores, it deprecated the loss of the word library, and wished to see that word maintained, but with a changed public perception of what it stood for. The Committee stressed that in its view libraries must be first about books and their conclusion and recommendation 6 states: ‘We recognise that libraries are viewed as safe public environments and as such have the potential to act as a suitable home for a service, meeting a wide range of community needs and wishes. However, it is equally clear to us that libraries must not be overloaded with objectives or expectations that strain their resources or inhibit the fulfilment of their core functions.’ The report should be read by anyone with an interest in the public library developments during this period. The response by the DCMS – by the time this was issued there had been a general election and David Lammy was the relevant minister having replaced Lord McIntosh – also repays reading.36 So there were two powerful strands to the argument about the future of public libraries: the arch-traditionalists and the modernizers. The modernizers were exemplified by Idea Stores and Discovery Centres. Idea Stores and Discovery Centres Idea Stores in Tower Hamlets, and Discovery Centres in Kent and Hampshire, share similar aims. ‘The plan is to create a series of bright, new buildings in local shopping areas, combining lifelong learning and cultural attractions with all the services normally associated with libraries from classic books to DVDs and CDs.’37 Tower Hamlets’ website continues: ‘The idea was born when residents told Tower Hamlets Council in their thousands that they would like to see their libraries located where they can get to them more easily and do more than borrow items while they’re there’: Imagine a place where you can get into a good book. Listen to a CD in comfortable, friendly surroundings or study quietly knowing that the knowledge you need is just a fingertip away. Imagine a place where skills and training advice is freely available and courses are offered in the same building. A place where you can learn informally at your own pace, mixing with other people learning all sorts of new skills. A place that will allow you to move on, in the same friendly and familiar surroundings, to more formal forms of learning if you choose. A place geared to help you get the most out of life. Imagine a place where you can take your whole family to use a wide range of services and enjoy a safe environment. A place where parents and children can learn together with other families in fun and stimulating surroundings. Imagine a place where you can relax in a quality café, take in an art exhibition or music performance. Imagine a quiet place where you can do your school homework, a place that is fun
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and exciting, a place where you can meet your friends, have lots of fun.
As their website said, and thousands of users attested, these ideas became reality in their Bow Street, Chrisp Street and Whitechapel locations. Discovery Centres were similar in concept to Idea Stores. The first modernized library to be re-badged as a Discovery Centre was that in Dover: a joint venture between Kent County Council and Dover District Council bringing together a modernized library service, adult education, and the District Council-run museum. Within the building were to be found a nursery, a café, a theatre, adult education, and arts and crafts activities. As the website said: ‘The Discovery centre is an exciting and fun place to visit – a smart modern building bursting with brand new technology that welcomes library users, adult education students, museum visitors and new users…Users of the Dover Discovery Centre will be inspired to explore, discover and learn.’38 The Dover Discovery Centre was a fine example of many bodies working together to provide services. The County Council ran the libraries but had to work with the District Councils which shared service provision within their areas. This made joined-up provision more difficult in two-tier areas of the country. Hampshire’s Discovery Centres learned from the Dover experience and explored the concept of re-vitalizing the library brand by a re-affirmation of its core values, and by seeking to enhance its value in the eyes of non-traditional users.39 The website makes clear why there was the need for Discovery centres and what they were meant to achieve, as these extracts show: For a number of years library use has been declining. Now there is a need to re-launch libraries with a broader range of services to ensure they serve the needs of the whole community. They offer an exciting way to enable more people to use the wide range of recreation and heritage services that Hampshire County Council and its partners provide via a single location, as well as bringing heritage and museum services to a wider audience. Existing library services are at the core of Discovery Centres. Book lending and reference books are the primary focus, together with CD, DVD and video loans, PlayStation games and Talking Books. Other services will depend on local requirements but may include museum exhibitions, local history resources, a café to encourage longer visits, areas to relax and read, art exhibition space, meeting rooms, IT facilities and events space. Discovery Centres will also offer longer opening hours so more people can access the services at times that suit them. Discovery Centres will result in more people using Hampshire County Council’s library, information and leisure services for longer periods of time, delivering greater learning and leisure opportunities and improving quality of life for Hampshire residents. A Discovery Centre begins with traditional library services, including lending and reference books – and then goes further. The concept is all about delivering more services within a modern, attractive environment, and making them available for longer and to many more people!40
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The Gosport Discovery Centre opened in 2005 and was not without controversy. A purpose-built 1970s town centre library was gutted and remodelled using bright and vibrant colours, new and funky furniture and welcoming layouts. It was not intended to look like a traditional library and it was meant to attract people who felt that libraries were ‘not for them’. In that aim it succeeded spectacularly with visitor numbers showing massive increases and significantly more people borrowing books. Unpublished market research carried out for the County Council showed that 66% of people thought the Discovery Centre was an improvement on what there was before, 16% thought it was worse, 14% thought it about the same and 4% were unsure. Those in a favour of the changes cited reasons such as improvements in the books, computers, a bright and welcoming modern feel to the building and the coffee shop. However, those against said the books were not as good as before and it was noisy. The number of activities carried out by users had increased: they might have said they were coming for books, or for the internet, but once in the building they typically made use of a range of other activities. And the younger they were the more activities they enjoyed. The key success of the Discovery Centre was that it shifted the age range of the users and made itself attractive to a user group more nearly representative of the population than had been the case for traditional libraries. This did have implications, of course, for not alienating the core users – who tended to be older, and less interested in change and new activities. The challenge the library service would face over the next few years was how to continue to widen the appeal of the service to younger people whilst still meeting the needs of the older users. Overdue: how to create a modern public library service Published in 2003, Overdue was Charles Leadbeater’s take on how libraries needed to change if they were to survive.41 Leadbeater felt that libraries should be ‘curiosity satisfaction centres’: Curiosity propels people into libraries to research their family history, find out about a business regulation, explore a novel, listen to some music, surf the internet or watch a video. The common thread is the excitement and satisfaction of curiosity.42
Leadbeater saw the problems of libraries as stemming at least in part from their being run by many local authorities with weak overall direction and control from central government. To solve this problem he recommended the establishment of a National Library Development Agency (NLDA) bringing together the library responsibilities of MLA and DCMS and the funding from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister. The role would be political, policy-making and funding, standard setting, improving performance, workforce development, innovation and advocacy.
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Complacency would be challenged, national marketing and advertising campaigns would be run and a coherence brought the sector. Unfortunately, interesting and valuable though this idea was, it did not catch the imagination of those likely to be able to make it happen. Conclusion It has proved remarkably difficult to follow the editor’s instructions and write this chapter as if one were looking back at the years 2001–2005 from the future. Bringing a dispassionate eye to events that one was bound up in has been a struggle. The five years would have been remarkable if all that happened had been the introduction of library standards and Framework for the Future. But we also had the start of the debate about the whole future of the service, summed up as: take the traditional route, doing what libraries have always done but do it better – essentially the Select Committee route – or accept that society has fundamentally changed and libraries need to change with it – the Idea Stores and Discovery Centre route.
Notes 1
Department for Culture, Media and Sport. Libraries, Information and Archives Division, Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries: standards and assessment. London: DCMS, 2001. 2 CPA – Comprehensive Performance Assessment – the mechanism by which central government monitors and grades local authorities, with published league tables so that local people can judge how effective their councils are and providing freedoms and flexibilities for the highest performing authorities. 3 The People’s Network evaluation summary. London: Big Lottery Fund, 2004. 4 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade. London: DCMS, 2003. 5 Resource became the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) in February 2004 and is referred to as MLA throughout to avoid confusion. 6 House of Commons, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, Public libraries: third report of Session 2004–05. London: TSO, 2005. 2 vols. 7 Building better library services. London: Audit Commission, 2002. 8 Better public libraries. London: Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment and Resource, 2003. 9 Anne Lines, Christopher Savory and Angharad Reakes, Extending the role of libraries. London: National Foundation for Educational Research, 2004. 10 Laser Foundation – a charitable foundation established after the close of LASER as an inter-library loan operation. Its dominant voice was that of the indefatigable Frances Hendrix. The author of this chapter is a trustee of the Foundation. 11 Libraries impact project. London: PricewaterhouseCoopers and Laser Foundation, 2005. 12 Douglas J. C. Grindlay and Anne Morris, ‘The decline in adult book lending in UK public libraries and its possible causes’, Journal of documentation 60 (6), 2004, 609–31.
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13 Perceptions of libraries and information resources: a report to the OCLC membership. Dublin, Ohio: OCLC, 2005. 14 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review. London: PKF, 2005. 15 Charles Leadbeater, Overdue: how to create a modern public library service. A Laser Foundation report. London: Demos, 2003. 16 John Holden, Creative reading: young people, reading and public libraries. London: Demos, 2004. 17 Tim Coates, Who’s in charge? Responsibility for the public library service. London: Laser Foundation and Libri, 2004. 18 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries, 3. 19 Public library statistics: 2005–06 estimates and 2004–05 actuals. London: CIPFA, 2005 20 Audit Commission: . 21 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Framework for the future, 2003, 5. 22 IdeA, the Improvement and Development Agency for Local Government, which accredits the peer review process and trains the reviewers. 23 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review. London: PKF, 2005. 24 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public libraries, 5. 25 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public libraries, appendix IIIb para 2.22. 26 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’. 27 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’, 627. 28 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’, 613 quoting L. Muir and A. Douglas, ‘Where now for the UK public library service’, Library management 22 (6/7), 2001, 266–71. 29 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’, 613–14. 30 R. Loynes and R. Proctor, ‘The effect of reductions in public library opening hours on book issues: a statistical analysis’, Journal of documentation 56 (6), 2000, 605–23. 31 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’, 615. 32 Grindlay and Morris, ‘Decline in adult book lending’, 616. 33 R. D. Codlin, ‘Downward trend’, New library world 74 (879), 1973, 195. 34 Coates, Whose in charge? 35 House of Commons, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, Public Libraries. 36 Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Government response to the third report of the Culture, Media and SportSelect Committee, session 2004–2005: public libraries. London: TSO, 2005. 37 ‘What’s the great idea?’, Idea Store website: (accessed 31/5/06). 38 Dover Discovery Centre: (accessed 25/5/06). 39 Kent’s Discovery centre programme had begun when Yinnon Ezra and I worked there together. Its success however came after we had both left for Hampshire where Ezra was instrumental in persuading the authority that the Discovery centre approach was the right way for libraries to go. 40 Discovery Centres: (accessed 31/5/06). 41 Leadbeater, Overdue. 42 Leadbeater, Overdue, 15.
3
From social inclusion to community cohesion John Pateman and John Vincent
Introduction There was more activity with regard to public libraries and social exclusion between 2001–2005 than there had been over the preceding ten-year period.1 There were three main developments during 2001–2005: there were more efforts to locate public libraries within the national policy context of social inclusion and community cohesion; there was a vast amount of commentary on and scrutiny of libraries, from both within and outside the sector; and the previous emphasis on inputs and outputs was replaced by a greater focus on impacts and outcomes. In terms of the strategic context, there was a shift in language from social exclusion to social inclusion and then to social cohesion or community cohesion. This shift in language also represented a shift in focus, away from the needs of socially excluded people, and towards the need to develop a more inclusive and cohesive society. This development was triggered partly by the disturbances in Bradford, Burnley, Oldham and elsewhere in 2001. There was also a repositioning of social exclusion work within the overall strategic context and direction of public libraries. The main catalysts for this were Libraries, museums, galleries and archives for all2 and Framework for the future,3 the government’s ten-year strategy for public libraries. This was the first time in nearly forty years that the government had tried to define what ‘comprehensive and efficient’ meant in terms of the statutory responsibilities of public libraries as laid down by the 1964 Public Libraries and Museums Act. With regard to greater commentary and scrutiny, there was a plethora of research, reports and activity around the themes of exclusion, inclusion and cohesion. The spur for this was the re-election of the New Labour government and the continued work of the Social Exclusion Unit which did not change its name despite the shift in direction and policy. Among the major reports published during this period were: Building better library services; Developing a needs-based library service; and Who’s in charge?4 Inputs and outputs were replaced by impacts and outcomes. This started off with an attempt to quantify impact via Public Library Standards (2001)5 which
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were rationalized into Public Library Service Standards (2004).6 They formed part of the government’s Comprehensive Performance Assessment (CPA) scheme for local government.7 Further attempts were made to qualify the impact of public libraries on local communities, via Public Library Impact Measures (2005)8 and Generic Social Outcomes (2005).9 A number of toolkits were produced to help libraries understand and measure their efforts at tackling social exclusion. The period 2001–2005 can therefore be seen as both a progression and an acceleration of developments with regard to public libraries and social exclusion which started in the previous decade. There were also other echoes from the past, some of which reflected the obsession of previous Conservative governments with the ‘three Es’ of economy, efficiency and effectiveness. These issues resurfaced in 2005 via reports such as Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review10 and the exploration of ways of developing the local government services market.11 Our review of the period ends on a positive note with a government announcement that ‘There are 1.1 million fewer socially excluded adults’.12 Strategic context The paper Libraries and community cohesion examined the social and national context, raised challenges and offered ways for the library sector to move forward.13 There was a shift from an emphasis on social inclusion to a focus on community cohesion which was defined as ‘A shared sense of belonging based on common goals and core social values, respect for difference (ethnic, cultural and religious), and acceptance of the reciprocal rights and obligations of community members working together for the common good’.14 The strategic context for libraries was established by a number of organizations including: Resource (the Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries – renamed in 2004 the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, or MLA); the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS); the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP); and the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM). The Public Libraries and Museums Act was passed in 1964. It stated that every local authority had a statutory duty to provide a ‘comprehensive and efficient’ public library service for all who lived, worked or studied in the authority. But it did not define what ‘comprehensive and efficient’ meant. This challenge was not taken up by successive governments as it was felt that these decisions should be made by local politicians. As a result public libraries had no overall strategic direction, priorities or objectives. This started to change after Resource was established in April 2000 as the successor to the Library and Information Commission and the Museums and Galleries Commission. Resource was ‘a strategic body empowered to advise government and the sector on the long term development of museums, archives and libraries for the well being and improvement of individuals and communities. Its vision is to ensure that museums, archives and libraries belong at the very heart of people’s lives; contributing to their enjoyment and inspiration, cultural values, learning potential, economic prosperity and social equity’.15
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In July 2000, Resource published a Manifesto that defined a number of core values for its work, including: ‘The services provided by museums, archives and libraries should be focused on the needs of actual or potential users’; and ‘These services should recognize and promote physical and social inclusion and cultural diversity’.16 Building on success: an action plan for libraries included a commentary on access to services: Social inclusion is a cornerstone of Government policy and its recognition and promotion is one of Resource’s core values. Public libraries are especially powerful agents for inclusiveness. They are open to all, non threatening and non judgemental. They are frequently the only point of access to information and learning that is available to the deprived, the excluded or the disaffected. Their special qualities in opening out to people excluded from other aspects of society are precious and must be nurtured and encouraged. Promoting greater equality of access to services forms a core element of Resource’s mandate. At the heart of equality of access is an understanding by service managers of the particular needs of individuals and groups within the community served.17
Building on success was one of a series of consultation documents which began to position public libraries within a strategic context. Others included Using museums, archives and libraries to develop a learning community: a strategic plan for action and Information and communications technology and the development of museums, archives and libraries: a strategic plan for action.18 The Resource Annual review 2002/03 summarized all the activity which they had been involved in concerning social exclusion.19 This included: the development of several toolkits and training materials; the creation of a Cultural Diversity Officer post and regional Cultural Diversity Networks; and support for the Quality Leaders Project20 (alongside support for Positive Action Traineeships in the museums domain). The key government document with regard to public libraries and social exclusion was Libraries, museum, galleries and archives for all: co-operating across the sectors to tackle social exclusion.21 This was a combination of two previous reports: Libraries for all, a draft social inclusion policy for public libraries in England; and Centres for social change, a draft social inclusion policy for public museums, galleries and archives.22 Libraries, museums, galleries and archives for all set out a number of policy objectives around access and audience development. These objectives, and the methodology for developing a strategic approach (the six-point plan), were taken from Libraries for all. There were also two new objectives for the library sector: ‘Outreach activities should be an integral part of the role of libraries, museums, galleries and archives’; and ‘libraries, museums, galleries and archives should consider how they can further develop their role and act as agents of social change’. CILIP established a Social Inclusion Executive Advisory Group which produced the report, Making a difference – innovation and diversity.23 This
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recommended that ‘CILIP should encourage LIS organisations to mainstream services to socially excluded people and promote diversity, recognising that for most this will mean organisation transformation’. Transforming libraries to meet community needs was also a key theme of Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade which defined the public libraries’ modern mission as: the promotion of reading and informal learning; access to digital skills and services including e-government; and measures to tackle social exclusion, build community identity and develop citizenship.24 It was recognized that ‘people who find reading difficult and groups in the community most at risk of social exclusion may find libraries distant or even intimidating places rather than seeing them as symbols of community’. All libraries were encouraged to ‘engage groups and individuals that are hard to reach by identifying them and establishing what are their particular needs and then by redesigning services when necessary so that there are no barriers to inclusion’. Some libraries were already involving the communities themselves in the design and implementation of services. ‘Libraries must be adept at seeking, understanding and serving the needs of non-users, some of whom may be ill at ease in a library setting.’ The Report to Parliament on public library matters gave some examples of ‘social policy work with libraries’, such as the use of volunteers to increase community engagement, and improved access for disabled people, particularly those who were visually impaired.25 The House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee’s Report on public libraries emphasized the importance of books and reading, but also recognized that libraries could offer more to the communities which they served: ‘Public libraries have always been part of tackling social exclusion (whatever this objective has been called over time) and we would encourage a continuing focus on those areas where libraries have a unique contribution to make to this end’.26 The Government response to this report agreed that a balance needed to be struck between books as ‘the core of libraries’ work’ and the need for libraries to ‘reach out to communities in many ways … in particular for those who are most vulnerable in deprived areas and elsewhere’.27 This could be achieved through greater community engagement and libraries that were ‘open at times that match local demand, for example in the evenings or on Sunday’. When Resource became MLA it continued to develop the strategic context for public libraries. A quiet revolution outlined the contribution which libraries could make to ‘the Shared Priorities that have been agreed between local and central government’, for example by ‘tackling unemployment, combating social exclusion, engaging disaffected teenagers who hang around street corners’.28 Investing in knowledge was ‘a five year vision for England’s museums, libraries and archives’.29 The priorities regarding community and civic values were: ‘delivering an inclusive service that reflects and helps build cohesive communities’, providing information and services for disabled people, and ‘providing library premises that meet the needs of 21st century communities’.
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On 21 June 2004 MLA ‘welcomed the government’s announcement of new funding of £2 million for public libraries. Public libraries provide safe, neutral, shared environments for people from all walks of life. They support formal education and learning, are centres of creativity, and serve as focal points for local communities. They are the unsung heroes of the public sector’.30 In 2004, MLA launched a new programme, ‘New Directions in Social Policy’, to prove the impact of museums, libraries and archives on key social outcomes and the Shared Priorities of local and national government. The first stage of ‘New Directions’ – Understanding the Policy Context – included the publication of three policy guides. Cultural diversity for museums, libraries and archives provided an overview of policies surrounding the term ‘cultural diversity’ both within and outside the museums, libraries and archives sector.31 Communities and inclusion policy for museums, libraries and archives explored the contribution museums, libraries and archives can make to neighbourhood renewal, community agendas and social inclusion.32 Health policy for museums, libraries and archives outlined how museums, libraries and archives can contribute to individual and community health through the new preventative health agenda of the NHS.33 These documents formed the core of an ongoing series of social policy briefing documents which MLA was committed to creating as part of ‘New Directions’. In 2005 two reports were produced, which contained echoes of previous attempts (in the 1980s and 1990s) to make public libraries more economic, effective and efficient. At an Intellect/SOCITM Supplier Forum in September 2005, Mark Upton from the ODPM gave a paper, ‘Developing the local government services market’, which considered ‘the development of a diverse market and new ways of working to support improvement and innovation …’.34 This formed part of a wider study of key local government supply markets and it contained some key messages for the sector. The proposed new models of library service provision were: collaborative working and trading models within local government; shared service arrangements across council boundaries; increasing the involvement of the private sector; increasing the role of the voluntary and social enterprise sector; increasing community ownership and management; and stock procurement and supply chain management. Stock management was considered in detail in the report, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review, which was commissioned by DCMS and MLA.35 The key finding of the report was that ‘efficiency gains and better value for money could be found, largely by library services throughout the country adopting the same processes and by purchasing books together. The greatest efficiency gains could be made if all library services placed the same requirements on suppliers and negotiated through one mechanism with the suppliers of books’. MLA rejected the case for a National Library Service, but agreed that further work was needed to persuade the sector of the benefits of collective purchasing and standardized processing requirements. 2005 ended on a positive note with the publication of The little book of public libraries which was ‘for people who love libraries and want to share their passion
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with others’.36 This advocacy tool was intended to ‘open your eyes to the valuable contribution libraries make to families, communities and society as a whole’. Public libraries were as much hubs of the community as churches, pubs and post offices, but with several big advantages: ‘they are public spaces where everyone is welcome; you can use them in different ways – to borrow books, music and films, search the internet, find out information, participate in events; there is expert help on hand if you need it; almost all services are free.’ Libraries had a role in ‘improving people’s quality of life; safer, stronger sustainable communities; healthier citizens’. This located libraries firmly within the national strategic context of the shared objectives between central and local government. Commentary and scrutiny A good summary of social exclusion policy and activity towards the beginning of this period appeared in the Social and racial exclusion handbook for libraries, archives, museums and galleries.37 Another good source of information was The Network newsletter: tackling social exclusion in libraries, museums, archives and galleries;38 this was the most comprehensive record of issues regarding social exclusion and libraries, museums, archives and galleries during this period. It contained a summary of projects and initiatives by service-providers, plus commentary and scrutiny of the service by library professionals, and also information about research and reports on public libraries produced by agencies and organizations outside of the sector, including the Audit Commission, universities, the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE), the Local Government Association, CABE (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment), the Laser Foundation39 and the Network itself. Building better library services noted the significant decrease in library issues and visits and concluded that libraries need to rethink services from the user’s point of view by: providing more of the books and information services that people want; improving accessibility by opening at times that suit people, sharing facilities with other services, and using the internet; ensuring that services are easy and pleasant to use – learning, in particular, from bookshops; building awareness among non-users of the services that libraries offer.40
An important piece of cross-domain research was carried out by the University of Northumbria: Neighbourhood renewal and social inclusion: the role of museums, archives and libraries compared the sector’s view of its contribution to social inclusion and neighbourhood renewal with that of other agencies and organizations involved in neighbourhood renewal and social inclusion activity.41 Developments in adult education were similar to those in public libraries. NIACE launched the ‘NIACE lifelines in adult learning series’ which provided ‘straightforward background information, accessible know how and useful examples of good practice for all practitioners involved in adult and community learning’. One of the titles in this series was Developing a needs-based library
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service which suggested that modernizing public libraries was not enough. They needed to be transformed via new strategies, structures, systems and culture. A needs-based library service would be able to identify, prioritize and meet community needs, and actively engage local people in the planning, design, delivery and evaluation of library services. The Local Government Association also took an interest in public libraries and funded research by the National Foundation for Educational Research, which was published as Extending the role of libraries as part of its educational research programme.43 The key findings concerned partnership working, funding, the role of library staff, national and local support and targeting user groups: ‘Libraries need to identify clearly their main target audiences and promote their services appropriately to these groups.’ The need for more targeted services was also explored in Welcome to your library.44 This was an evaluation report of a library project for asylum-seekers and refugees, which had been piloted by five London Boroughs. In her foreword, Lyn Brown (Chair of the London Libraries Development Agency) noted that: ‘Reaching the most excluded, vulnerable and disadvantaged people in our communities is, by definition, a very challenging task for any service, anywhere. Few services try, and even fewer succeed, so I am particularly delighted to be able to report a real success story that has had a marked and, in my view, very moving impact on people’s lives across our Capital City.’ A number of new library buildings were opened during this period, which caught the public imagination: Idea Stores in Bow and Whitechapel, Peckham Library, Bournemouth Library and the Norwich Millennium Library. The connections between design and exclusion were examined in two reports by CABE. Better public libraries suggested that ‘Quality design will have a major role in delivering a 21st century library service; drawing in the diverse communities they serve’.45 21st century libraries: changing forms, changing futures concluded that ‘imaginatively designed and responsive public library services can play a pivotal role in promoting greater social cohesion and a stronger sense of civic pride and local identity’.46 Buildings and books were the core back-to-basics message of Who’s in charge? which asked ‘who is responsible for the public library service?’ and recommended: treble the expenditure on books and reading material; increase opening hours by 50%; institute a programme of library redecoration and redesign.47 This could be achieved via a reallocation of resources, improved productivity and the introduction of new systems and methods of working. This report was widely reported in the national press and created headlines such as ‘Why libraries spend £24 for book that costs £10 in shops’ and ‘A minute’s silence, please, for the late public library’.48 A ‘crisis summit’ was called by the DCMS at which it was predicted that the library service ‘could be extinct in 20 years if the trend goes on’.49 The Laser Foundation commissioned a number of reports which challenged public library orthodoxy and prompted new ways of thinking. Overdue: how to create a modern public library service recommended a radical rethink, including
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putting social exclusion and the promotion of equality of opportunity at the core of a new ‘guerrilla’ service.50 Libraries: a vision – the public library service in 2015 (which was the outcome of a seminar organized for the Futures Group,51 a group of middle managers in public libraries who came together under the auspices of the Laser Foundation to discuss issues relating to the future of the public library sector) distinguished between core services ‘free at the point of delivery’ and premium services which could be charged for on ‘a full cost recovery basis’.52 The report suggested that ‘library services must follow retailing in being “customerled” … In the future there will be no “one size fits all” library. Each will reflect local needs’. The Laser Foundation also funded a number of innovative projects to test and experiment with new ways of delivering services.53 The Paul Hamlyn Foundation also funded a number of highly significant developments in public libraries during this period via its themes ‘Right to Read’ (for work with looked-after children and young people); and the ‘Reading & Libraries Challenge Fund’ which consisted of ‘Free with Words’ (for work with prisoners and young offenders) and ‘Libraries Connect’ (for work with groups that are frequently excluded from library services).54 The Network also contributed to the debate via a regular column on social exclusion and community cohesion in the Public library journal. For example, ‘Tackling the problem’ drew together information about some of the ‘tools’ that existed to help libraries tackle social exclusion, and ‘A question of cohesion’ looked at the role of libraries in developing cohesive communities.55 Contributions were also made by individual commentators. ‘Open to all? The public library and social exclusion’ was an executive summary of ground-breaking research which influenced policy and practice across the sector.56 Social class was identified as a major determinant of library use and non-use. ‘Why class matters’ examined the ‘class ridden attitudes’ which ‘are prevalent in all professions, including the library and information profession’.57 ‘Moving target’ argued that ‘class is still preventing many people from taking up the services that libraries offer for learning and skills development’.58 Another major theme which re-emerged during this period was the notion of designing library services which could meet community needs. Pateman suggested that ‘by focusing on community needs, public libraries can become a dynamic force for social change’.59 This was explored further in ‘Developing a needs-based library service’; ‘Structures to tackle social exclusion’; and ‘The essence of inclusion: Cuba and the Nordic states’.60 At the same time, there was also an emphasis on libraries’ needing to reach out to and engage with the most marginalized communities if they were to become inclusive services. Nicola Baker looked at Essex Libraries’ service to traveller sites, which won the 2004 Libraries Change Lives Award.61 ‘Tackling exclusion: gypsies and travellers’ also looked at services to this highly excluded group.62 Vincent highlighted some good practice for working with looked-after children,63 including the need to work out in the community (and this good practice, as well as
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experience drawn from a range of projects, was pulled together in The librarians’ training kit).64 Social inclusion was a theme at many professional events and conferences. ‘Reasons to be wrathful’ was a paper given at the Public Library Group conference, which urged practitioners to harness their emotions in the fight against exclusion.65 ‘Count in everybody’ was a challenge at the launch of the Diversity Council ‘to win the hearts and minds of library policy makers and senior practitioners, to change the culture of our profession and to create library services which are truly open to all’.66 ‘So, who are “proper” library users then?’ was a question raised at the 2005 CILIP Umbrella Conference, and the article continued: ‘Let’s not talk about “proper” and “improper” users, but see what we can do to make our libraries more welcoming and attractive to a wider range of people’.67 Papers on libraries and social exclusion were also given at conferences organized by NIACE,68 the Diversity Group,69 the Local Government Association,70 East Midlands Museums Libraries and Archives Council,71 CILIP,72 and the CILIP Career Development Group.73 Impact and outcomes While book issues were in decline during this period, library visits increased after the implementation of the People’s Network. A study carried out into Arts in England: attendance, participation and attitudes in 2001 found that 45% of those interviewed had attended a library in the last year.74 There were clear social class differences in library use: ‘Respondents from managerial, professional and intermediate occupations were more likely to have visited a library than respondents from other occupational groups.’ These findings were very similar to the Report on the 2000 UK time use survey: examining public use of museums, galleries, archives and libraries which found that library users were most likely to possess educational qualifications and be in a managerial or professional occupation: men with no formal qualifications were the least likely (9%) to visit a library; and anyone who had ‘A’ levels or above was most likely (51%) to have visited a library.75 Many Best Value reviews showed that 60% of the population were library members, but only 20–30% of people were regular library users. In order to drive up these figures, a range of performance indicators were introduced to measure existing levels of use and set targets for increasing these in the future. The government launched Public Library Standards in April 2001 with a three-year phase-in period.76 The aim of the Standards was to ‘set for the first time a performance monitoring framework for public libraries. Since then there has been a significant increase in library opening hours, improvements to stock and ICT provision, an increase in user satisfaction and visits’.77 Performance against the Standards was originally reported to DCMS via Annual Library Plans.78 These were later replaced by Library Position Statements,79 although this too came under review.80
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The 26 Public Library Standards were replaced by a streamlined set of ten Public Library Service Standards in April 2005.81 These Service Standards were designed to measure accessibility, ICT, performance/usage/satisfaction and stock. They went on to form part of the Comprehensive Performance Assessment framework for local government.82 In Wales, a set of Standards was also adopted,83 and in 2005 an overall analysis of the Standards was published by CyMAL (Museums, Archives and Libraries Wales), as a result of which the Standards were extended for a further three years to 2008.84 Following some funding issues in the public library service, Northern Ireland’s Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure issued a consultation document in 2005 – the Ministerial foreword set the scene: But like everything else of course the library changes to meet new needs and to adapt to a new environment. It is funded from the public purse and as such needs to make the best use of the money it has. That is not just about saving money – it is also about providing value, and in library terms that means a good quality service, meeting the needs of the people who use it and enabling it to encourage new users. This is what this report is about, achieving a better quality library service, libraries which meet peoples’ needs, libraries which make the most of their power to change lives. Because they do change lives.85
Scottish public libraries were under an ongoing review too: The role of libraries in the 21st century is also under consideration as part of the current cultural policy review instigated by the Scottish Executive. The definition of ‘cultural rights’ and ‘cultural entitlement’ from a user’s perspective form a central plank of the Cultural Commission’s remit, and the public library service has a significant contribution to make in this context, through supporting reading and literacy, facilitating access to lifelong learning and information skills development, and working with partners to close the so-called ‘digital divide’. A further key element in the review will be the development of national strategies to protect and support Scottish cultural heritage, and to deliver quality information services for all.86
Work to develop impact indicators began in August 2002 when a Social impact audit was carried out for the South West Museums, Libraries and Archives Council.87 Several broad themes emerged from this audit (learning, community identity, social cohesion, economic value, equity and access), but no suggestions were made about how these could be measured. Another study, this time on Public libraries and community cohesion: developing indicators did set out to recommend some impact measures.88 But this report only managed to propose a framework for indicators, which consisted of a matrix matching library strategy, delivery and local engagement, with four key aspects of a library service: resources, expertise, place and symbol.
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The nettle was finally grasped by the DCMS, which launched the Public Library Impact Measures in March 2005: The Measures are intended to provide DCMS, MLA, and indeed services themselves, with a tangible means of demonstrating the impact that public library services make to wider community issues, around the themes of the central/local government shared objectives. Alongside the public library service standards, they will also help to demonstrate the quality of library provision to local people. It is envisaged that the impact measures will form part of the Comprehensive Performance Assessment Culture Block next year.89
The ability of these measures to accurately measure community impact was questioned by some commentators. For example, does the amount of non-fiction stock on health issues on the shelves of a public library really measure the impact of that library on the health of the local community? An attempt to develop, improve and complement these impact measures was made by the Libraries impact project, which also focused on the shared priorities between central and local government: children, education, health and older people.90 MLA also contributed to the development of impact measures via Generic Social Outcomes, which were modelled on the Generic Learning Outcomes that formed part of the ‘Inspiring Learning for All’ framework.91 MLA has contracted consultants Burns Owens Partnership (BOP) to develop and pilot outcome measures to document the impact of the sector in three main areas related to communities: healthy communities, social capital and community identity and cohesion. The development of these measures (known as Generic Social Outcomes or GSOs), forms the second stage of the New Directions in Social Policy programme initiated by MLA in 2004.92
A number of toolkits were also produced to help library managers understand and measure their contribution to tackling social exclusion. In 2002 Suffolk County Council (with support from the Department for Education and Skills) produced a handbook to assist councils and other organizations assess their level of inclusion.93 Then, in October 2002, the Resource disability action plan and the self-assessment toolkit Access to museums, archives and libraries for disabled users were published.94 MLA then published the ‘Access for All’ toolkit: enabling inclusion for museums, libraries and archives,95 and checklists for Disability Access96 and Cultural Diversity.97 MLA also produced an ‘Inspiring Learning for All’ toolkit.98 EMMLAC (the East Midlands Museums, Libraries and Archives Council) published guides on How to develop a community profile and How to write an audience development plan.99 The Basic Skills Agency funded a major project that was delivered by the National Literacy Trust, looking at literacy and social inclusion, which, whilst much wider than just libraries, nevertheless saw the potential role for libraries in
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tackling basic skills needs. The final report was produced as a handbook, with valuable links across to government and other policies.100 Several attempts were also made to measure the impact of technology on tackling social exclusion. Inclusion through innovation: tackling social exclusion through new technologies explored the potential that ICT had to promote equality and improve life chances for disadvantaged people, and to transform the delivery of services to them.101 Challenging the digital divide? reported that: … the use of public access and support sites (such as UK Online centres) by those currently perceived as excluded from the benefits of ICT is generally low. The location of many public access sites in libraries, schools, further education colleges and other public sector venues may be a significant barrier for those who do not associate such institutions as being part of their lives.102
However, after the People’s Network (which gave free public access to the internet) was introduced into public libraries, visitor figures went up dramatically. A series of reports was produced, trying to assess the impact of the People’s Network. The interim evaluation of the People’s Network and ICT Training for public library staff by the New Opportunities Fund warned that there was an ‘ad hoc, responsive flavour to much of the work around social inclusion, with relatively few library services taking a targeted approach informed by community profiling and needs identification’.103 The Big Lottery Fund’s Evaluation summary found that ‘the People’s Network has been markedly successful in broadening the library’s user base and the credibility of the library service has been enhanced, helping librarians to reposition themselves at the heart of the local community’.104 The People’s Network: moving forward claimed that the People’s Network was ‘reaching a significant proportion of its target population among the more disadvantaged sectors of society’.105 However, the ability of the People’s Network to narrow the digital divide was impeded by the decision of a growing number of local authorities to charge for access.106 Books and bytes recommended that the People’s Network should ‘remain a free service that people can turn up and use’.107 But new technology alone was not enough – the whole service needed to change. Connecting the UK: the digital strategy, the government’s ambitious strategy for closing the digital divide, did not mention the People’s Network or the role of public libraries.108 In response, the MLA launched Longitude: ‘a toolkit of resources for public library staff to evaluate the long term impact of IT based services on users’.109 This was followed by Longitude II: ‘a Library Networking Impact Toolkit for a user driven environment. This Toolkit is for public library managers seeking to gather reliable information on the overall impact of their services, within local, regional and national contexts, and to demonstrate and exemplify significant impacts on individuals’.110
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Conclusion The period 2001–2005 can therefore be seen as both a progression and an acceleration of developments with regard to public libraries and social exclusion, which started in 1991–2000. The main change was that there were more efforts to locate public libraries within the national policy context of social inclusion and community cohesion. Libraries became now firmly embedded as contributors to the shared objectives of central and local government. Another feature of this period was the vast amount of commentary on and scrutiny of libraries, from both within and outside the sector. This level of attention contrasted sharply with the preceding period, particular the Thatcher and Major years, when public libraries were ignored, apart from a few attempts to make them more efficient. Issues of efficiency, economy and effectiveness did not go away, but there was more focus on trying to measure the quality, rather than just the quantity, of public library services. The emphasis on inputs and outputs was replaced by a greater concern regarding impacts and outcomes. One outcome, which was announced by the government on 29 November 2005, was that ‘there are 1.1m fewer socially excluded adults – those suffering multiple disadvantages – in Britain, according to new figures being released by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister today’.111 In 1997 there were 4.8 million adults (both of working age and pensioners) who experienced five or more disadvantages. In 2003, this number had fallen by 1.1 million to 3.66 million. The number of adults suffering from three or more disadvantages fell by 2.2 million people over the same period. In his first speech on social exclusion, Communities Minister David Miliband said that it was time to move social exclusion back into the spotlight: We should be proud of our progress. We’ve really turned the corner in the fight against exclusion. It’s time to shake off the lazy fatalism that the poor will always be with us. But we need to redouble our efforts. Social exclusion is not just about basic conditions. It is about not having access to the things most people take for granted – basic skills, a job, a decent home, a sufficient income and contact wit friends and family. It is about not having power over your life and your future. There are new challenges ahead. Society is changing – for example, the number of people living alone has jumped from 3.4m in 1971 to an estimated 8.5m in 2021. Living alone doesn’t in itself mean social exclusion, of course, but it can increase the risks. Older people are particularly vulnerable. We have a duty to ensure the ageing generation doesn’t become a lonely generation. We want to make sure that every public service in this country is held accountable for their performance in the poorest areas and for the most disadvantaged people, not just for the average. This means looking at how we can distribute funds more progressively, according to deprivation and need.112
The Minister pledged to take ‘five key challenges’ to each Whitehall Department to keep the fight against social exclusion at the heart of government policy: ‘establishing “floor targets” so Departments raise minimum outcomes; progressive funding which starts with those most in need; joined up and personalized services
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which put people first; rights being conditional on responsibilities; shared institutions and activities which bring people together.’ This speech was interesting for two reasons. First, it indicated that social exclusion was once again the government’s focus. The Social Exclusion Unit was established in 1997 by Tony Blair, but the language later shifted to social inclusion and then community cohesion. The policy wheel appeared to have turned full circle with the emphasis put back on the socially excluded and their needs. Second, the public library service was asked to meet the five key challenges of tackling social exclusion and will be held accountable for its performance in supporting those with the greatest needs. The ability to meet these challenges could determine the survival and development of public libraries over the next ten years.
Notes 1
2 3 4
5 6
7
8
9
John Vincent and John Pateman, ‘From equal opportunities to social exclusion’ in British librarianship and information work 1991–2000, ed. J. H. Bowman. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006, pp. 37–61. Libraries, museums, galleries and archives for all: co-operating across the sectors to tackle social exclusion. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2001. Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2003. Building better library services. Wetherby: Audit Commission, 2002; John Pateman, Developing a needs-based library service. Leicester: NIACE, 2003 (NIACE lifelines in adult learning; 13); Tim Coates, Who’s in charge? Responsibility for the public library service – a report by Tim Coates. London: Libri Trust, 2004. Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries: standards and assessment. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2001. Public library service standards. London: Department of Culture, Media and Sport, [2004]. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). The Comprehensive Performance Assessments are carried out by the Audit Commission who bring together a range of factors to assess a Council’s overall performance; for further information, see: (accessed 3/4/06). Public library service impact measures – proposals for 2005/2006. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). The background to this development was laid out in a series of reports published in 2005: Burns Owens Partnership, New directions in social policy: developing the evidence base for museums, libraries and archives in England. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: ; Tracey Hylton, New directions in social policy: cultural diversity for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: ; Rebecca Linley,
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10 11
12
13
14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28
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New directions in social policy: communities and inclusion policy for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: ; and Marcus Weisen, New directions in social policy: health policy for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: (all accessed 3/4/06). PKF, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review. London: Department of Culture, Media and Sport, 2005. Presentation by Mark Upton from the ODPM: ‘Developing the local government services market: presentation to the Intellect/SOCITM Supplier Forum’, 27 Sept. 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). ‘1.1m fewer people socially excluded’, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister News Release 2005/0253, 29 Nov. 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). John Vincent, Libraries and community cohesion: a paper for the South East Museum, Library and Archive Council. Winchester: SEMLAC, 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). Building cohesive communities: a report of the Ministerial Group on Public Order and Community Cohesion. London: Home Office, 2001. Building on success: an action plan for libraries. London: Resource, 2001. Resource manifesto. London: Resource, 2000. Building on success: an action plan for libraries. London: Resource, 2001. Using museums, archives and libraries to develop a learning community: a strategic plan for action. London: Resource, 2001; Information and communications technology and the development of museums, archives and libraries: a strategic plan for action. London: Resource, 2001. Annual review 2002/03. London: Resource, 2004. See, for example: (accessed 4/4/06). Libraries, museum, galleries and archives for all: co-operating across the sectors to tackle social exclusion. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2001. Libraries for all. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 1999; Centres for social change: museums, galleries and archives for all. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2000. Making a difference – innovation and diversity: the report of the Social Inclusion Executive Advisory Group to CILIP. London: CILIP, 2002. Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2003. Report to Parliament on public library matters. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2004. House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee, Public Libraries: third report of Session 2004–05. Vol. 1. London: Stationery Office, 2005. Government response to the third report of the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, Session 2004–05: public libraries. London: Stationery Office, 2005. A quiet revolution. London: MLA, 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). The Shared Priorities were agreed between central and local government in 2002. They include: raising standards across schools; improving the
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quality of life of children, young people and families at risk, and of older people; promoting healthier communities and narrowing health inequalities; creating safer and stronger communities; transforming the local environment by improving the quality, cleanliness and safety of public space; meeting local transport needs more effectively; and promoting the economic vitality of localities. Further information is available at: (accessed 3/4/06). 29 Investing in knowledge. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2004. 30 ‘New funding to develop public libraries’, Museums, Libraries and Archives Council news release, 21 June 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). 31 Tracey Hylton, New directions in social policy: cultural diversity for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). 32 Rebecca Linley, New directions in social policy: communities and inclusion policy for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). 33 Marcus Weisen, New directions in social policy: health policy for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: http://www.mla.gov.uk/documents/ndsp_health.doc, (accessed 3/4/06) 34 Presentation by Mark Upton from the ODPM, ‘Developing the local government services market: presentation to the Intellect/SOCITM Supplier Forum’, 27 Sept. 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 35 PKF, Public libraries: efficiency and stock supply chain review. London: Department of Culture, Media and Sport, 2005. 36 The little book of public libraries. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. 37 Shiraz Durrani, Social and racial exclusion handbook for libraries, archives, museums and galleries. Nadderwater: Social Exclusion Action Planning Network, 2001. 38 The Network newsletter: tackling social exclusion in libraries, museums, archives and galleries. Nadderwater: The Network, 2001– (formerly Public Libraries & Social Exclusion Action Planning Network newsletter 1999–2001). Available at: <www.seapn.org.uk> (accessed 3/4/06). 39 LASER (the London and South Eastern Library Region) was an operational company which served for more than 70 years the cooperative interests of public libraries predominantly in London and the South East. The Laser Foundation was created from the transfer of the LASER company into a grant-making trust. Further information is available from: (accessed 3/4/06). 40 Building better library services. Wetherby: Audit Commission, 2002. 41 Sandra Parker et al., Neighbourhood renewal and social inclusion: the role of museums, archives and libraries. London: Resource, 2002. 42 John Pateman, Developing a needs-based library service. Leicester: NIACE, 2003 (NIACE lifelines in adult learning; 13).
From social inclusion to community cohesion 43
44
45
46 47 48
49
50 51 52
53 54 55
56
57 58 59 60
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Ann Lines, Christopher Savory, Angharad Reakes, Extending the role of libraries: final report. Slough: National Foundation for Educational Research, 2004 (LGA research report; 23/04). Welcome to your library: an evaluation report by the Advice Development Project. London: Advice Development Project, 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). See also: Helen Carpenter, Welcome To Your Library Project: developing public library services for asylum seekers and refugees in the London Boroughs of Brent, Camden, Enfield, Merton, Newham – final report. London: London Libraries Development Agency, 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). Better public libraries. London: Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment, 2003. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). 21st century libraries: changing forms, changing futures. London: Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment, 2004 (‘Building futures’ series). Tim Coates, Who’s in charge? Responsibility for the public library service: a report. London: Libri Trust, 2004. Catriona Davies, ‘Why libraries spend £24 for book that costs £10 in shops’, Daily telegraph 28 April 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06); Ian Herbert, ‘A minute’s silence, please, for the late public library’, The independent 28 April 2004. John Ezard, ‘Library experts “sidelined in crisis summit”’, Guardian 19 June 2004. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). Charles Leadbeater, Overdue: how to create a modern public library service. London: Demos, 2003. For further information see: (accessed 3/4/06). Libraries: a vision – the public library service in 2015. London: Laser Foundation, 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). See: (accessed 4/4/06). Information about these funding streams and the projects they supported can be found at: (accessed 4/4/06). John Vincent, ‘Tackling the problem: some help’, Public library journal 19 (2), summer 2004, 18–19; John Vincent, ‘A question of cohesion’, Public library journal 20 (2), summer 2005, 26–8. Dave Muddiman et al., ‘Open to all? The public library and social exclusion: executive summary’, New library world 102 (1163/1164), 2001, 154–7; Dave Muddiman et al., Open to all? The public library and social exclusion. London: Resource, 2000. Vol. 1: Overview and conclusions; Vol. 2: Survey, case studies and methods; Vol. 3: Working papers (Library and Information Commission research reports; 84–86). John Pateman, ‘Why class matters’, Diversity: newsletter of the Diversity Council 3, March 2002, 14–16. John Pateman, ‘Moving target’, Public library journal 18 (2), summer 2003, 31–2, 34. John Pateman, ‘Libraries must change to survive’, Adults learning May 2003. John Pateman, ‘Developing a needs-based service’, Library + information update 3 (5), 2004, 34–7; John Pateman, ‘Structures to tackle social exclusion’, Library + information update 3 (6), 2004, 38–40; John Pateman and Charles Newby, ‘The
46
61 62 63
64 65 66 67 68 69
70 71 72
73 74 75
76 77
78
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 essence of inclusion: Cuba and the Nordic states’, Library + information update 3 (11), 2004, 30–3. Nicola Baker, ‘Breaking the cycle of poor literacy’, Library + information update 3 (10), 2004, 38–9. John Pateman, ‘Tackling exclusion: gypsies and travellers’, Library + information update 3 (3), 2004, 42–3. John Vincent, ‘Working with looked-after children’, Public library journal 20 (1), spring 2005, 15–17. Much good practice was established as a result from seedfunding from the Paul Hamlyn Foundation. Summaries of key projects can be found at: (accessed 4/4/06). John Vincent, Access to books and reading projects for young people in public care: the librarians’ training kit. Nadderwater: The Network, 2004. John Pateman, ‘Reasons to be wrathful’, Library management 23 (1/2), 2002, 17–22. John Pateman, ‘Count in everybody’, Public library journal 17 (2), summer 2002, 38–9. John Vincent, ‘“So, who are ‘proper’ library users then?”’ Public library journal 20 (3), autumn 2005, 10. ‘Moving Target’, NIACE conference, Imperial War Museum, Duxford, Feb. 2003. ‘Diversity – dare to win!’ Diversity Group Conference, University of Wolverhampton, 4 Oct. 2004. There is a brief summary of the conference in Diversity autumn 2004, 2 (available at: (accessed 4/4/06)). ‘Extending the Role of Libraries’, Local Government Association Conference, Local Government House, Smith Square, London, 22 Nov. 2004. ‘Agenda for change – how inclusive are our services?’ East Midlands Region Social Inclusion Seminar, EMMLAC, Leicester, 12 Jan. 2005. ‘Umbrella 2005’, CILIP conference, University of Manchester, 30 June–2 July 2005. See, for example, the papers presented at the Community Services Group sessions at: (accessed 4/4/06). ‘Mainstreaming Equality’, CILIP Career Development Group National Conference, University of Leicester, 14 Nov. 2005. Adrienne Skelton et al., Arts in England: attendance, participation and attitudes in 2001. London: Resource, 2002. Patrick Sturgis and Jonathan Jackson, Report on the 2000 UK Time Use Survey: examining public use of museums, galleries, archives and libraries. London: Resource, 2003. Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries: standards and assessment. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2001. Public library service standards. London: Department of Culture, Media and Sport, [2004]. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). See, for example: Annual Library Plans: guidance for the preparation of plans in 2001. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2001. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). See, for example: Public library position statements 2003: guidance. London: Department for Culture, Media and Sport, 2003. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06).
From social inclusion to community cohesion 80 81 82 83
84
85
86
87
88 89
90
91 92 93
94
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The latest thinking is that these should be subsumed as part of a local authority’s Community Strategy and Plan. Public library service standards. MLA’s response to proposals for Comprehensive Performance Assessment from 2005. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Comprehensive, efficient and modern public libraries for Wales: standards and monitoring. Cardiff: National Assembly for Wales, 2001. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). The Welsh public library standards 2002/05: an overall analysis. Aberystwyth: CyMAL, 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). Northern Ireland’s libraries: a framework for change. Belfast: Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure, 2005. Available at: (accessed 5/4/06). Information from the ‘Scotland: Cultural Profile’ website at: (accessed 5/4/06). Jared Bryson, Bob Usherwood and David Streatfield, Social impact audit. Taunton: South West Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2002. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). Kevin Harris and Martin Dudley, Public libraries and community cohesion: developing indicators. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Public library service impact measures: proposals for 2005/2006. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Libraries impact project. London: Laser Foundation, 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). See: (accessed 4/4/06). ‘“New Directions in Social Policy” – researching the impact’, MLA news eBulletin 138, 20 May 2004. Vincent McDonald and Debbie Olley, Aspiring to inclusion: a handbook for councils and other organisations. Ipswich: Suffolk County Council, 2002. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). Resource disability action plan. London: Resource, 2002; Access to museums, archives and libraries for disabled users. London: Resource, 2002 – neither of these publications was accessible on the MLA website on 4 April 2006. To some extent they have been superseded by the ‘Disability portfolio’, a set of 12 practical guides, all published: London: Resource: Annie Delin, Disability in context, 2003 (‘Resource disability portfolio’ guide 1); Sarah Playforth, Meeting disabled people, 2003 (Guide 2); Sarah Playforth, Training for equality, 2003 (Guide 3); Annie Delin, Audits, 2003 (Guide 4); Marcus Weisen, The Disability Discrimination Act (DDA), 2003 (Guide 5); Sarah Playforth, Inclusive information, 2003 (Guide 6); Nick Poole, Using technology, 2003 (Guide 7); Annie Delin, Access on a shoestring, 2003 (Guide 8); Janet Bell, Accessible environments, 2004 (Guide 9); Linda Sargent, Outreach and partnerships, 2004 (Guide 10); Sarah Playforth, Consulting disabled people, 2004 (Guide 11); Annie Delin, Employment at every level, 2004 (Guide 12). All available
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at: (accessed 4/4/06). 95 ‘Access for All’ toolkit: enabling inclusion for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2004. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 96 ‘Access for All’ self-assessment toolkit. Checklist 1: Disability access for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, [ca. 2004]. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 97 ‘Access for All’ self-assessment toolkit. Checklist 2: Cultural diversity for museums, libraries and archives. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, [ca. 2004]. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 98 See: (accessed 4/4/06). 99 How to … develop a community profile: a guide for museums, libraries and archives. Leicester: EMMLAC, 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06); How to … write an audience development plan: a guide for museums, libraries and archives. Leicester: EMMLAC, 2005. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 100 Viv Bird and Rodie Akerman, Literacy and social inclusion: the handbook. London: Basic Skills Agency, 2005. Prior to this, the project had produced a position statement which laid the foundations for the final report: Viv Bird and Rodie Akerman, Every which way we can: a Literacy and Social Inclusion position paper. London: National Literacy Trust, 2005. 101 Inclusion through innovation: tackling social exclusion through new technologies: a Social Exclusion Unit final report. London: Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, 2005. 102 Brian Loader and Leigh Keeble (eds.), Challenging the digital divide? A literature review of community informatics initiatives. York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2004. 103 Evaluation of the People’s Network and ICT training for public library staff programme: interim report for the New Opportunities Fund. London: New Opportunities Fund, 2003. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 104 The People’s Network: evaluation summary. London: Big Lottery Fund, 2004 (Big Lottery Fund research issue; 7). Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 105 Peter Brophy, The People’s Network: moving forward. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2004. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). 106 Survey of charges for People’s Network. [UK]: Society of Chief Librarians, 2004. 107 Books and bytes: new service paradigms for the 21st century library: an evaluation of the People’s Network and ICT training for public library staff programme. London: Big Lottery Fund, 2004. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06).
From social inclusion to community cohesion 108
109 110
111
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Connecting the UK: the digital strategy. London: Cabinet Office, Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit/Department of Trade and Industry, 2005. Available at: http://www.dti.gov.uk/industries/telecoms/pdf/digital_strategy.pdf>(accessed 4/4/06). ‘Measuring the impact of the People’s Network over time: MLA launches LONGITUDE toolkit’, MLA news 26 May 2005. Peter Brophy and Jenny Craven, Longitude II: a library networking impact toolkit for a user-driven environment. London: Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2004. Available at: (accessed 4/4/06). “1.1m fewer people socially excluded”, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister news release 2005/0253, 29 Nov. 2005. Available at: (accessed 3/4/06). Ibid.
4
Community information Helen Leech
Community information in public libraries generally consists of a central signposting database of clubs and societies. In the past this was available only to library users, but during these five years the rise of the internet convinced most library authorities to make their databases available on the web. This made the information easier to access – but also eroded the role of the library and the role of the librarian, as other services started to develop community information databases, as people changed the way they search for information, and as clubs and societies started publishing their own websites. The rise of community information websites During these five years public libraries increasingly took the opportunity to make information available over the internet. By the end of 2005 around six out of every ten library authorities were offering community information databases over the internet.1 More continued to be added all the time: in November 2005 East Lothian made its database, Inquire, available.2 The nature of these databases changed very little from the time that they were kept in card files. They listed local clubs and societies, were organized by subject and place, and gave contact details and meeting times. Two new fields tended to be added in these years: email address for the contact person, and URL for the organization website. Occasionally the remit of the service was widened to included halls for hire, places of worship, and other signposting information, and these are discussed towards the end of this chapter. Databases can be made accessible in a number of ways: examples can be seen at Lancashire, Sandwell, where the community information database could be found via the library web pages, and Westminster, where the database could be found via the community and living pages.3 The first used a database, the second provided information in a printed directory and made the directory available using an Adobe PDF file, and the third used a module within its library management system (GEAC). The norm for public library authorities was to follow the first example, and use database software hosted on a Council server. The move to put these databases online coincided with the move, by the clubs and societies themselves, to start publishing their own information in the form of
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web pages. By the end of 2005 around four out of every ten clubs had their own websites. (It is interesting to note that this ratio did not differ significantly between urban and rural areas.) Generally speaking, public library services did not engage with local clubs to help them create their own websites. Exceptions can be seen in a small number of authorities, examples being Medway and Kent. In Medway library services used free software to help local clubs to build their own websites, and in Kent they gathered together resources to assist clubs. The role of the local authority in supporting local groups online Public libraries continued to be undisputed centres for depositing and accessing information, a place where people could drop in posters or look for leaflets. It was a key role for librarians to collate this information to make it more easily accessible. However, libraries were no longer necessarily the first port of call for members of the public looking for local organizations. It became increasingly common for other services within local authorities to assist clubs to get online. There was a growing recognition of the role of local authorities in supporting local groups, neighbourhoods and charities. This role had long consisted of financial support for local organizations through local Compacts. More recently there was a growing awareness of the potential use of local organizations for supporting and delivering community services, which was recorded in the document Citizen engagement and public services: why neighbourhoods matter, published in 2005.4 This document argued for ‘double devolution’, the devolution of responsibilities and budgets to local groups keen to work for community improvement. Double devolution called for excellent communication with community groups. This meant, firstly, that the groups had to be identified, and secondly, that the infrastructure needed to be in place to talk to them. This led, in 2003, to community information being identified as one of the key e-government outcomes in the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister’s strategy for supporting local government service delivery.5 As a result, a handful of local authorities developed units which, firstly, compiled local and community information online, and secondly encouraged local groups to publish contact and other details on the internet. The demarcation line between these units and library services was often blurred; the clubs and societies database sometimes underpinned the Council A–Z of services, and ex-librarians often staffed the units. Examples existed in Essex, Brent and Bromley. Examples where local authorities supported clubs to get online can be seen in Essex, which offered free websites to local groups.6 Another example can be found in Kingston.7 Records for websites created in this way fed into Council directories of local organizations, and these could be regarded as competition for those traditionally compiled by library authorities. A small number of library services reported that they were attempting to develop their community information databases to act as a central core for a wider
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Council database of organizations. One authority reported that ‘our practice in terms of updating is very good but not all departments are able to maintain the database as we have learnt to’.8 This seems to have been a common experience: librarians as a profession became more acutely aware of data protection requirements and information management than most other officers in local authorities. Competition from commercial information providers Local authorities were not the only bodies collating central registers of signposting information. Competition can be seen in the rise of websites provided by public service bodies or professional organizations. It became possible to search for doctors, plumbers or vets using a postcode to bring up results within one’s own area, information which previously would only have been found in printed directories in public libraries or by telephoning the professional organization involved. Commercial bodies such as UpMyStreet and KnowUK also provided creditable directories of local and community information.9 However, these websites tended to focus on specific types of information and none of these was able to challenge the public library’s role as collator of a wide range of non-profit-making information. Small clubs and societies are hard to trace, and are not of interest to the large commercial websites as the information about them is comparatively expensive to compile and of interest only to a small local population. Online search engines, too, did not yet have the ability to challenge public libraries as central places to find clubs and societies. Because small clubs have small websites, accessed by small numbers of people, they do not rank highly in returns delivered by the major search engines such as Google and tend to be difficult to find. New initiatives and partnerships There was increasing recognition of the power of new technologies to draw information together from disparate sources. This manifested itself in partnerships between library services, other services within their parent authorities, and other external organizations such as local health providers and the police. A small number of library authorities reported that they were using existing community information resources to put together subsets to support their authority’s various objectives, such as promoting healthy living. One example was the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, which created a database to support local children’s services and related professionals.10 There were a number of projects across the country where library services drew together community information resources. The biggest example of this was WILL, What’s In London Libraries.11 WILL aimed to bring together the catalogues and community information databases of London’s public libraries, and at the time of writing included the community information files of eleven London authorities, which could all theoretically be searched at once.
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Another example of a partnership was the consortium known as SeamlessUK, which was led by Essex County Council and joined by Medway Council. The New Opportunities Fund provided funding for the project, which in November 2003 allowed Medway to launch its About Medway website, bringing together in a single place information about local resources, a community information partnership, and a way of delivering national information resources to local people.12 It included information from over 600 organizations, services and groups, and allowed users to find in one place information which previously had been scattered over several. A local information audit was carried out in order to discover what barriers existed to finding information. Working with SeamlessUK facilitated the understanding of the relevant standards. Largely speaking, however, partnership working for community information generally revolved around one local authority, and could include health providers, voluntary bodies, and learning providers. Examples were Brent, East Sussex, Wakefield, Devon, Islington, and Northumberland. Standards There were no widely-used standards for the provision of community information. The US MARC Community Information Format was the only standard dedicated to community information, and the author is not aware of its being used in the UK. At one point metadata showed promise as a means of structuring community information data, specifically Dublin Core, which was adopted and specified by central government in 2001.13 (Metadata is the background code that identifies particular parts of a web page, such as the title and creator.) However, it is clear that where Dublin Core was being used it was to structure the background pages rather than the database records. One example could be seen at Essex.14 Because people tend to ask for community information by subject, this requires structured indexes. Most authorities used lists that were developed in-house, but April 2005 saw the publication of IPSV, the Integrated Public Service Vocabulary. The IPSV was the result of the merger of the Government Category List, the Local Government Category List, and a taxonomy provided by SeamlessUK, which had originated in a community information team in Essex public library service. At the time of writing, the Vocabulary was used by over a hundred local authorities for metadata within their websites, and was starting to be considered for use with community information data. One example where this was happening was the community information database of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead. Other kinds of community information This chapter has concentrated on databases of clubs and societies. Every library service maintained these lists, although not necessarily on the internet. However, the definition of ‘community information’ differed from authority to authority and each authority tended to gather different bodies of information.15
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One body of information that tends to be universally offered by public library authorities is collections of leaflets. There was little change in the way library services collated and offered leaflets, despite the fact that increasingly this kind of information was being made available over the internet. Many library authorities still subscribed to Camden Council’s leaflets service, which provided them with a list of what public information leaflets were available. Two other types of information that libraries tend to collate are halls available for hire, and places of worship. Increasingly, these lists were made available over the internet, either embedded in the organization’s community information database, as can be seen in Islington, or as a separate database, as at Reading.16 Increasingly, however, these lists were maintained by other sections within local authorities. Finally, the rise of the internet eliminated the need for library services to collate certain kinds of information, specifically bus and train timetables, childcare information, and health providers. This information was now collated nationally.17 While it cannot be denied that it is enormously helpful to have this information available, it represents further erosion of the library service’s role in collating information and making it accessible. Conclusions, and the future Public libraries continued to be the undisputed centres for community information collation and provision, but it was not clear whether this role would develop – or whether it might fall away entirely. The continuing development of the internet was changing the way that people expected to find information. At the time of writing libraries were still the only bodies willing to spend the resources to draw together a wide range of information, but commercial organizations like Google, KnowUK and UpMyStreet, and local media organizations, were increasingly providing competition. In addition to this, the role of the librarian in this regard was being challenged by other bodies, often within the librarian’s own authority, which were taking on the roles of managing information and collating community information. The author’s opinion is that future success for public libraries would lie in adopting the new technologies which currently represented competition. Libraries should be using search engine technology to harvest from and signpost distributed data sources. With the rise of new technologies and the online club website, it was becoming increasingly difficult to justify manually and laboriously collating central databases of contact information, when this information was freely available from distributed websites. This leads to a logical interim step: libraries should be encouraging and supporting local organizations to get online, and encouraging best practice in the use of information management standards. Framework for the future, published in 2003, identified community and civic values as one of the key functions of the modern library service, and community engagement was increasingly seen as crucial both for local and library authorities.18 Public libraries needed to address
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their own and local authority agendas by supporting local organizations to get online.
Notes 1
2 3
4 5
6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13
14 15
16
There is no central list of library services’ community information databases, but all can be access through the library websites, and a full list of these can be found at the UK Public Libraries website: (accessed 6/06). East Lothian Council, Online databases of community organisations: . Lancashire lantern: the Lancashire life and times e-resource network: ; Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council: ; City of Westminster, Community and living: . Citizen engagement and public services: why neighbourhoods matter. 2005. Available at: < http://www.communities.gov.uk/index.asp?id=1163148> (accessed 17/7/06). Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, Defining e-government outcomes for 2005 to support the delivery of priority services & national strategy transformation agenda for local authorities in England. Version 1.0. Available at: (accessed 17.7.06). Essex Online: your gateway to services and information across Essex: (accessed 17/7/06). Kingston ePublish: (accessed 17/7/06). The data protection laws were revised in 1998 to require holders of databases to update ‘personal information’ regularly. Many community information records for clubs include secretaries’ home addresses. UpMyStreet: for where you live : ; KnowUK: (accessed 17/7/06). Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, Children’s service directory: (accessed 17/7/06). What’s in London’s libraries: (accessed 17/7/06). Helen Leech, ‘All about Medway’, Libray + information update 2 (12), 2003, 52–3. Office of the e-Envoy, E-Government Metadata Framework. London: Office of the eEnvoy, 2001. Available at: (accessed 17/7/06). Essex Online. A list of the kinds of information that may fall into the category of community information can be found in: CIRCE: better communities through better information. London: Library and Information Commission, 1999 (Library and Information Commission research report; 1). Islington Library & Cultural Services, Directory of local services: ; Reading Borough Libraries, Community
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information database: (accessed 17/7/06). 17 Traveline: ; ChildcareLink: (accessed 17/7/06). 18 Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade. London: DCMS, 2003. Available at: .
5
University libraries Jeremy Atkinson and Steve Morgan
Introduction The start of the twenty-first century saw some major developments in British university libraries. The content of this chapter does not pretend to be comprehensive. Although some developments were not always adequately covered in the literature, they were often discussed widely in professional networking circles. The structure of the chapter aims to reflect these developments by adopting a division into three sections. The first three topics focus on the library user (Users and Services; Information literacy; Cooperation and collaboration). This is followed by consideration of the hybrid library environment in which the user operates (E-developments; Library as place). The third grouping represents aspects of management which ensure that the user and the hybrid library are brought together in the most effective way (Staffing and staff Development; Managing change; Finance; Compliance; Quality). Before embarking on the main content, we would like to highlight two developments that were significant at a national level. During the period 2004–2005 SCONUL (the Society of College, National and University Libraries)1 developed a vision statement to identify the key issues facing university libraries up to the year 2010.2 It also undertook a major strategic review with the aims of: x x
becoming a more strategic organization in terms of influence and leadership enabling a step change in its activity levels to take place in order to support delivery of its enhanced strategic agenda x responding to concerns about the visibility, impact and value for money of the organization. Despite being a large organization in terms of membership (all universities in the UK and Ireland are members as are many of the UK’s colleges of higher education), SCONUL continued to have a very small secretariat and was heavily dependent on senior library staff in member libraries giving freely of their time. A major refocusing of effort was thought to be necessary to ensure that SCONUL used this scarce resource wisely and appropriately.
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Changes agreed by the membership included a new financial strategy leading to increased income levels and a major revision of SCONUL’s committees and groups to form a new portfolio of fixed Working Groups and shorter life Task and Finish Groups, which were set up to lead on a range of high visibility areas of work. Some key priorities for expenditure were also agreed, focused on the issues of visibility, impact and value for money, not just for SCONUL itself but also for its member libraries. These included beginning to develop a toolkit to enable members to be able to demonstrate to their institutions the value for money and impact provided by library services, and the development of a new marketing and communication strategy for SCONUL. An important strategic development for university libraries was the formation of the RIN (Research Information Network),3 set up in 2004 for an initial threeyear period, supported by funding from the four higher education funding bodies, the three national libraries and the eight research councils. The mission of the RIN was to ‘lead and coordinate new developments in the collaborative provision of research information for the benefit of researchers in the UK’. The formation of RIN stemmed from the Final report of the RSLG (Research Support Libraries Group), which identified that existing providers of research information often worked in loose collaboration with the lack of a unified approach to produce a national framework to meet researchers’ needs.4 Representatives from university libraries played an important part in the early work of RIN, particularly in the membership of consultative groups, which were set up to form a bridge between the research and the library and information communities. Users and services The place of users near the beginning of this chapter is no coincidence, given their centrality to the university library service.5 This immediately raised a question: what we continued to call the individuals who engaged with these services – patrons, clients, customers, students and staff, users, readers, visitors, stakeholders, etc. Brophy provided a detailed summary of the increasingly heterogeneous nature of the service receivers.6 Offering services that could satisfy a plethora of groups with differing needs became problematic. Therefore a more focused approach to differentiation and segmentation was taken, requiring a more serious marketing approach.7 Marketing library services, although higher profile, continued to be perceived as a luxury or afterthought rather than a strategic imperative. Competition for the attention of students was fierce. The impact of the Google factor, mobile phone technology, cheap web-based book suppliers, increasing access to PCs and laptops, new handheld devices, all required high quality promotional alternatives to turn students’ heads in the library direction. Greater emphasis was placed on satisfying the needs of groups such as those with disabilities e.g. visual impairment, hearing difficulties, mobility problems, dyslexia, those from backgrounds where higher education was a new departure – and the concomitant problems of student retention, overseas students, higher education students based at further education colleges, and researchers.8 Finance loomed large in the lives of
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an increasingly vocal number of students: either the need to earn whilst studying (and its implications for access to services) or the recognition (manifested through greater student assertiveness and litigiousness) that payment of tuition fees entitled them to high standards of resource provision and course support. For those studying remotely – such as e-learners,9 distance learners,10 traditional under/ postgraduates accessing services from home and companies – service provision improved substantially. One of the dilemmas associated with service provision was the balance between providing generic services required by potentially all users and the niche services identified by particular groups. If services were to be truly customer-orientated, then the needs of both groups had to be met – a tall order. Considerable progress was made to strengthen service provision – both physically and virtually – for generic and specific groups. The opening hours of university libraries continued to increase, with more and more offering services 24 hours a day, seven days a week.11 During the extended hours services were selectively provided, e.g. selfservice or reference only options being offered.12 In general, students required access to printed material and a place to study, together with computer facilities. For some university libraries the five years saw a quantum leap in the provision of self-service facilities, e.g. self-service issue and return, renewals, reservations, inter-library loan systems, accessing individual borrower accounts, online student payment services, self-service photocopying, scanning, etc.13 Basically, this was catch-up time to bring provision in line with services offered by retail outlets including banks, building societies and supermarkets. How best to give support to the users who visited the library continued to exercise service managers and planners: the levels of staff required, their knowledge and expertise, and striking a balance between providing quality services whilst (in some cases through ‘paymaster persuasion’) pursuing efficiency gains. Providing reference and enquiry services – physically and virtually – became a more complex set of challenges. To the traditional face-to-face approach were added the synchronous (or real time) and asynchronous interactions.14 An example of the former would be the provision of chat software (putting a human face on the virtual library); the latter involved the delayed interaction of email and web-based communication media. Portals which promoted the library services to particular segmented groups became embedded in the library web page one-stop shop approach. Particular groups were supported by a range of human as well as electronic resources. As well as traditional support provided by subject librarians, a more integrated approach took root in many institutions, with the blending and overlapping of staff expertise. Study skills, disability technology facilities, pastoral or counselling support, software support were just a few of these developments. Students were less interested in the source of the support than in its effective operation.
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Information literacy Although neither a new phenomenon nor one limited to the university sector, information literacy certainly became high profile. Developed in the United States in the late 1980s, it was defined as: the adoption of appropriate information behaviour to obtain, through whatever channel or medium, information well fitted to information needs, together with critical awareness of the importance of wise and ethical use of information in society.15
Andretta provided an excellent practitioner’s view of the topic, as did the contributors to the special issue of Library review.16 The first LILAC (Librarians’ Information Literacy Annual Conference)17 in 2005 included some excellent papers and was the catalyst for a new website18 and journal (Journal of information literacy), the first issue published in 2006. Over the years the role of the academic librarian adapted to the changes in government policies, information technology and the needs of the student population. How this affected academic librarians in their day-to-day work was well documented by Langley et al.19 One of the key aspects of the role was information literacy. During the period in question continued attempts were made to ensure that students acquired the necessary transferable skills to become information-literate. A number of university libraries developed information literacy strategies or policies.20 Some produced toolkits to encourage best practice, for example at Newcastle University.21 Historically, the narrowly-based library and bibliographic instruction (concentrating on the book and its location) gave way to the more widely conceived user education (concentrating on the student him/ herself). This in turn evolved into the even wider information or informationhandling skills, a sibling of information literacy.22 Each of these steps required the student to possess, as a basic foundation, an increasingly sophisticated level of IT skills. The hybrid library, the all-pervasive nature of the internet, the variety of formats in which information was delivered necessitated serious reconsideration of what it meant to be information literate in the early twenty-first century. Indeed, some suggested that ‘information literacy programmes are about changing people’,23 and not just a new set of skills to be acquired. Poyner provided a comprehensive guide to information skills training, highlighting the identification of student information needs and devising programmes to meet them.24 In a significant development SCONUL developed the ‘seven pillars’ model of information literacy in which seven information skills lead to the achievement of information literacy. The skills are: x x x x x
recognizing information need distinguishing ways of addressing gap constructing strategies for locating locating and accessing comparing and evaluating
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x organizing, applying and communicating x synthesizing and creating.25 This model was taken up by many others for their own curriculum development purposes.26 It was generally agreed that any information literacy programme worked best when integrated into the curriculum and facilitated by a combination of academic and library/learning resources staff. The aim was to make use of a generic model that could be adapted for a range of different disciplines. Whether library staff were the right people to deliver information literacy programmes continued to be debated.27 The question was raised as to whether it might be more appropriate for librarians to train and/or involve academic staff as a way of persuading students of the benefits. It was recognized that librarians needed to understand more fully the different attitudes and motivations of academic staff in different contexts. Although there were always small pockets of success, there was much ground to be made up before academic and library staff were seen as a genuine partnership in steering students towards becoming information-literate. The Big Blue Project and the subsequent Information Skills Toolkit was another important development during this period.28 Given the developments in the USA and Australia, it was no surprise that the Project called heavily upon experiences in those countries to inform this model. Students value tasks that have some bearing on their assessment. The challenges relating to the assessment of information literacy programmes, like their previous incarnations, were discussed in Webber and Johnston.29 Cooperation and collaboration Collaboration continued to figure prominently on the agenda of university libraries in order to achieve improved services for users, a more cost-effective sharing of resources or joint project working in response to calls from JISC and other funding bodies.30 Collaboration at a national level was progressed by organizations such as SCONUL and CURL (Consortium of University Research Libraries) and by a wide range of formal and semi-formal groups, particularly in the areas of staff development and training such as BIALL (British and Irish Association of Law Librarians), the University, College and Research Group of CILIP (the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals)31 and the University Science and Technology Librarians Group. Significant development work was carried out by a number of regional collaborative groups. WHELF (Wales Higher Education Libraries Forum) carried out a major review of collaboration in its HELP (Higher Education Libraries in Partnership) project, including case studies on e-learning and journals, leading to an action plan for further development.32 WHELF also continued to be active in the areas of staff development and training. SCURL (the Scottish Confederation of University and Research Libraries) carried out innovative work in developing CASS (Collaborative Academic Store for Scotland), began work on a Scottishwide institutional repository and was particularly active in special needs work.33
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The M25 Consortium of Academic Libraries in the east and south-east of England was particularly active in staff development and training through its CPD25 activities, and in access schemes and online resource discovery through its InforM25 service. InforM25 was developed to consist of four integrated schemes designed to provide users with simultaneous searching across the library catalogues of the large number of member institutions using standardized protocols, and with information about libraries and collections by geographical location, by subject discipline and by opening hours and access arrangements.34 NOWAL (North West Academic Libraries) further developed its well-regarded staff development activities and also arranged an innovative collaborative procurement exercise for netLibrary e-books with OCLC involving the acquisition of 12,000 priced titles within a 30-month contract.35 Other key collaborative developments at a national level during the period were the development of a UK-wide access and borrowing scheme for university researchers, SCONUL Research Extra,36 and further activity in the development of regional cross-sectoral access schemes, including LIN y Gogledd, which claimed to be the UK’s first free reciprocal borrowing scheme between public libraries and a university library.37 In addition a pilot scheme, UK Computing Plus was developed, which sought to allow reciprocal access to computers in host libraries, to complement the work of the UK Libraries Plus scheme.38 The delivery of university academic programmes in further education colleges continued to develop and a number of university libraries sought to define partnership agreements with their FE counterparts.39 E-developments At the beginning of the period Rusbridge wrote about the eLib (UK Electronic Libraries) programme as it was coming to a close.40 The eLib programme had been a major outcome of the Follett report41 in the mid-1990s and Rusbridge saw the programme as having successfully achieved its objective of a major cultural shift, with university libraries taking up new technologies almost as a matter of course. JISC had been the driver of the eLib programme and many of the e-developments in university libraries during 2001–2005 continued to be strongly influenced by JISC activities. In 2001 the main focus of thinking was around concepts such as networked learning, hybrid libraries and the DNER (Distributed National Electronic Resource),42 although authors such as Pinfield had identified a series of further challenges for institutions.43 By 2005 the use of new technologies in British university libraries had both widened and deepened: there was a wider range of high quality electronic resources available in all forms (e-books, e-journals, images, moving images, etc.), e-learning was more prevalent in universities with libraries taking a key role, digitization activities were more widespread, and libraries were involved in fundamental infrastructure changes in their institutions as e-approaches became more embedded, notably in the development of electronic theses, institutional repositories and records management.
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Conyers provided a useful overview of the extent of the availability of eresources in university libraries by the end of the period, with a significant move from print to electronic resources and a decline in the use of inter-library loans.44 Given the wide range of e-developments taking place in university libraries during the five-year period, it will only be possible to identify and summarize the key developments, with the references providing access to more in-depth information. One of the key issues for university libraries was the emphasis given to digitization of collections. At the beginning of the period the emphasis was on relatively small-scale digitization as part of projects45 or within individual library services.46 By 2005 the developments had become larger-scale, with HEFCE’s £10 million investment in a JISC Digitisation Programme involving digitization of large text, moving image and sound collections, and with a further tranche of funding promised for 2006.47 JISC was also involved in developing cross-sectoral strategic approaches.48 Commercial providers also became involved, for example in the University of Oxford’s mass digitization agreement with Google, involving the digitization of more than one million of the Bodleian Library’s books. During the period there was a distinct move from the internet being used in an ad hoc way by enthusiasts in higher education to e-learning having become an integral part of academic delivery, supported in a more routine way.49 Melling61 and Allan62 provided useful detail on the way in which librarians became directly involved in e-learning activities such as in the design and development of materials, delivery of e-content and the support of individual and group learning.50 There were a number of key projects related to delivery in particular subject areas51 or the development of specific tools and approaches, particularly around embedding information resources in learning environments.52 These developments began to impact on librarians’ roles and on services provided, with the need for more extensive cooperation between departments in the university.53 Librarians needed to obtain a more detailed knowledge of VLEs (virtual learning environments), and to a lesser extent virtual research environments, and be involved in a detailed way in their use and development.54 A key issue was the relationship between e-learning and digital libraries,55 with the INSPIRAL project analysing issues surrounding the linking of VLEs and digital libraries, focusing on institutional and end-user perspectives.56 For e-books a key strategic role was carried out by JISC’s E-Books Working Group.57 Progress by academic libraries in making e-books available in university libraries was much slower than with e-journals, although netLibrary supplied significant numbers of e-books to UK academic libraries during the period. A number of authors usefully explored the advantages and disadvantages of the medium.58 Important work was carried out by the EBONI (Electronic Books ON-screen Interface) project, funded under the DNER Learning and Teaching programme, which developed a set of guidelines for designing electronic textbooks, through evaluations with lecturers and students from a range of different disciplines.59 In 2001 Halliday and Oppenheim noted that the move to digital publishing by
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commercial publishers had done nothing to relieve the very high inflation rate on journal prices and highlighted the move to alternative models of journal production.60 Open access publishing gained momentum and was the focus of a report by the House of Commons Select Committee for Science and Technology.61 Following the previous Pilot Site Licence initiative (1995–1997) and NESLI (1998–2001), NESLi2 was implemented as the national initiative for the licensing of electronic journals on behalf of higher and further education from 2003 and piloted the use of a model licence for use in negotiating agreements with publishers.62 There were common problems for university libraries in dealing with large, bundled deals and in attempting to move from print to electronic collections.63 University libraries had for many years incorporated slide and video resources into their physical collections. Major progress was made during the period, particularly by JISC, in making networked image, moving image and sound resources available to university users, leading to the need for university libraries to incorporate these resources within their virtual collections and information gateways.64 A key development was the setting up of EMOL (Education Media OnLine), subsequently relaunched as Film and Sound Online, which was a JISCfunded set of online collections of film and video freely available to use either in full or as segments.65 2001–2005 was a period in which there was major investment in electronic resources by university libraries and JISC. Although there was a strong commitment and take-up by university librarians, there was an underlying concern about use and take-up of these resources by academic staff and students, who often showed a preference for using search engines such as Google.66 A number of important studies at individual institutions and by JISC-evaluated aspects of use of electronic resources and information-seeking behaviour. These included studies at Leeds Metropolitan University and Glasgow Caledonian University, the JUBILEE project, the JUSTEIS project, the EDNER project and the JISC User Behaviour Monitoring and Evaluation Framework.67 The outcomes of these studies pointed to a need for university librarians and JISC to be proactive in promoting the value of quality electronic resources and the importance of information skills training for students and academic staff. The development of electronic resources provision by university libraries was particularly important as universities sought to expand their distance and e-learning provision and provide an equivalent learning experience for students based off campus.68 Although access to electronic bibliographic databases in universities was well developed by 2001 and access to full text e-journals was relatively common, the provision of access to online theses was relatively underdeveloped and no UK national guidelines existed for the production and management of electronic theses and dissertations. During 2001–2005 there was significant progress, both in individual institutions and nationally.69 The JISC FAIR (Focus on Access to Institutional Resources) provided a focus for activity and the JISC-funded EThOS
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project started work to develop ‘a fully operational, easily scaleable and financially viable prototype UK online electronic theses service’.70 A key development for scholarly communication was the increasing emphasis on institutional repositories for the archiving of e-prints and e-theses. An important factor was the use of the (OAI) Open Archives Initiative, which created the conditions for making distributed archives interoperable.71 Leading UK institutions in these developments were Southampton, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Nottingham.72 The SHERPA project developed open access institutional repositories in a number of these research institutions.73 Other technology-based developments worthy of note included the use of RFID technology and blogs,74 progress in digital preservation,75 the move from ATHENS to Shibboleth authentication76 and libraries’ involvement in the development of records management policies and systems in universities.77 There were also significant developments in library management systems for universities with an emphasis on products facilitating access to e-content in an integrated way with books, journals and other library stock, including portal solutions, article-linking software and federated searching.78 Library as place As a result of the influential Follett report over 100 new academic library building projects were undertaken in the UK between the mid-1990s and the early years of the new century.79 Details of new academic library buildings in the UK can be accessed via SCONUL’s website.80 During 2001–2005, although clearly the process slowed down, significant development of the physical infrastructure of many library buildings took place.81 As well as some new buildings started from scratch, most university libraries participated in one or more of the following: x x x x x x x x
constructing extensions to existing buildings consolidating services on to fewer sites/into fewer buildings rationalizing the numbers of service points relocating services between buildings relocating services into different buildings on the same campus re-using existing space for a different purpose refurbishing existing buildings (interior and exterior) making existing accommodation work harder through the integration of services x making alterations to buildings to comply with legislation eg institutions are now obliged to ensure accessibility to all. The reasons for these developments were many and varied. They included the need to respond to financial constraints in higher education, to support changes to academic programmes (often related to student recruitment), to provide a range of teaching and learning spaces as a result of student demands and the advances in technology, and to incorporate the benefits of the virtual library into the changing
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physical environment. Many discussions debated the hybrid library (which during this five-year period continued to develop inexorably along the continuum between paper-based and electronic) and the balance of resources required by the academic communities. Did we need large book collections? Did we need buildings to house less-used physical resources? What about special collections, departmental collections or collections for particular groups like researchers? What about ebooks? How long before we moved to electronic-only journals collections? What about the archiving of print-only journals and digitization issues? All these considerations had implications for the physical space within universities and were discussed by Brophy.82 Emphasis was placed on the importance of flexibility and future-proofing of space. Both recognized that the existing usage of space would need to change over time and therefore required the potential to be reconfigured.83 The pedagogical and technological requirements of future students would clearly evolve. Learning spaces developed a blended approach that accommodated the physical and the virtual, each complementing the other. The physical began to take on a different persona. The types of services provided broadened into other support areas including study skills, counselling and financial support, services for disabled or dyslexic students, specialist media and IT services. The increasingly ubiquitous laptop appeared in the university library landscape – leasing, lending, owning – with appropriate accompanying work stations. Many buildings became wirelessenabled. Although not new, the zoning of library buildings became an accepted mechanism for trying to provide students with a choice of study environments. So group study areas or rooms (increasingly to enable students to prepare presentations), individual study carrels, workstations (for use of fixed or portable equipment), quiet areas, silent areas (and the challenges of differentiating between them!) and training suites were offered to users. One development that made a quantum leap during this period was that of social and learning space. Learning has always been a social activity but the rise of e-learning and the increased access to e-resources encouraged many universities to recognize student demand and provide social and learning space. The nomenclature varied – cybercafés, learning zones, learning centres, etc.84 In 2002 Glasgow Caledonian University opened its Learning Zone – just one example of a university reaching out to the student population. The multifunctional library buildings could thus provide a range of environments – for those requiring background noise, social interaction, relaxation (chill-out zones?), refreshments on tap,85 internet access, as well as the more traditional environment of silence. The different zones for different purposes, of course, threw up some management issues – not just of library staff and resources but also of noise, human traffic and behaviour.86 A greater emphasis was placed on security in the library buildings, given their vulnerability to theft of expensive equipment. This was particularly important for those sited in inner city locations. The use of closed circuit TV and swipe cards for staff and students became the norm.
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Staffing and staff development The importance of managing and developing staff showed no let-up. The management aspect was covered comprehensively by Jordan and Lloyd,87 whilst Brine, Oldroyd and Yeoh highlighted attempts to keep staff development high on the agenda.88 Although not extensively covered in the literature, one of the major discussion points in this period was job evaluation. As part of the National Framework Agreement the staff of each university including those providing library and information services were expected to participate in the exercise – most used either the HERA (Higher Education Role Analysis)89 or Hay models – in a drive to ensure amongst other things that individuals received equal pay for work of equal value. Whilst not yet completed for all universities, this protracted role analysis put library and information posts under intense scrutiny, with many winners, inevitably some losers and others still uncertain. The exercise succeeded in highlighting the changing roles in the library and information environment – new skills for new times. The role changes took place at different levels. As outlined elsewhere in this chapter, the leaders of services were bequeathed or acquired ever-expanding empires, taking on previously separate areas of responsibility. The skills and abilities required therefore could change quite dramatically.90 This was borne out in the extensive HIMSS Project, which explored the skills required of senior library and information staff.91 Not surprisingly, human resource, strategic, financial and change management skills, together with leadership and communication/interpersonal skills were seen as core requirements. The role of subject/information librarians also came under the spotlight.92 This culminated in a rare collective show of defiance as a result of the cutting of eight librarian posts at the University of Bangor.93 This acted as a wake-up call and prompted librarians across the sector to consider their own (in)dispensability. The change of roles was also demonstrated by the virtual demise of posts such as Chief Cataloguer or Systems Librarian and the rise of a range of exotically termed posts such as Knowledge Manager,94 Digital Resources Librarian, Metadata Manager, E-resources Coordinator and other learner support posts.95 Overall, there was a recognition that library staff required a wider skills base, regardless of their role,96 and that many staff benefited from acquiring project management skills.97 With the exception of Bangor, there was also a gradual reinforcement of the notion that, as well as library users having the facility to manage their library activities themselves and indeed study from a distance, being served, helped, advised and supported through human interaction was for many still an identified requirement.98 This period saw the launch of the CILIP Framework of qualifications, partly in an attempt to attract more high quality applicants into the profession and the university sector.99 However, the jury was still out. The difficulties faced by fixed term and project staff became evident following an extensive study.100 Another possible attraction to academic library work was the working pattern. This period demonstrated that flexibility was high on the list of many employees (and indeed of many employers), particularly those returning after undertaking family
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commitments. The European Working Time Directive, giving employees with young or disabled children the right to request to work flexibly, proved to be a breakthrough.102 Temporary or fixed term arrangements, home working, part-time working (various models) became increasingly acceptable options. Issues relating to performance management, although not covered widely in the literature, began to be discussed through informal networks including staff appraisal processes, reward systems, stress increasingly experienced by staff and absence management. The lack of succession planning for senior library staff, hitherto a topic mainly for the commercial sector, was increasingly a concern.103 Managing change The industry surrounding library management104 and management of change in particular continued apace.105 Although the university sector had become used to dealing with strategic change during the 1990s, in recent years the sheer complexity of the higher education landscape threw up huge challenges for staff – at micro and macro levels. Universities continued to be involved in a range of change events over the period, all requiring planning, preparation and a range of other skills. The University of Luton provided a comprehensive toolkit, developed out of a HEFCE Good Management Practice Project.106 Change management scenarios included: x mergers, partnerships and other collaborative ventures with other higher education institutions x realignment of library services in supporting institutional or academic review x convergence, deconvergence or establishment of changed relationships involving a range of support departments x restructuring of staffing in response to a range of external or internal factors x planning and implementing new building programmes, relocating to different premises or rationalizing premises (see elsewhere in chapter) x staffing changes brought about by the National Framework Agreement (ongoing) x new staff appointments – at institutional or departmental level – influencing strategic direction. In respect of the last point newly appointed service leaders drove some of the types of change outlined above (often factors outside their direct control) or brought in fresh ideas to make their mark on the new organization. Such ideas, quite naturally, included different ways of operating, e.g. leadership style, which affected in some way most of the staff in the service. The trickle-down effect of these changes clearly impacted in varying degrees throughout the institutions and their respective support services. It should be remembered that in many cases changes had to be given time to embed in the existing systems and structures. Given the amount and complexity of change, coupled with insufficient time for changes to coalesce, it
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was hardly surprising when issues around resistance and staff morale became prevalent. And all this before consideration was given to technological developments107 and dealing with external agencies,108 changes to teaching, learning and research methods, the fluidity of academic portfolios, the heterogeneous nature of the student body and the financial constraints within which higher education has to operate in the 21st century. The list is endless, as any good STEP/PEST analysis (Political, Economic, Social, Techological) or indeed the elongated PESTEL (add Environmental and Legal) analysis will testify. It was important that bodies such as SCONUL provided some vision for the academic library during this period.109 Universities needed a similar vision so that there was a unified focus for individual and collective energies. All these factors affected the way many people went about their work and how and with whom they interacted. It was these aspects of change which tended to get forgotten in a list of more concrete developments or moves. Ultimately, it was the people who made these activities succeed or fail and the cultural dimension to change is the least understood and the least amenable to practical solutions.110 Multiple change highlighted the importance of adopting proactive approaches to change, rather than letting change just happen.111 Strategic planning was deemed to be a powerful management tool in tackling change head-on so that a degree of control could be exerted.112 Atkinson provided some measures to enable change management to be carried out (relatively) painlessly, with particular emphasis placed on strategic planning.113 This process provided the opportunity to involve all the staff and gain ownership at an early stage. Although there would always be resistance in some quarters, there were mechanisms available to minimize it, if not avoid it altogether. The range of challenges thrown up by change management was well illustrated in Hanson.114 He provided a number of case studies of convergence and deconvergence (and also some institutions which decided against convergence) in universities. These detailed potted histories showed the different models that were followed. Most were carried out as a result of heads of service departing, i.e. opportunities were grasped. Many of the successes and failures of (de)convergence were dependent upon the ability to integrate staff coming from sometimes diverse cultures. Finance In general, financial issues did not loom large during the period, with most university libraries experiencing incremental growth in their budgets, but with pressures relating to above average inflation on subscription-based information products. In-depth financial benchmarking continued to be available to institutions through the annual SCONUL and UK higher education management statistics.115 There were pressures put on university library budgets and budget structures not only by above-average inflation on journals and subscription-based electronic resources,116 but also by consortial licence agreements and by complex ‘big deal’ arrangements for electronic resources, which often required an unprecedented flexibility in budget arrangements.117
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There were also continuing pressures on university libraries to raise income to supplement central university funding, with a few research-based libraries, such as the University of Oxford, mounting large-scale funding campaigns.118 Although there were a number of initiatives enabling libraries to make real progress in terms of e-delivery in support of their institution’s teaching, learning and research, specific developments in e-content provision produced a number of significant financial implications. There were often a number of major additional costs for those libraries wanting to make progress in this area. For example, the HERON service developed a well used charged-for service providing copyright clearance, digitization and delivery of book extracts and journal articles to UK higher education institutions, as well as a resource bank of digitized materials for rapid use, subject to copyright descriptions.119 Services such as HERON were guided in their approaches by the JISC-funded PELICAN project, which sought to develop an understanding of charging mechanisms for distributing commercially produced electronic material.120 In addition, following successful negotiations with Universities UK and SCOP (Standing Conference of Principals), the CLA (Copyright Licensing Agency) introduced a new trial licence, at additional cost to institutions, permitting the photocopying and scanning of copyright protected titles with effect from 1 August 2005.121 Compliance During the period there was a significant amount of legislation which impacted on universities and their library and information services and which presented a range of compliance challenges for service provision. The most significant were those relating to disability, copyright and intellectual property rights, and freedom of information. The SENDA (Special Educational Needs and Disability Act) legislation placed new requirements on those institutions providing post-16 education, including universities. In the university library sector there was a very positive response to this legislation by individual institutions, including physical changes to library buildings, study furniture and service points, provision of specialist equipment, and development of special services and support material, all of which were very well received by user.122 There was a particular emphasis on the provision of electronic information services for the visually impaired.123 There were also useful collaborative approaches in terms of sharing ideas and identifying best practice, notably by CLAUD in the south and south west of England124 and in Scotland.125 The increasing complexity of copyright compliance and the development of elearning and blended learning approaches in particular, resulted in a much greater workload in copyright clearance for universities, often centred on the library service.126 Those university libraries with a responsibility for copyright in the widest sense were also involved in ownership issues concerning intellectual property rights in relation to university lecturers and commercial exploitation.127 The introduction of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the consequent
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need for records management expertise also had a significant impact on university libraries and quite often resulted in a bringing together of responsibilities for copyright, data protection, freedom of information and records management under central information services management in those institutions where there had been an organizational convergence of library and IT services.128 Quality During the period there was a continuing emphasis on the performance measurement and evaluation of university provision and services and this was reflected in approaches taken in the university library and information services sector, both nationally and at the institutional level. The impact of the quality assurance processes of the QAA (Quality Assurance Agency) on institutions continued to be significant, both in terms of workload and in ensuring that there was a ‘joining up’ of quality procedures across all parts of the institution. The SCONUL Working Group on Quality Assurance produced an aide-memoire, endorsed by QAA, to assist reviewers when they were evaluating library and learning resources under the Academic Review procedures.129 Academic Review was subsequently replaced by Institutional Audit in England and Northern Ireland and by related methods in Wales and Scotland, and the Group produced further guidelines to assist library and academic staff to prepare for Audit in terms of learning resources provision.130 The National Student Satisfaction Survey was introduced, although coverage of library provision and services was very limited. Outcomes from the Survey were recorded on the Teaching Quality Information website, enabling students and other stakeholders to make comparisons between institutions.131 A range of survey methods was used by university libraries during the period, usefully investigated by West, Secretary of SCONUL’s Working Group on Performance Improvement.132 Of 65 respondents, 62 were carrying out user surveys, with significant use of the standard SCONUL satisfaction survey and the ARL (Association of Research Libraries) LibQUAL+ instrument.133 University libraries viewed the ability to benchmark data as being a major advantage of LibQUAL+ and the Working Group on Performance Improvement carried out work to develop a mechanism for libraries using the SCONUL satisfaction survey to be also able to benchmark data.134 In universities, attention also turned to developing ways to measure the outcomes of learning, teaching and research and in library and information services specific work took place on measuring the impact of services provided for users.135 SCONUL worked with LIRG (the Library and Information Research Group) on a joint initiative looking at the impact of higher education libraries on learning teaching and research.136 Twenty-two libraries were involved in assessing the impact of particular services on new innovations in their institutions. Consideration was also given to the relationship between the funding levels provided for a university library and institutional outcomes in terms of quality assessment.137 Progress was also made in trying to develop standard approaches for
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performance measurement for electronic services and resources.138 The HEFCEfunded eVALUEd project was concerned with developing an online toolkit to help library managers evaluate their services, particularly the use of their electronic services.139 A related e-measures project, also funded by HEFCE, tested out a range of measures relating to a range of electronic services and resources and their use within a pilot group of 25 higher education libraries.140 The rapid development of online resources during the period provided librarians, in theory, with a range of statistics to enable them to assess the use and value of these resources. In practice, the lack of consistency and standardization in these statistics and the lack of a formal international structure for providing these statistics caused problems for British university libraries. Project COUNTER (Counting Online Usage of NeTworked Electronic Resources) sought to address these problems by beginning to develop an international Code of Practice governing the recording and exchange of online usage data, beginning with journals and databases.141
Notes 1
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SCONUL was founded in 1950 as the Standing Conference of National and University Libraries. It changed its name in 2001 after admitting colleges of higher education. Website: (accessed 7/7/06). SCONUL Vision: (accessed 7/7/06). Research Information Network: (accessed 7/7/06). Research Support Libraries Group, Final report: (accessed 7/7/06). Maxine Melling and Joyce Little (eds.), Building a successful customer service culture: a guide for library and information managers. London: Facet, 2002. Peter Brophy, The academic library. 2nd ed. London: Facet, 2005. Eileen Elliott de Saez, Marketing concepts for library and information services. 2nd ed. London: Facet, 2002; Jennifer Rowley, Information marketing. Aldershot: Gower, 2002. SCONUL, Access for users with disabilities. London: SCONUL, 2003 (SCONUL briefing paper); Library review 54 (8), 2005: Disability issues; Kay Foster, ‘Libraries and student retention: some thoughts about the issues and an approach to evaluation’, SCONUL newsletter 28, 2003, 12–16; Helen Singer, ‘Learning and information services support for international students at the University of Hertfordshire’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 63–7; Suzanne Livesey and Peter Wynne, ‘Extending the hybrid library to students on franchise courses’, Library management 22 (1/2), 2001, 21–5; Emma Robinson, ‘Academic liaison and research support – agendas for change – reflections drawn from implementation of a new model in a research environment’, SCONUL newsletter 27, 2002, 44–50; Diana Garfield, ‘Support for research: support for learning’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 25–8. Ruth Jenkins, ‘Supporting e-learning at University of Birmingham’, SCONUL newsletter 25, 2002, 53–6; Maxine Melling (ed.), Supporting e-learning: a guide for library and information managers. London: Facet, 2005; Carol Black and Lindsey Martin, ‘Supporting staff in a virtual learning environment’, SCONUL newsletter 30,
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2003, 19–22; Steve Lee, Laurence Patterson, Dave Monk, ‘Supporting e-learners 24 u 7 throughout Wales and beyond’, SCONUL newsletter 29, 2003, 48–53. Peter Brophy, Shelagh Fisher and Jenny Craven (eds.), Libraries without walls 5: the distributed delivery of library and information services. London: Facet, 2004; Julie Hitchin, ‘Supporting distance learners at the University of Central Lancashire’, SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 31–6; Christine Stevenson, ‘Distance no object: bridging the library and information gap for distance learners’, SCONUL newsletter 28, 2003, 8–11. Maureen Wade, ‘24 hour library opening at LSE’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 31–3; Laura Oldham, ‘Life in the last lane – well nearly: 24 hour opening pilot at University of Liverpool, Harold Cohen Library’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 55–8. Leigh Richardson, ‘Self services: the present state of play’, SCONUL newsletter 28, 2003, 18–21. Judith Reed, ‘Self service machine at the University of Worcester’, SCONUL focus 36, 2005, 53–65. R. D. Lankes, ‘The necessity of real-time: fact and fiction in digital reference systems’, Reference and user services quarterly 41 (4), 2002, 350–5. Sheila Webber and Bill Johnston, ‘Assessment for information literacy: vision and reality’ in Information and IT literacy, ed. Allan Martin and Hannelore Rader. London: Facet, 2003, pp. 101–11. Susie Andretta, Information literacy: a practitioner’s guide. Oxford: Chandos, 2005; Library review 54 (4), 2005: Information Literacy issues. LILAC Conference 2005: papers: (accessed 7/7/06). New Information Literacy website: (accessed 7/7/06). Anne Langley, Edward Gray and K. T. L, Vaughan, The role of the academic librarian. Oxford: Chandos, 2003. Jacquie Weetman, ‘“Seven pillars of wisdom” model: a case study to test academic staff perceptions’, SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 31–6; Sheila Webber, ‘Information literacy in higher education: a review and case study’, Studies in higher education 28 (3), 2003, 335–52; SCONUL Advisory Committee on Learning Outcomes and Information Literacy, Learning outcomes and information literacy. London: SCONUL, 2004; Jo Parker, ‘Putting the pieces together: information literacy at the Open University’, Library management 24 (4/5), 2003, 223–8. Newcastle University: (accessed 7/7/06). Jo Webb and Chris Powis, Teaching information skills. London: Facet, 2004. J. Stephen Town, ‘Information literacy: definition, measurement, impact’ in Information and IT literacy, ed. Martin and Rader, pp. 53–65. Ann Poyner, Enabling end-users: information skills training. Oxford: Chandos, 2005; Susie Andretta, ‘Legal information literacy: a pilot study’, New library world 102 (7/8), 2001, 255–64. Hilary Johnson, ‘The SCONUL Task Force on information skills’ in Information and IT literacy, ed. Martin and Rader, pp. 45–52. Allan Martin and Hannelore Rader (eds.), Information and IT literacy: enabling learning in the 21st century. London: Facet, 2003.
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 Sheila Webber and Bill Johnston, ‘UK academics’ conceptions of, and pedagogy for, Information Literacy: project webpage, University of Sheffield and University of Strathclyde: (accessed 7/7/06); Claire McGuiness, ‘Attitudes of academics to the library’s role in Information Literacy education’ in Information and IT Literacy, ed. Martin and Rader, pp. 244–54. JISC’s Big Blue toolkit and Final report, 2002: (accessed 7/7/06); Louise Makin, ‘“Out of the Blue” – achievement of the Big Blue Project’, SCONUL newsletter 26, 2002, 33–6. Webber and Johnston, ‘Assessment for information literacy’. Stella Pilling and Stephanie Kenna (eds.), Cooperation in action: collaborative initiatives in the world of information. London: Facet, 2002; David Ball, Managing suppliers and partners for the academic library. London: Facet, 2005. CILIP University, College & Research Group: (accessed 7/7/06). WHELF: (accessed 7/7/06); Elizabeth Kensler and Andrew Green, ‘WHELF: wherefore, whereto?’ SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 72–4; Jeremy Atkinson and Elizabeth Kensler, ‘HELP is at hand: reviewing and developing Welsh academic library collaboration’, New review of academic librarianship 10 (2), 2004, 105–17; Jeremy Atkinson and Elizabeth Kensler, ‘With a little HELP from my friends: developments in Welsh academic library collaboration’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 51–4. SCURL: (accessed 7/7/06); Jill Evans. ‘An overview of SCURL’s current activities and projects’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 74–6. M25 Consortium: (accessed 7/7/06); Di Martin, ‘INFORM25: the M25 consortium initiatives on resource discovery’, New review of academic librarianship 10 (2), 2004, 139–53. NOWAL: (accessed 7/7/06); Colin Harris. ‘NoWAL: developments in staff development and training and procurement of e-books’, New review of academic librarianship 10 (2), 2004, 119–27; Peter Wynne, ‘The NoWAL netLibrary e-book collection: a case study of a consortial agreement’, New review of academic librarianship 11 (1), 2005, 81–94. Maria Hiscoe and Susan Baker, ‘SCONUL Research Extra: conception, birth and early life’, SCONUL newsletter 29, 2003, 42–4. Gillian Anderson, ‘Free access – not ivory towers – in north-west Wales’, SCONUL newsletter 27, 2002, 56–8. Sara Marsh, ‘UK Computing Plus pilot project final report’, SCONUL newsletter, 29, 2003, 44–57. Kathryn Arnold, ‘The partnership experience: De Montfort and its Associate Libraries Network’, SCONUL newsletter 27, 2002, 49–54. Chris Rusbridge, ‘After eLib’, Ariadne 26, Jan. 2001: (accessed 7/7/06). Joint Funding Councils’ Libraries Review Group, Report. Bristol: HEFCE, 1993. Chairman Sir Brian Follett. (The ‘Follett report’.) Stephen Pinfield and Lorcan Dempsey, ‘The Distributed National Electronic Resource (DNER) and the hybrid library’, Ariadne 26, 2001: (accessed 7/7/06); Peter Brophy, ‘Networked learning’, Journal of documentation 57 (1), 2001, 130–56.
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Stephen Pinfield, ‘Managing electronic library services: current issues in UK higher education institutions’. Ariadne 29, 2001: (accessed 7/7/06). Angela Conyers, ‘E-resources in SCONUL member libraries: what the statistics tell us’, SCONUL focus 36, 2005, 65–7. Andrew Hampson, ‘Practical experience of digitisation in the BUILDER hybrid library project’, Program 35 (3), 2001, 263–75. Rosalind Pan and Richard Higgins, ‘Digitisation projects at Durham University Library: an overview’, Program 35 (4), 2001, 355–68; Gordon Brewer, ‘The University of Derby Electronic Library: a case study of some economic and academic aspects of a local digitised collection’, Program 36 (1), 2002, 30–7. JISC Digitisation Programme: (accessed 7/7/06). JISC, Digitisation in the UK: the case for a UK framework. 2005: (accessed 7/7/06). Rachel Forsyth, ‘Supporting e-learning: an overview of the needs of users’, New review of academic librarianship 9 (1), 2003, 131–40. Maxine Melling (ed.), Supporting e-learning: a guide for library and information managers. London: Facet, 2005; Barbara Allan, E-learning and teaching in library and information services. London: Facet, 2002. Matthew Sparks and Ann Cross, ‘Enterprise College Wales: libraries and e-learning in practice’, SCONUL newsletter 24, 2001, 48–52. Tracey Stanley and Asimina Sotiriou, ‘The Portole project: supporting e-learning’, New review of academic librarianship 9 (1), 2003, 141–7. Pete Johnston, ‘After the big bang: forces of change and e-learning’, Ariadne 27, Mar. 2001: (accessed 7/7/06). John MacColl, ‘Virtual library environments: the library and the VLE’, Program 35 (3), 2001, 227–39; John MacColl, ‘VLEs in the learning landscape’, Relay: the journal of the University College and Research Group 53, 2002, 7–9; John Paschoud, ‘Why librarians should care about VLEs’, Relay 53, 2002, 10–13; Ian Winship, ‘VLEs and information delivery’, Library + information update 2 (1), 2003, 40–1; Jacqueline Chelin, ‘Virtual learning environments: overview and issues for institutional managers’, SCONUL newsletter 28, 2003, 43–7; Michael Fraser, ‘Virtual research environments: overview and activity’, Ariadne 44, July 2005: (accessed 7/7/06). John Akeroyd, ‘Information management and e-learning’, Aslib proceedings 57 (2), 2005, 157–67. INSPIRAL project: (accessed 7/7/06). Louise Edwards and Hazel Woodward, ‘Shaping a strategy for e-books: the role of the DNER’, Vine 31 (4), 2001, 5–11. Chris Armstrong, Louise Edwards and Ray Lonsdale, ‘Virtually there? E-books in UK academic libraries’, Program 36 (4), 2002, 216–27; Penny Garrod, ‘Ebooks in UK libraries: where are we now?’, Ariadne 37, Oct. 2003: (accessed 7/7/06); Lucy Tedd, ‘E-books in academic libraries: an international overview’, New review of academic librarianship 11 (1), 2005, 57– 79.
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 EBONI: (accessed 7/7/06); Ruth Wilson, ‘E-books for students: EBONI’, Ariadne 27, Mar. 2001: (accessed 7/7/06). Leah Halliday and Charles Oppenheim, ‘Developments in digital journals’, Journal of documentation 57 (2), 2001, 260–83. Paul Ayris, ‘Open archives: institutional issues’, Vine 31 (4), 2001, 34–7; David C. Prosser, ‘From recommendations to practice: the next steps towards open access’, SCONUL focus 32, 2004, 24–7; Charles Oppenheim, ‘Open access and the UK Science and Technology Select Committee Report Free for All?’, Journal of librarianship and information science 37 (1), 2005, 3–6. NESLI2: (accessed 7/7/06). Paul Evans et al., ‘Big deal usage: a case study with Emerald Fulltext’, Library + information update 4 (11), 2005, 30–3; Nicholas Lewis, ‘Are we burning our boats?: survey on moving to electronic-only’, SCONUL focus 31, 2004, 57–61. Jeremy Atkinson, ‘Developments in networked moving images for UK higher education’, Program 35 (2), 2001, 109–18; Balviar Notay and Catherine Grout, ‘Looking for more than text’, Ariadne 45, Oct. 2005: (accessed 7/7/06). EMOL: (accessed 7/7/06). Jan Brophy and David Bawden, ‘Is Google enough? Comparison of an internet search engine with academic library resources’, Aslib proceedings 57 (6), 2005, 498–512; John MacColl, ‘Google challenges for academic libraries’, Ariadne 46, Feb. 2006: (accessed 7/7/06). Andrew Hewitson, ‘Use and awareness of electronic information services by academic staff at Leeds Metropolitan University: a qualitative study’, Journal of librarianship and information science 34 (1), 2002, 43–52; Angel de Vicente, John Crawford and Stuart Clink, ‘Use and awareness of electronic information services by academic staff at Glasgow Caledonian University’, Library review 53 (8), 2004, 401– 7; John Crawford, Angel de Vicente and Stuart Clink, ‘Use and awareness of electronic information services by students at Glasgow Caledonian University: a longitudinal study’, Journal of librarianship and information science 36 (3), 2004, 101–17; Graham Coulson, Kathryn Ray and Linda Banwell, ‘The need for a converged approach to EIS provision? Evidence from the JUBILEE project’, Library review 52 (9), 2003, 438–43; Christine Urquhart et al., ‘Uptake and use of electronic information services: trends in UK higher education from the JUSTEIS project’, Program 37 (3), 2003, 168–80; Chris Armstrong et al., ‘A study of the use of electronic information systems by higher education students in the UK’, Program 35 (3), 2001, 241–62; EDNER: (accessed 7/7/06); Jill R. Griffiths and Peter Brophy, ‘Student searching behaviour in the JISC Information Environment’, Ariadne 33, Oct. 2002: (accessed 7/7/06); Peter Brophy, ‘Evaluating the Joint Information Systems Committee’s Information Environment: the EDNER and EDNER+ projects’, Vine 34 (4), 2004, 143–7; Linda Banwell et al., ‘The JISC User Behaviour Monitoring and Evaluation Framework’, Journal of documentation 60 (3), 2004, 302–20. Peter Brophy, Shelagh Fisher and Zoe Clarke (eds.), Libraries without walls 4: the delivery of library services to distant users. London: Facet, 2002; Peter Brophy, Shelagh Fisher and Jenny Craven (eds.), Libraries without walls 5: the distributed
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delivery of library and information services. London: Facet, 2004; Anne Ramsden, ‘The OU goes digital’, Library + information update 2 (2), 2003, 34–5. Simon J. Bevan, ‘Electronic thesis development at Cranfield University’, Program 39 (2), 2005, 100–11; Richard Jones and Theo Andrew, ‘Open access, open source and etheses: the development of the Edinburgh Research Archive’, Program 39 (3), 2005, 198–212; John MacColl, ‘Electronic theses and dissertations: a strategy for the UK’, Ariadne 32, July 2002: (accessed 7/7/06); Susan Copeland and Andrew Penman, ‘E-theses: recent developments and the JISC “FAIR” programme’, SCONUL newsletter 28, 2003, 39– 42; Susan Copeland, Andrew Penman and Richard Milne, ‘Electronic theses: the turning point’, Program 39 (3), 2005, 185–97. EThOS: (accessed 7/7/06). Richard Jones, Theo Andrew and John MacColl, The institutional repository. Oxford: Chandos, 2006; Robin Yeates, ‘Institutional repositories’, Vine 33 (2), 2003, 96–101; Ruth Martin, ‘ePrints UK: developing a national e-prints archive’, Ariadne 35, Apr. 2003: (accessed 7/7/06). Jessie Hay, ‘Targeting academic research with Southampton’s institutional repository’, Ariadne 40, July 2004: (accessed 7/7/06); Susan Ashworth, Morag Mackie and William J. Nixon, ‘The DAEDALUS project, developing institutional repositories at Glasgow University: the story so far’, Library review 53 (5), 2004, 239–64; Stephen Pinfield, Mike Gardner and John MacColl, ‘Setting up an institutional e-print archive’, Ariadne 31, Apr. 2002: (accessed 7/7/06). SHERPA: (accessed 7/7/06); John MacColl and Stephen Pinfield, ‘Climbing the scholarly publishing mountain with SHERPA’, Ariadne 33, Oct. 2002: (accessed 7/7/06). Pippa Jones, Wendy Calvert and Alison Depledge, ‘RFID technology: the way forward at Leeds University Library’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 41–5; Alan Hopkinson and Rajesh Chandrakar, ‘Introducing RFID at Middlesex University Learning Resources’, Program 40 (1), 2006, 89–97; Ian Winship, ‘Weblogs and RSS in information work’, Library + information update 3 (5), 2004, 30–1. Neil Beagrie, ‘Preserving UK digital library collections’, Program 35 (3), 2001, 215– 26; Leona Carpenter, ‘Supporting digital preservation and asset management in institutions’, Ariadne 43, Apr. 2005: (accessed 7/7/06). Simon McLeish, ‘Installing Shibboleth’, Ariadne 43, Apr. 2005: (accessed 7/7/06). Steve Bailey, ‘Records management and the challenge to HEIs’, Library + information update 2 (8), 2003, 34–5; Margaret Procter, ‘One size does not fit all: developing records management in higher education’, Records management journal 12 (2), 2002, 48–54. Catherine Ebenezer, ‘Trends in integrated library systems’, Vine 32 (4), 2002, 19–45; Andrew Cox and Robin Yeates, ‘Library portal solutions’, Aslib proceedings 55 (3), 2003, 155–65; Chris Awre, ‘Portals: enabling discovery for all in higher and further education’, Vine 33 (1), 2003, 5–10; Anne Ramsden, ‘The library portal marketplace’, Vine 33 (1), 2003, 17–24; Ruth Stubbings, ‘MetaLib and SFX at Loughborough University Library’, Vine 33 (1), 2003, 25–32; Andrew Brown and Neil Smyth,
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 ‘Serial Solutions and LinkFinderPlus at the University of Wales Swansea’, Program 39 (2), 2005, 147–59. SCONUL, Library building projects database. London: SCONUL, 2002– . Available at: (accessed 7/7/06). SCONUL, Library buildings database: (accessed 7/7/06). Clive Evans, ‘Library buildings visit: LSE Lionel Robbins Library and King’s College London Maughan Library, November 2003’, SCONUL newsletter 30, 2003, 6–8; Seamus McMahon, ‘Design issues: new library development at University College Cork’, SCONUL newsletter 30, 2003, 11–13; J. Adam Edwards, ‘SCONUL buildings visit 2005’, SCONUL focus 36, 2005, 75–7. Peter Brophy, The academic library. 2nd ed. London: Facet, 2005. B. Clark (ed.), Future places: reinventing libraries in the digital age: proceedings of the 12th international seminar of the IFLA Section on Library Buildings and Equipment, 2002. Frankfurt: Saur, 2003; JISC InfoNet, Good practice and innovation: (accessed 7/7/06). Edward Oyston, Centred on learning: academic case studies on learning centre development. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003. Christopher West, ‘Cafes in UK Higher Education libraries’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 53–5. Matthew Lawson, ‘Implementing good conduct guidelines: changing user behaviour in an academic library’, SCONUL newsletter 31, 2004, 65–7. Peter Jordan and Caroline Lloyd, Staff management in library and information work. 4th ed. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002. Alan Brine, Continuing professional development: a guide for information professionals. Oxford: Chandos, 2004; Margaret Oldroyd (ed.), Developing academic library staff for future success. London: Facet, 2004; Jean Yeoh, Val Straw and Caroline Holebrook, ‘Staff development and continuing professional education: policy and practice in academic libraries’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 16–20. HERA (Higher Education Role Analysis): (accessed 10/7/06). Pat Noon, ‘Developing the academic library managers of the future’ in Developing academic library staff for future success, ed. Margaret Oldroyd. London: Facet, 2004, pp 41–66; Jon Purcell and K. Moore, ‘A change for the better: making organisational change work for your library’, Relay 55, July 2003, 13–16. Pete Dalton and Clare Nankivell, Hybrid information management: skills for senior staff: final research report and recommendations. Birmingham: University of Central England, 2002: (accessed 7/7/06). Stephen Pinfield, ‘Changing role of subject librarians in academic libraries’, Journal of librarianship and information science 33 (1), 2001, 32–8; Richard Biddiscombe, ‘Learning Support Professionals: the changing role of subject specialists in UK academic libraries’, Program 36 (4), 2002, 228–35; Anne Langley, Edward Gray and K. T. L. Vaughan, The role of the academic librarian. Oxford: Chandos, 2003; Philippa Levy and Sue Roberts (eds.), Developing the new learning environment: the changing role of the academic librarian. London: Facet, 2005.
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Tony Tysome, ‘Librarians under threat’, Times higher education supplement 11 Feb. 2005, 8; Angela Jones-Evans, ‘Bangor University Library Service: an update’ (Editorial), Journal of librarianship and information science 37 (3), 2005, 115–17. Helen Hayes, ‘Knowledge management: knowing what we know’, Relay: the journal of the University, College and Research Group 56, 2004, 1–5. Ruth Wilson, ‘Learner support staff in Higher Education: victims of change?’, Journal of librarianship and information science 35 (2), 2003, 79–86. Information Services National Training Organisation, Skills foresight in the Information Services sector 2000–2007. Bradford: ISNTO, 2001; Information Services National Training Organisation, Skills foresight in the Information Services sector 2003–2009. Bradford: ISNTO, 2003. Barbara Allan, Project management: tools and techniques for today’s information professional. London: Facet, 2004. Phil Sykes, ‘Putting library staff back into libraries’, SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 4–9. Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, Framework of qualifications. London: CILIP, 2005. John Fielden, ‘Resolving the human issues in LIS projects’, SCONUL newsletter 26, 2002, 5–10. Sue White and Margaret Weaver, ‘Lifelong learning at work: staff development for the flexible workforce’ in Developing academic library staff for future success, ed. Oldroyd, pp. 113–28; CILIP, Flexible working: the work-life balance. 2002–03: (accessed 7/7/06); Jackie Brocklebank and Heather Whitehouse, ‘Job sharing in academic libraries at the senior management level’, Library management 24 (4/5), 2003, 243–51; Judith Cattermole and Julie Howell, ‘Job sharing at a senior level: a personal perspective’, SCONUL newsletter 30, 2003 37–40; Graham Walton and Catherine Edwards, ‘Flexibility in HE hybrid libraries: exploring the implications and producing a model of practice’, Journal of librariansip and information science 33 (4), 2001, 199–208. European Union, The European Working Time Directive. 2003. Pat Noon, ‘Receiving the secret: do we care about succession planning in higher education libraries?’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 4–10; Fiona Parsons (ed.), Recruitment, training and succession planning in the HE sector: findings from the HIMSS project. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 2005. Patricia Layzell Ward, ‘The management of library and information services: a review’, Library management 22 (3), 2001, 131–55; Patricia Layzell Ward, ‘The management of library and information services: review of the literature’, Library management 23 (3), 2002, 135–65; Patricia Layzell Ward, ‘Management and the management of information, knowledge-based and library services 2002’, Library management 24 (3), 2003, 126–59; Sue Roberts and Jennifer Rowley, Managing information services. London: Facet, 2005. Terry Hanson (ed.), Managing academic support services in universities. London: Facet, 2005. HEFCE, Good Management Practice Project (Luton reference): <www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/infokits/change-management> (accessed 7/7/06). David Baker, Strategic management of technology: a guide for library and information services. Oxford: Chandos, 2004. David Ball, Managing suppliers and partners for the academic library. London: Facet, 2005.
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 SCONUL vision: (accessed 7/7/06). Ian Smith, ‘Achieving readiness for organizational change’, Library management 26 (6/7), 2005, 408–12. Judith Stewart, ‘Basically, you do miss your mates: managing the people side of moving a library’, SCONUL newsletter 29, 2003 65–9. Sarah McNicol, ‘Challenges of strategic planning in academic libraries’, New library world 106 (11/12), 2005 496–509. Jeremy Atkinson, ‘Managing change and embedding innovation in academic libraries and information services’, New review of academic libraries 9, 2003, 25–41. Hanson (ed.), Managing academic support services. SCONUL, Annual library statistics. London: SCONUL. Annual; Claire Creaser, UK higher education library management statistics. London: SCONUL. Annual. Sonya White and Claire Creaser, Scholarly journal prices: selected trends and comparisons. Loughborough: LISU, 2004. Michael Roberts, Tony Kidd and Lynn Irvine, ‘The impact of the current e-journal marketplace on university library budget structures’, Library review 53 (9), 2004, 429–34. Reg Carr, ‘Stirring up other men’s benevolence: library fundraising in Oxford’, SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 10–15. HERON: (accessed 7/7/06). Rachel Hardy, Charles Oppenheim and Iris Rubbert, ‘Pricing strategies and models for the provision of digitized texts in higher education’, Journal of information science 28 (2), 2002, 97–110. Copyright Licensing Agency: (accessed 7/7/06). Jenny Langford and Jill Lambert, ‘Implementing the requirements of SENDA in Aston University Library and Information Services’, SCONUL focus 33, 2004, 21–5; Karen McAulay, ‘Studying with special needs: some personal narratives’. Library review 54 (8), 2005, 486–91. Allison Jones and Lucy A. Tedd, ‘Provision of electronic information services for the visually impaired’, Journal of librarianship and information science 35 (2), 2003, 105–13. Claud: (accessed 7/7/06); Sandra Jones, Recommendations to improve accessibility for disabled users in academic libraries. Bristol: CLAUD, 2002. Sheila Whyte, ‘Auditing SCURL Special Needs Group members’, Library review 54 (8), 2005, 459–63; Chris Pinder, ‘Customers with disabilities: the academic library response’, Library review 54 (8), 2005, 464–71. Elizabeth Gadd, ‘An examination of the copyright clearance activities in UK higher education’, Journal of librarianship and information science 33 (3), 2001, 112–25. Stuart Hannabuss, ‘Intellectual property rights and university employees’, Library review 50 (3), 2001, 117–22. Steve Bailey, ‘Assessing the impact of the Freedom of Information Act on the FE and HE sectors’, Ariadne 42, Jan. 2005: (accessed 7/7/06); Mike Heaney, ‘Freedom of Information at Oxford University Library Services’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 32–5. SCONUL, Aide-memoire for reviewers evaluating learning resources: (accessed 7/7/06).
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SCONUL, SCONUL guidelines for QAA institutional audit in England: (accessed 7/7/06). Teaching Quality Information: (accessed 7/7/06). Christopher West, ‘A survey of surveys’, SCONUL focus 31, 2004, 18–22. Selena Lock and J. Stephen Town, ‘LibQUAL+ in the UK and Ireland: three years’ findings and experience’, SCONUL focus 35, 2005, 41–5. Claire Creaser, ‘Benchmarking the standard SCONUL User Survey: report of a pilot study’, SCONUL focus 34, 2005, 61–5. Sharon Markless and David Streatfield, Evaluating the impact of your library. London: Facet, 2006; Stella Thebridge and Pete Dalton, ‘Working towards outcome assessment in UK academic libraries’, Journal of librarianship and information science 35 (2), 2003, 93–104. Special issue on the LIRG/SCONUL impact initiative. Library and information research 29 (91), 2005: (accessed 7/7/06); Philip Payne, John Crawford and Wendy Fiander, ‘Counting on making a difference: assessing our impact’, Vine 34 (4), 2004, 176–83. Charles Oppenheim and David Stuart, ‘Is there a correlation between investment in an academic library and a higher education institution’s rating in the Research Assessment Exercise?’, Aslib proceedings 56 (3), 2004, 156–65. Jane Barton, ‘Measurement, management and the digital library’, Library review 53 (3), 2004, 138–41. Stella Thebridge and Rebecca Hartland-Fox, ‘Towards a toolkit for evaluating electronic information services’, SCONUL newsletter 27, 2002, 37–43; Sarah McNicol, ‘The eVALUEd toolkit: a framework for the qualitative evaluation of electronic information services’, Vine 34 (4), 2004, 172–5. Angela Conyers, ‘E-measures: developing statistical measures for electronic information services’, Vine 34 (4), 2004, 148–53; Angela Conyers, ‘E-measures: ready for the count? Measuring use of electronic information services’, SCONUL focus 31, 2004, 53–6. Peter T. Shepherd, ‘The COUNTER Code of Practice: implementation and adoption’, SCONUL newsletter 29, 2003, 22–6; Peter T. Shepherd, ‘COUNTER: towards reliable vendor usage statistics’, Vine 34 (4), 2004, 184–9.
6
Colleges of further education Andrew Eynon
Introduction In previous editions of this series colleges of further and higher education were considered collectively in relation to library provision. However, from the 1990s many of the old colleges of higher education moved into the university sector or sought university status. The significant difference in funding and inspection regimes between further and higher education institutions has meant that I have concentrated solely on issues affecting further education (FE) colleges. I have, however, included a section on the delivery of higher education provision through FE colleges. Changes in the further education sector The period 2001–2005 saw major changes in the further education sector across the whole of the UK. During this period new funding bodies for further education were created in England and Wales, and two major revisions to the inspection processes took place for English and Welsh colleges. In addition, in England two new inspectorates for the sector came into being, and there were major changes to funding and educational priorities. All of these policy and funding changes had an impact on the delivery of library and learning resource services (LRSs). In England the most significant change in the sector was as a result of the Learning and Skills Act 2000, which created the Learning and Skills Council (LSC). The LSC became operational in April 2001 as the new funding body for FE, replacing the old Further Education Funding Council (FEFC). Most significantly, the inspection functions of the FEFC were now divided between the Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted), the schools inspectorate, which was given the remit for inspecting provision for 16–19-year-olds, and the new Adult Learning Inspectorate (ALI). Similarly in Wales, the old Further Education Funding Council for Wales (FEFCW) was replaced by Education and Learning Wales (ELWa). In Wales, unlike in England, the inspection process remained, as previously, with Her Majesty’s Inspectorate (Estyn). Significantly, in both England and Wales the new funding bodies also during this period assumed funding for school sixth forms. In Scotland and Northern Ireland there were fewer such changes. In Scotland the Scottish Further Education Funding Council (SFEFC) remained, whilst in
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Northern Ireland change was hampered by the failure to establish a devolved government in the province. One of the main outcomes of the new funding regimes was the pressure for smaller further education institutions to merge in order to rationalize staffing and accommodation costs and this of course had an impact on learning resource provision and staffing. In Northern Ireland, the most extreme example of this trend, it was proposed that the number of FE institutions in the province should be roughly halved. Inspection It was in the area of college inspections that the major impact on learning resource services was felt. In England, learning resource services were initially assessed under key question 3: how do resources affect achievement and learning?1 In effect this marked little change from the previous inspection regime although the new inspectorate gave clearer guidance on its expectations of learning resource services. The inspection handbook included recommendations that: x services include sufficient electronic resources (in addition to traditional print-based resources) x learners receive an induction into the service x learning resource centres (LRCs) include quiet study areas x resources be centralized (i.e. not held in departments) so as to maximize their accessibility and to ensure resources are closely managed x users be consulted about services x provision be made for distance and work-based learners.2 In Wales learning resource services were initially inspected under key question 4, which covered support for learning. This meant that there was a greater emphasis on the role of learning resource service staff in supporting students, rather than concentrating on the physical aspects of learning resource service provision, such as the number of study spaces and the size of the library collection. To help nonspecialist library inspectors Estyn produced the Aide memoire – learning resources, which provided quantitative performance indicators (mainly based on the 1996/97 CILIP FE survey results) and qualitative indicators such as whether the learning resource service had a mission statement, whether there were service level agreements with staff and learners, etc.3 These guidelines were reissued, unaltered, when the inspection regime was revised in 2004 although learning resource services were now inspected as part of key question 7: the management of resources. In 2005 Ofsted reduced the number of key questions in its inspection scheme and consequently learning resources came under key question 5: how effective is the leadership and management in raising achievement and supporting all learners? It was hoped that this move would raise the profile of learning resource services as they were now being inspected under the more important auspices of college
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leadership and management. There were subtle changes to the guidance notes for colleges, with greater emphasis put on the need for equality of provision within LRCs (taking into account issues such as ethnicity and disability). The guidance notes also emphasized the importance of the links between curriculum and learning resource service staff and the provision of resources to those studying in the community (in addition to work-based learners). However, the reality for many further education learning resource services was the continuation of the old inspection regimes’ tendencies to give learning resources only a cursory mention in inspection reports. Consequently there was much interest in the development of self-assessment or peer accreditation systems to more fully evaluate the effectiveness of learning resource services. Quality toolkits Scotland led the way in pioneering the development of quality toolkits for the selfassessment of learning resource services. In 2002 the Scottish Further Education Funding Council (SFEFC) funded a project to draft such a toolkit. The Scottish Library and Information Council (SLIC) undertook the project, in cooperation with staff from the Scottish HMI, the Scottish Further Education Unit and SFEFC. The toolkit was published in 2003 and contained a framework for self-assessing learning resource services against seven elements:4 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Learning resource organization – examining interoperability and the effective use of a library management system. Staffing – covering the qualifications, skills and review of LRS staff. Integration of ICT – looking at the use of VLEs and electronic resources. User support – assessing LRS support for programme delivery and off campus support/delivery of learning resources. Accessibility – the advice and support available for using learning resources and online access to library resources. Inclusiveness – LRS compliance with accessibility and diversity issues. Quality assurance and improvement – the production of quality standards and effective promotion of services.5
Each element contained a summary of ‘quality indicators’, ‘key characteristics’ and sources of evidence that could be used to evaluate one’s service. Furthermore, the toolkit also included an innovative system of grade illustrations, based on real world examples, of how a particular learning resource service would ‘look’ for each of four grades. These were mapped to the Scottish inspection grading system and grade illustrations were included for each element. The toolkit was designed for use in conjunction with the performance indicators published in SLIC’s college guidelines.6 The success of this toolkit prompted a similar project in Wales, which resulted in the publication in 2005 of a toolkit for Welsh FE college learning resource
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services produced by fforwm (the Welsh association of colleges) and funded by CyMAL (Museums, Archives and Libraries, Wales).7 The Welsh quality toolkit used seven key questions, which were mapped to the Estyn Common Inspection Framework (these equated to the elements used in the Scottish toolkit). The Welsh toolkit also used quantitative and qualitative performance indicators which were drawn from a variety of sources including Estyn, CoFHE and CoLRiC. In addition, certain performance indicators were developed by the project team for inclusion in the toolkit. The key questions used in the Welsh toolkit covered the following areas of learning resource provision: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Provision of effective learning environments – are learning resource centre study and ICT facilities adequate? Qualifications and experience of LRS staff – are there sufficient staff and are they appropriately qualified and experienced? Resourcing – does the service meet the needs of its users in terms of the range of resources provided? Integration of ILT – is the service proactively encouraging the use of ILT, including VLEs? User support – does the support provided by LRS staff enhance the quality of the learner experience? Accessibility – is the service inclusive and accessible to all learners? Quality systems – does the service have a robust quality assurance process?
In order to build upon the self-evaluation aspects of these toolkits there was a renewed interest in peer assessment as a means of providing an independent review of learning resource provision. Peer evaluation Peer assessment was far from new in further education: the Council for Learning Resources in Colleges (CoLRiC)8 had a long-standing peer accreditation scheme which had been running for over ten years and was used by further education colleges across the UK. Local peer accreditation schemes, most notably the one established by the Merseyside Circle of College Librarians, had been running a similar length of time. More recently the Yorkshire Museums, Archives and Libraries Council funded the creation of a peer evaluation scheme amongst FE colleges in Yorkshire and Humberside. The CoLRiC peer accreditation scheme offered a graded quality mark for the learning resource service based on an assessment by two trained CoLRiC assessors. Colleges paid a fee for this scheme based on whether or not the institution was a CoLRiC member and on the size of the institution. Colleges were assessed against a clearly defined set of qualitative criteria, under three headings: mandatory criteria, core criteria and supportive criteria. Within these three sets of criteria there were requirements to be met by both learning resource managers and senior college
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managers. A summary report was presented to the college, highlighting good practice and identifying areas for improvement. The Merseyside and Yorkshire schemes were more informal and did not make a charge for carrying out assessment. Instead they relied on a reciprocal arrangement between institutions, which created a pool of assessors to draw upon. In common with CoLRiC, the Yorkshire scheme made provision to train its peer assessors. Both the Merseyside and Yorkshire schemes used a team of two assessors to carry out the peer evaluation, and as with CoLRiC these assessors are experienced learning resource managers. Instead of a graded outcome and the awarding of a quality mark these regional schemes concentrated on the production of a detailed report highlighting service strengths and weaknesses. In creating these peer evaluation schemes FE librarians also looked to good practice in other sectors, in particular to the very detailed scheme for Health Service librarians – Helicon – which included detailed checklists for the actual peer assessment visits.9 Benchmarking and performance indicators One of the main problems facing operational managers in FE learning resource services during this period was the lack of benchmark data to set quantitative standards for learning resource performance. The 6th edition of the CoFHE guidelines, published in 2000,10 had not contained any quantitative recommendations owing to the poor response rate to the CILIP FE survey of 1996/97 (the findings of which were not published until 1999). In 2003 CILIP carried out a new survey of FE learning resource provision to rectify this deficiency. This survey generated a much higher response rate than the previous one. The response rate as a whole was 59% of colleges in the UK, with many regions achieving much higher figures.11 The survey gives a detailed picture of learning resource services in the UK, and the results were published in separate regional tables to enable regional benchmarking to take place. The presentation of the results, however, makes it difficult to spot trends in provision because the 2003 survey results were not compared with the earlier CILIP surveys (the findings of which were of course very dated and where in many cases the questions were not comparable). The Colleges of Further and Higher Education group (CoFHE) of CILIP used the findings of this survey for the quantitative recommendations in the 7th edition of the CoFHE guidelines published in 2005.12 The 7th edition of the CoFHE guidelines, following the example set in the 5th edition, outlined ten qualitative recommendations for learning resource provision. In addition, the guidelines set ten quantitative performance indicators covering areas such as number of study spaces, library spend per student, library staffing ratios, provision of stock and ICT equipment. Following on from the precedent set in the survey, ratios were measured against actual student numbers rather than fulltime equivalents (FTEs). This was because it was felt that services should relate to actual learners rather than composite ones. However, this rationale disadvantaged smaller (usually sixth form) colleges which had a relatively small student popula-
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tion but where the students were predominately full-time (and hence would have had a relatively high FTE count). HE in FE In many further education institutions higher education continued to expand during this period, although by 2005 the impact of tuition fees and the slowdown of expansion in the HE sector meant that HE in FE was probably about to enter a period of contraction. There were, however, many positive developments in this provision, including a relaxation in the attitude of HE institutions in making available their electronic resources to franchise students. Relations between FE and HE partners, in terms of resourcing, became more formalized with many institutions having service level agreements or partnership documents. Although the CoFHE guidelines no longer covered HE provision there were many other sources of benchmarking data for HE in FE provision, most notably the SCONUL benchmarks. Furthermore, in December 2004, CILIP updated its guidelines for the provision of learning resources for HE students based in FE institutions. These guidelines were made available solely in electronic format.13 In addition to general guidance, CILIP produced a checklist of performance indicators for HE provision. These indicators covered a variety of areas of provision, including: funding, partnership agreements, course review, user support, communication, quality assurance, accessibility and staffing. Sixth form colleges The 2003 CILIP survey had of course covered provision in sixth from colleges, but it had long been recognized that tertiary colleges were a very distinct part of the FE sector and it has already been mentioned that the CoFHE guidelines’ use of total student numbers to set performance indicators did not adequately reflect sixth form college norms of provision. In 2005 CoLRiC carried a survey of sixth form colleges, the first since 1993.14 Unlike the picture in FE in general, the sixth form sector appeared to have benefited from increased resourcing, with library expenditure increasing by 60%. The survey also found significant increases in library collections, issue figures and visitor numbers. The survey also indicated that salaries in the sector had increased and that 93% of libraries had been reported as one of the college’s strengths in inspection. E-resources The JISC Regional Support Centres (RSCs) continued to play a significant role in raising standards in FE library provision. The RSCs provided staff development to FE library staff in a wide range of ICT/ILT skills. Furthermore, the RSCs continued to play a major role in embedding e-learning and e-resources into libraries and the curriculum in the FE sector. This was most notable in the creation of subject guides, specific to FE, for online resources.15
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There was a major expansion in use of Virtual Learning Environments in the sector, often supported by the RSCs. These were used by college library services for the delivery of inductions, providing resources for distance learners and for developing and delivering information skills to learners. Professional activity FE librarians continued to be represented across the UK by two main bodies: CoFHE and CoLRiC. Both bodies held annual national conferences – from 2002 CoFHE ran its conference in conjunction with the University, College and Research Group on a biennial basis – and both produced newsletters or bulletins on a regular basis and had JISC-mail lists for members to keep up to date with issues of professional interest. In addition, in Scotland FE LRS staff were supported by Scottish Further Education Unit’s librarians group, whilst similarly in Wales fforwm had a Learning Resource Managers’ network. CoLRiC, founded in 1993, is an independent voluntary organization dedicated to enhancing and maintaining excellence in learning resource services in further education. In addition to the peer accreditation scheme already mentioned, CoLRiC sponsored a Beacon Award for excellence in the delivery of learning resource services and a professional development award for individuals who demonstrated excellence and innovation in professional practice. At the time of writing this continues. CoLRiC produced a second edition of its ‘working papers’ which helped library managers in a variety of professional duties, covering areas such as job descriptions, quality systems and policy documents.16 Furthermore, CoLRiC collected annual benchmarking data as part of its ‘snapshot’ survey of learning resource usage and recommended questions for learning resource surveys. In addition to its survey of sixth form colleges, CoLRiC also carried out research about the perception of learning resource services among college principals. The results of this survey, published in 2005, showed a much more favourable view than the negative perceptions usually attributed to senior managers.17 CoFHE began to build up a bank of case studies of best practice on its website, starting with information relating to new FE library builds. The website has also been used to maintain electronic copies of articles from the CoFHE bulletin and conference papers. The Bulletin became a Newsletter in October 2003, but reverted to a Bulletin with articles of professional interest in 2005. Many areas of professional interest were covered in the Bulletin, such as the Disability Discrimination Act, innovative induction practice, the impact of devolution on FE in Scotland and Wales, intranets, VLEs, dealing with challenging behaviour and metadata. Conclusion Although the FE sector receives little mention in the academic library press, I hope that I have demonstrated that there was much innovative practice in librarianship going on in the sector, most notably in the fields of quality toolkits and peer
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evaluation. Many other areas of significant FE library activity lack in-depth research, such as the delivery of information skills and reader development activities.
Notes 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9
10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17
Office for Standards in Education, Handbook for inspecting colleges. London: Ofsted, 2002. Ofsted, Handbook, 38–9. Estyn, Aide memoire – learning resources. Cardiff: Estyn, 2002. Guidance notes given to college inspectors. Scottish Library and Information Council/Scottish Further Education Funding Council, Resources & services supporting learning: a service development quality toolkit. Glasgow: SLIC/SFEFC, 2003. Catherine Kearney, ‘Library service development toolkit makes self-evaluation easy’, Broadcast 63, 2004, 46–8. Scottish Library and Information Council, Libraries in Scottish further education colleges: standards for performance and resourcing. 2nd ed. Glasgow: SLIC, 1997. fforwm, Services supporting learning in Wales: a quality toolkit for evaluating learning resource services in further education colleges. Cardiff: fforwm, 2005. See for more details. Chris Fowler and Val Trinder, Developing excellence in library and knowledge services: accreditation of library and information services in the health sector. [UK]: Health Libraries & Information Confederation (HeLicon), 2002. Kathy Ennis (ed.), Guidelines for learning resource services in further and higher education: performance and resourcing. 6th ed. London: Library Association, 2000. UK survey of library and learning resource provision in further education colleges. London: CILIP, 2003. Available from: (accessed 31/5/06). Andrew Eynon (ed.), Guidelines for colleges: recommendations for learning resources. London: Facet, 2005. (accessed 31/5/06). Gill Pacey, ‘CoLRiC VI form colleges library survey’, CoLRIC newsletter 37, 2006, 1– 4. Lis Parcell, ‘New resource guides’, CoFHE bulletin, 97, 2002, 11. The CoLRiC Working Papers are now available from the CoFHE website: (accessed 31/5/06). Council for Learning Resources in Colleges: .
7
Services to children, young people and schools Lucy Gildersleeves
Following the service cutbacks and restructurings of the 1980s and 1990s, library services for children and youth arguably experienced a new lease of life in the first years of the 21st century. National agendas for addressing education, welfare, crime and social inclusion were radically reshaping policy across government departments. Children, young people and families were priority groups, with literacy and community engagement being key drivers. Out of this the government defined a new proactive role for public libraries in delivering on learning, health, social inclusion and citizenship goals, set out in Framework for the future.1 Children’s and youth services became important and media-visible players in libraries delivering on this. School libraries and school library support services (SLS) were working with a rapidly changing educational context of curriculum developments, extended schools and partnerships. Traditionally public library children’s services had been committed to reaching out to those caring for and working with children, and to the children and young people themselves, using a variety of activities both within and outside the library venue – arguably more so than adult services. From 2000 there was a substantial shift in the perception of the public library role away from resource provider and encourager of readers towards active partner in outreach and community participation. The balance of professional staffing and activity tipped away from stock functions and supporting visitors to the library towards seeking out children and families, particularly from groups not traditionally using libraries, and drawing them into reading and learning. There was extensive development of familyfocused early years programmes. More recently children’s and youth library services were challenged to find new ways of using creative and participative ways of enabling and engaging young people, as demonstrated by Fulfilling their potential.2 The Children Act 2004 required English local authorities to establish Children’s Trusts by 2008, bringing together health, social and education services for children and families and paying particular attention to children at risk.3 They were also required to appoint a Children’s Director responsible for these services
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and to produce a single annual Children and Young People’s Plan encompassing them. The Act also laid a duty on each local authority to make arrangements to promote cooperation between departments and other appropriate bodies to improve children’s well-being, and a duty on these partners to take part in this cooperation. Library services for children and youth were therefore connected into this partnership. The four focal areas of child protection identified were early intervention, improving coordination of children’s services, improving support for parents and carers, and development of a childcare workforce strategy. This legislation in turn underpinned the suite of major government strategy documents defining a framework of services for children and young people situated within the remit of the Department for Education and Skills, including Every child matters: change for children, Every child matters: change for children in schools, Youth matters and the Department’s Five year strategy for children and learners.4 Children’s and youth library services in the early 21st century were also set against a background of intense political concern over national literacy levels and education problems impeding young people from becoming active citizens able to find and use information to tackle life questions, achieve economic well-being and participate in political decision-making. The opportunities for children’s and youth libraries, school libraries and schools library support services (SLS) to contribute to achieving national policy and to be seen as key players delivering into local government targets were therefore probably greater in 2005 than at any previous point. At the same time a survey of members of the Association of Senior Children’s and Education Librarians (ASCEL) in November 2005 found that both public children’s library services and SLS were facing significant challenges in handling the new structures, priorities and funding contexts created by the national reshaping of local government children’s services, and in sustaining the new roles and initiatives expected.5 Principal drivers for children’s and youth services From 2000 there were a number of significant policy drivers shaping children’s and youth library services and school libraries. Start with the child, a major review of library services for children and youth, based on research commissioned by Resource (from 2004 the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council – MLA), identified a number of essential factors in effective library provision, including: x x x x
appropriate environments and services services that are relevant and responsive appropriate help for children and young people and those who support them support from the wider community to use and benefit from the services.6
The review highlighted various key roles, in particular early years work, reader development initiatives, study support and support of 14–16-year-olds. It noted several areas for improvement, including staff development, better communication
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and involvement of parents and carers, and more coherent approaches to dealing with information literacy and study support across the public library and schools. It also identified some problematic issues, notably the financial impact on SLS of Fair Funding, more joined-up cooperation with schools, the need for more relevant impact assessment of services, and the frequent omission of libraries from key government learning strategies. Start with the child articulated the place of library services in the subsequent government shaping of strategy for children’s and youth services and focused planning on the greater use of evidence-based research. Framework for the future, the national government strategy for public libraries until 2013, revised definitions of library purpose, focusing on the concept of national offers and consumer entitlement. It identified various problems, particularly in the disparate nature of services available across Britain, the need to rejuvenate stock and premises, the relevance of location and opening hours, and the need to reach non-users. Accordingly the Framework recommended building on the distinctiveness of library services and targeting areas which maximize benefit to society. It defined three focal activities at the heart of the modern library service: x promotion of books, learning and reading x access to digital skills and services, including e-government x measures to tackle social exclusion, build community identity and develop citizenship. In terms of public library ability to deliver on these, services to children and young people featured strongly within each of the focal areas, provided two of the ‘national offers’ which could be expected from any public library (Bookstart and the Summer Reading Challenge), and were recognized as fruitful players in developing partnerships with education, welfare and community – and therefore in helping to create the political visibility of libraries. Inspiring learning for all provided a framework for focusing on library delivery of informal and collaborative learning opportunities for personal and social growth in terms of generic learning outcomes.7 It offered a practical toolkit for mapping, planning and evaluating services in four categories: people, places, partnerships, and planning and performance. This represented a significant shift away from judging libraries as providers of activities tailored for audience towards defining purpose in terms of the benefits gained by these audiences from the service. Dominant themes affecting public children’s and youth services which emerged were the need to train staff to work with young people; to design activities to enhance curriculum-based learning and to take account of individual learning styles; to involve children and young people in service development; and to keep up to date with initiatives influencing learning. By 2005 the framework was being used by the majority of children’s and youth librarians to demonstrate to policy makers and service planners the value of both national offers such as Summer Reading Challenge and local projects.8 Every child matters: change for children framed a completely new integrated
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approach to delivering local authority services for children, based on the goals of the Children Act 2004 and the consultation vision statement Every child matters published by the government in 2003. It set out five key outcomes for every child: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
be safe be healthy enjoy and achieve through learning contribute to the community achieve economic well being
against which public libraries and SLS were to map their services. The Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP) updated its child safety guidelines in line with outcome 1.9 Libraries were involved in promotions with youth workers on drug abuse, with schools on healthy living, and worked with Children’s Centres and Sure Start to support literacy and family welfare. Homework clubs, Reading Champions and Summer Reading Challenge all contributed to the ‘enjoying and achieving through learning’ outcome. The outcomes on community involvement and economic well-being were supported by engagement of young people in library design, partnerships with Connexions and library-based opportunities for volunteering. Every child matters offered public libraries and SLS the chance to be formally included in partnership with other services for children. In principle this crosssector working was broadly what was being advocated as a ‘multi-service Charter for the Child’ by LISC(E) in 1995 in Recommendation 6 of Investing in children.10 Despite this, by 2005 heads of both SLS and children’s libraries were reporting that it was often difficult to get their voice heard by other partners and that the ‘big players’ (education, social services and health) did not always understand what benefit libraries could bring to achieving the five outcomes. The heads also noted that librarians needed to be comfortable with the language and issues of the partner sectors to be able to engage in shared planning. The National Foundation for Educational Research broadened its focus to cover children’s services and set up a discussion list, [email protected], for information professionals working in the areas covered by the Children Act 2004 and Every child matters to help address this. Every child matters also provided for shared planning and commissioning across the different partner services. This created funding implications for both public libraries and SLS as the framework implied sharing of resources across the Children’s Trust, whilst children’s and youth library services, as part of the public library service, were often embedded within a Culture or Heritage directorate. Public library services experienced the channelling away of funds to underpin SLS and vice versa, as part of local authority movement of resources to support prioritized activities. In 2002 the government piloted the concept of Extended Schools which was then confirmed in the Department for Education and Skills Five year strategy for
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children and learners and in the Extended Schools prospectus. The Strategy pulled together the strands of education and childcare encompassing early years provision and Children’s Centres, curriculum development from nursery to 14–19 and reform of school structures, including development of specialist and extended schools, up to October 2004. Extended Schools were defined as providing ‘a range of services and activities, often beyond the school day, to help meet the needs of children, their families and the wider community’.11 It was expected that by 2010 all schools would be open from 8.00 am to 6.00 pm including some out-of-term weeks, offering childcare and a variety of activities out of curriculum hours, such as homework clubs, parenting support including information sessions and family sessions for children and parents learning together, and providing wider community access to facilities such as ICT and the library. ASCEL members identified the Extended School agenda as a critical issue for both public children’s and youth libraries and SLS:12 schools did not have sufficient staffing to deliver the full cover and accordingly there were opportunities for libraries to provide services in the range offered and to build on reader development programmes such as the Reading Agency’s Enjoying reading connecting public libraries with schools.13 They also had concerns about sustainable funding to deliver the Extended School model, the possibility that 8.00 am–6.00 pm wrap-around provision in school might discourage use of the public children’s and youth library and the problems of achieving mutually beneficial partnerships where the school was the dominant player. The Reading Agency produced Fulfilling their potential in 2004 to examine how libraries could deliver the Every child matters outcomes for young people aged 11–19.14 Fulfilling their potential found that provision was inconsistent and that services needed to combine the facilities and skills of libraries with youth clubs, education and training and leisure. It built on the findings of the Learning to listen action plan15 and subsequent work by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister which identified that young people were motivated by having some control over services for them and that they needed to take a more active role in their communities. The Reading Agency found that when young people were consulted and were made partners in service development, their perception of libraries was significantly changed. The government action plan for youth services, Youth matters, started from the objective of including young people as ‘stakeholders’ in all policy developments affecting them or their communities. It set out three goals for young people: offering ‘things to do and places to go’; involving them in making a contribution to their communities through volunteering and participation; and providing information, advice and guidance. A key aspect being explored in 2005 was ‘opportunity cards’, a form of cross-service pass entitling access to local services and accumulating rewards for positive engagement. These cards could incorporate library membership with the potential for reward discounts on charged services and penalties for defaulters. Libraries were looking at working with young people to take advantage of the ‘opportunity funding’ on offer for new facilities and at employing young people as volunteers as part of the responsible citizenship goal.
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Public libraries were delivering via the People’s Network the ‘easy to access, innovative and independent ICT service through which young people can access national and local information’, while school librarians could contribute to the key introductions planned for pupils in Years 7 and 9 and to the ongoing information support. School libraries and schools library services From 2000 there was rapid developments affecting both school libraries and SLS. The government brought in several curriculum modifications, changes to the design and remit of schools and set out a five-year strategy. The number of librarians in schools increased year on year, but some SLS closed. SLS had to reinvent their services to adapt to the changing needs of schools and shifting relationship with public libraries.16 Policy developments In 2000 the Library and Information Commission produced Empowering the learning community, making recommendations for improved cooperation between public and education sector libraries towards achieving government priorities for lifelong learning and social inclusion.17 The report highlighted a need for better cooperation within geographical areas and shared ‘access maps’ to services, improved cross-sectoral funding, and training. It also recommended making school library provision statutory. The government took up the recommendations for collaborative working, but decided against guaranteeing school libraries and SLS in England and Wales by law. After Fair Funding was introduced in 2000, extending the financial autonomy of schools away from local authority influence, SLS came under pressure as their viability depended increasingly on achieving a critical mass of buy-back of their services by schools. The survey of ASCEL members flagged this as the most urgent issue in 2005 for SLS, many noting that since 2000 they had experienced a year on year decline in subscription take-up, despite substantial discounting, as schools struggled to cope with falling pupil rolls and a rise in initiatives to fund, and head teachers prioritized spending away from the school library. This is backed by evidence from LISU of an annual trickle of SLS closures from a starting-point where in the late 1990s, following local management of schools and local government reorganization, the position of SLS seemed to have stabilized.18 The Education Act 2002 allowed schools deemed to be successful to have ‘earned autonomy’ or freedom from the national curriculum.19 Importantly also schools were permitted to join into confederations or form companies in order to purchase goods or to provide services for other schools. This had particular relevance for the SLS relationship with schools individually and as consortia buyers. Whilst there was potential for SLS to establish new subscription arrangements with schools formerly unwilling to purchase services individually, equally SLS were concerned that federations would arrange service agreements directly with suppliers or publishers, bypassing SLS packages including advisory services
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and support. Joint commissioning was also a feature of the Children’s Trusts. This encouraged services to work across boundaries to develop new provider relationships supporting children and youth and led to some restructuring, by 2005, of relationships with public libraries and across traditional local authority limits. In the period 2004–05 school workforce remodelling redefined roles (and related salaries) into either direct teaching or support jobs.20 This was a significant concern for school librarians. A few successfully argued that they fulfilled a teaching role, participating in curriculum planning, delivering information literacy or coteaching on subject lessons. Many more found themselves fighting to avoid their role being sidelined into purely administration and support functions, with an assumption that such non-teaching posts would not require professionally qualified staff or, indeed, could be done by parent volunteers. The Building schools for the future strategy set out a rolling programme for school premises renewal over 10–15 years and put forward models for good design.21 The models offered challenged the concept of a library at the heart of the school providing a variety of learning environments for pupils. The potential for exciting library development, building on existing successful examples, was great, but some libraries in implemented designs were found to be inadequate or had to be relocated to be effective. By 2005 the School Library Association and CILIP School Libraries Group were working together with the backing of MLA to create a set of good practice examples and guidance for architects. Curriculum developments The Foundation Curriculum for early years, outlining the key areas to be covered by school, nursery and approved pre-school settings educating 3–5-year-olds, was introduced in 2000. It encompassed personal, social and emotional development, communication, language and literacy, knowledge and understanding of the world, maths, and physical and creative development and built on previous early years learning goals. In addition to providing a range of resources and suitable library environments for this young age group, school libraries and SLS had to develop links with their public library colleagues, with pre-school settings and with Sure Start and Children’s Centre partners. Building on the 1997 primary National Literacy Strategy, the Key Stage 3 National Strategy covering school years 7–9 (11–14-year-olds) was introduced in 2001. This set out a goal for coordinated literacy development across the whole curriculum, to make every pupil a ‘shrewd and fluent independent reader, confident writer and effective speaker and listener’.22 School librarians found it valuable to draw particularly on the ‘literacy across the curriculum’ modules 5 (Active reading strategies) and 6 (Reading for information) and on the English framework for literacy, to build the library role in supporting particularly the ‘text level’ aspects on developing creative reading, writing and discussion and information literacy. The Curriculum 2000 reforms of post-16 school-based education placed a much greater emphasis on teaching and assessment of ‘key skills’ including communi-
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cation and research skills, alongside traditional subject study. The subsequent 2003 reshaping of education for post-Key Stage 3 students in 14–19: opportunity and excellence allowed for individually tailored routes through vocational and academic education.23 Students from 14 years old could now learn in a blend of school, further education college and workplace environments. The 14–19 framework also focused on ‘common knowledge, skills and attributes’ needed to achieve reflective and effective individual learners, and social learners aware of their rights and responsibilities within the wider world. School libraries and SLS thus needed to develop links with other education partners and to work closely with individual students. The focus on key and common skills improved opportunities for librarians to build up information literacy programmes with subject teachers and across the curriculum. English 21 playback, a consultation in 2005 with educators, practitioners and parents on the future of English as a subject, identified several key points for shaping of the curriculum which were important for library input.24 Those consulted stressed the increasing need for spoken communication skills and familiarity with electronic writing skills and formats. They emphasized the importance of reading as a leisure activity, demanding a rich range and experience of texts from the earliest age, creative and imaginative writing balanced with information and book formats balanced with electronic resources supported by pupil skills to use these. There was also an increased expectation of reflection of diversity through use of literary heritage of different cultures. The consultation thus reinforced the provider and reader development roles of the school library. Key children and youth audiences Reader development and the literacy background Literacy improvement and encouragement of reading for pleasure and information were major priorities from the mid-1990s. International research into children’s reading showed that UK children and youth are readers.25 However, their comparative enthusiasm for reading for pleasure was less than expected given that UK literacy standards had improved and overall were good when ranked against the range of countries surveyed. What emerges from Reading for change is that a love of reading has a bigger positive effect than socio-economic factors on children’s educational success – children from deprived backgrounds who enjoy reading books, newspapers, comics, etc. do better than children from affluent homes lacking a book-filled environment, despite the many advantages available to the latter. Furthermore, the expansion of computer-based services, whether People’s Network access to internet and software resources, provision of laptops to children in care or loan of computer games, was particularly effective in drawing in boys identified as having lower literacy skills or reading motivation.26 The range of children attracted through technology broadened. Thus, for example, Birmingham-based Stories from the web,27 the internet-based book taster and writing site for children in public and school libraries, was now used around the world and added a new section for 0–7 years-old to complement their original 8–14s focus.
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During the period there was a move away from libraries being the sole or principal agent tacking promotion of reading and libraries (publicized in the media), to high-profile reader development partnerships with the media, such as the BBC’s Reading and Writing campaign (RaW) or the Orange-sponsored children’s reading groups Chatterbooks.28 There was also a growth in promotions tapping into cultural and creative activities, rather than specifically reading-focused events. Likewise there was a shift towards greater prioritizing of youth work and social inclusion activities in addition to the concentration on early years. Early years promotion and Bookstart – a key offer By 2000 early years involvement had become a substantial part of the modern children’s library focus, with the vast majority of public libraries providing Baby Rhyme Time sessions, under-fives story times, working with pre-school groups and health clinics, collaborating with Sure Start programmes,29 and contributing to the goals of Birth to three matters.30 In 2003 CILIP set up the Early Years Library Network (EYLN), providing practical advocacy support and a resource and ideas exchange for all library staff working with young children.31 EYLN quickly identified the need for libraries to become more family-friendly environments, a point subsequently taken on board in library design including easy toilet access, comfortable places for parents to sit with their small children, zoning of space for early years and a small but steady increase from 2000 in libraries providing toys. By 2005 about half of public libraries had special membership for under-fives, with a growing number opting to do away with fines and charges for this group. This removed a barrier for families worried about the cost of potential damage to materials by young children. Collaborative projects with non-library partners, such as the Sunshine Library Sure Start partnership in Wakefield,32 resulted in multi-function spaces designed specifically for under-fives. The government proposed at least one multi-sector Children’s Centre in each community, starting with centres to serve families and young children in the most disadvantaged areas in the first phase 2004–06.33 In 2004 the government extended the provision of free part-time nursery places for four-year olds to three-year-olds. As this take-up increased, by 2005 a number of public libraries were noting that the emphasis of their regular pre-school activities was now being geared more towards the 0–3 year age-band, with music and play sessions and parent-and-baby drop-in times. The Bookstart concept used a partnership of health visitors and libraries to give families a pack containing board books, rhyme card, information for parents about sharing books with babies and library information at their baby’s 8-month health check. By 2000 Sainsbury funding for two years was enabling a national roll-out of the scheme until early 2001. However, the subsequent years saw cuts, limitation by local authorities to children in deprived areas only and the need for substantial support from publishers and local sponsors. In 2004 the government gave funding via Sure Start for one year, towards national distribution of the first stage pack and then a further three years’ funding to expand the scheme. By 2005 the expanded
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Bookstart provided all pre-school children in England with an 8-month baby pack, a Bookstart Plus pack at 18 months and My Bookstart Treasure Box pack at 36 months. About 670,000 packs were being issued per phase per year. Similar arrangements were funded in Scotland and Wales. The Bookstart Baby Book Crawl, first run in 2003, invited children to participate in summer activities in the library, with a Book Crawl card and stickers, thus encouraging families into library membership and regular use and preparing them for later participation in the Summer Reading Challenge. Wade and Moore proved that the interactive involvement of parents and babies with books, tapes, rhymes and libraries improved young children’s skills in a number of areas including reading, numeracy, language and conversation, and that these translated through to improved attainments at age seven.34 Research at Roehampton and by the EPPE project team at the Institute of Education, London showed impact in increased use of books and in greater enjoyment of reading among participating children.35 The period 2000–05 saw Bookstart established as a core part of the library contribution to early years and family learning. It was one of the two specific activities measured for impact in children’s services in the Public Library Service Standards. Other activities and library promotions were developed successfully from the Bookstart model. For example, Croydon noted the huge success of their Bookstart Rhymetime in drawing very young children into libraries, growing from 8,132 participants in 2000 to 28,313 in 2003. They also took the opportunity created by liaison work with health visitors to set up a new ‘Books on the Move’ service for homeless families to be involved in their children’s learning.36 Essex used the Bookstart model to develop Schoolstart, collaborating with infant and primary schools to encourage library membership via packs to parents of children entering reception, with supporting promotional materials in libraries and schools.37 However, despite this success, a number of ASCEL members highlighted financial worries in delivering Bookstart. Even with Sure Start money and the sponsorship of the partner publishers and retailers, by 2005 some were finding the library element of the extended model expensive to supply, costly to store and handle the three phases of packs, and hard to fund the staffing needed to deliver it properly. Additionally, some were already becoming concerned about longer-term sustainability beyond the 2004 three-year government commitment to funding. There were also challenges in how Bookstart fitted in with the new Children’s Centres. Young people, culture and ‘audience development’ – the new reader development Libraries had been discovering a new more interactive, culture-focused, approach to tempting young people into libraries since 2000. With the focus firmly on consultation and involvement of youth in library space, stock selection and development of activities, a consistent picture emerged of the barriers perceived by teenagers. They identified public libraries as outdated, rule-driven, with
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unappealing stock and hostile staff.38 Teenagers also felt that services were targeted to young children or older adults, and were frequently not aware of what was on offer for them. More positively, however, where young people were brought into public libraries through creative activities or through participation in space and collection development, this turned around the perception. Out of the many initiatives focused on younger teens (11–14 years) and young adults (15–25 years) from 2000, successes tended to involve lively environments offering multiple leisure and learning activities or participative music and arts-based events, frequently using professional performers. New spaces developed since 2000 included multi-function centres such as Manchester’s Moss Side Powerhouse, bringing the library together with youth clubs, sport and fitness facilities, café and music studio, or Bradford’s HUB which made the youth library a central shared access point to other facilities such as a music studio and as a result turned it into a social space as much as a resource. Where the youth library sat within the public library space, informality, creation of ‘zones’ for different uses, bright and airy atmosphere, high levels of technology, listening posts and combination of learning, advice and leisure support all made a difference. New generation public libraries such as Peckham, Tower Hamlets’ Idea Stores or Hampshire’s Discovery Centres raised significantly the repeat visits of this age group. Where buildings simply did not have space for distinct areas or café and music facilities, or where there were conflicts between different user needs, libraries were exploring ‘zoning time’ – structuring opening times exclusive to specific groups, including youth. Reading groups, participation in the plethora of book awards and national reading days, and more traditional book-focused reader development activities continued to be important activities for this age group, as seen by the ongoing success of teenage reading groups, Bookheads, and Reading Champions.39 However, music and creativity were critical elements, particularly for drawing in new users, and fitted well with the emphasis from 2000 on partnership with arts and culture. Out of this came a new focus on ‘audience development’, hooking young people in through concentrating primarily on creative interests and building the reading interest from this. Examples such as Kirklees ‘Teenage Kicks’ creative reading days or the Poetry Society’s ‘Respect Slam’ project were very successful in changing attitude.40 However, these activities tended to require substantial staffing input, external funding and rely on partnerships. A common theme was the difficulty of sustaining such events both financially and in the face of resistance from library staff who did not see these activities as contributing to the core function. Support for excluded and disadvantaged children and youth The rapidly growing government focus on social inclusion around the turn of the millennium was embedded in Framework for the future and Every child matters. Asylum families, travellers, children in care or at risk and family members in custody all became expected audiences for children’s and youth outreach from 2000. Sim summarized the context and set out a variety of case examples in All our
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41
children. The case studies cover locally developed initiatives, but from 2001 a number of inclusion projects were extended. Thus, for example the Big Book Share, which enabled fathers in prison to share stories via tape with their children, with powerful reader development and family welfare results for prisoners, grew from one library in 2000 to 15 in the project’s second phase.42 The Paul Hamlyn Foundation-funded ‘Right to Read’ initiative set up to run from 2001 to 2006 supported library projects across the UK improving access to books and reading for looked-after children and youth and provided online support enabling other libraries to benefit from the project experiences.43 Libraries also worked to break down traditional barriers to service access, not only removing fines but dispensing with formal identity requirements. Interauthority cooperation grew, with shared initiatives such as the East London libraries’ no-fines bulk loans for foster carers. A breakthrough was the agreement, in 2005, between services to allow traveller children to return items without penalty to whichever library they were currently nearest, for that library to forward the items to the originating library. This is an example of the growing move towards placing the user’s needs over service parameters which might usefully be extended to other mobile groups such as asylum children or youth offenders. Relaxing of traditional requirements required careful negotiation between authorities and with staff anxious about such changes, but sent out a strong signal of trust to hard-to-reach groups. New ways were found to make libraries more representative and relevant to excluded groups, including young people. Tapping into the Youth matters outcome of community participation, libraries gave children and youth responsibility to select stock and make service decisions. Thus, for example, young people were on the management board of the Manchester Powerhouse, and Sheffield libraries handed over funds to homeless youngsters to choose books for use in hostels and in the library.44 Following Blackburn’s ‘Books on the Edge’ initiative targeting vulnerable youth, some of these ‘difficult background’ young people gained input into staff training and one worked as a volunteer in ‘The Curve’, Blackburn’s library space for youth. Young people also became volunteer study support mentors at homework club sessions, helping to dispel perceptions of these as ‘educational’ amongst those disaffected with school-based learning.45 Major issues for children’s and youth libraries by 2005 The need for marketing skills Public libraries and SLS now had to develop services in collaboration with children, young people and carers. Shared planning with partners in Children’s Trusts and Extended Schools had become essential. Staff needed to be able to communicate with all players, to understand their priorities and language and to keep the library role visible. The sheer volume of worthwhile initiatives involving the different audiences and the difficulty of sustaining effective projects was creating a sense of overload. SLS needed to develop their advisory role, identify services which they could offer where schools were stretched, and build on
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projects such as the MLA project Literature Matters which aimed to raise the profile of children’s literature and libraries in initial teacher training, in order to show teachers the value of reading for pleasure and the support services available. Within children’s and youth services there was a growing sense that public libraries would need to focus on a limited number of priorities and a more joinedup approach to these. This in turn meant recognizing that some activities would receive less attention or be discontinued to allow concentration of time and funding on the chosen priorities. As a result, ASCEL members identified marketing as a critical skill for librarians, from identifying the needs and desires of children and youth through to advocacy with policy-makers, partners and young people. Service evaluation Services needed to be evaluated in the context of the Every child matters outcomes, Framework for the future goals and Inspiring learning for all framework, in conjunction with use of the 2001 Public Library Service Standards (PLSS) and the Impact Measures developed in 2005. PLSS 8 assessed how children under 16 rated their library, while impact measure priority 3 concerned libraries improving quality of life for children, young people, families at risk and older people. Priority 4 looked at raising standards within schools, with specific inclusion of Bookstart and the Summer Reading Challenge, focusing on how these activities were felt by families, children and young people to have made a difference. By the close of 2005 work was under way to overhaul the Children’s PLUS survey instrument to make it more child-friendly and to reflect the views of children and groups such as class visits about the service as a whole. Capturing the views of non-users was recognized as essential, but remained more fragmented. There were no equivalent standards for school libraries, but in 2004 frameworks for self-evaluation of libraries in English primary and secondary schools were published to link into the whole-school self-evaluation and development planning process within Ofsted inspection.46 The frameworks supported demonstration of how the school library and librarian contributed to the school’s overall goals and had an impact on pupils’ wider learning. They built on the evidence from the body of American research and two UK surveys of impact research highlighting three key factors which underpin effective school libraries: the presence of a skilled librarian, availability of a range and breadth of resources and the collaboration between library and teaching staff.47 The Scottish evaluation experience had been in place a little longer, with the 2005 framework48 built on the earlier Taking a closer look at the school library resource centre.49 During 2004– 05 the Ofsted specific evaluation focus for the English subject team was the contribution of the school library to pupil learning. This evaluation examined a number of best-practice schools. Findings reported at the English Subject Conferences in October 2005 noted the valuable role played by school librarians and libraries, but still identified significant weaknesses in all the areas identified in the research. Thus by 2005 demonstration of the value of the school library had been
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put firmly on the agenda, but experience in implementing evaluation was still patchy. Staff recruitment and training The survey of ASCEL members in November 2005, collecting the top three issues of concern which individual heads of service identified for public and for schools library services, found that staffing was the most commonly cited. Heads of service noted both a lack of posts dedicated to children’s and youth work and significant difficulties in recruiting new staff with appropriate training and a positive attitude for working with children and young people. In 2000 twenty authorities had no specialist children’s librarians and the trend revealed over these five years in the annual statistical data analyses conducted by LISU was generally for a slight decline or static position in specialist professional posts available in public libraries, and a more steady decline within SLS. Only Scotland and some of the English unitary authorities went against this trend in 2003–05. What is evident is that in the latter years there were a number of children’s service posts, professional and nonprofessional, which were funded for a fixed period by external sources such as Sure Start to deliver specific initiatives. This increase in dedicated posts was highest within Early Years delivery. The long-term security of such posts was however dependent on continued drawing down of sponsorship or on realigning authority funding to make them part of the core service. Because of the difficulties in recruiting staff trained in children’s and youth librarianship, both public libraries and SLS were turning to other sectors with relevant experience, such as teaching, to fill vacancies. The push for collaborative development meant that services might also be delivered by youth or social workers as much as by librarians. One implication for staff training arising out of the Children’s Trust approach was the planned development of a common core of skills, knowledge and competence for all who work with children, young people and families, together with a set of related qualifications. At the time of writing it was unclear how far library staff working with these groups would need to fit in formally with this core. In public libraries in 2005 it was generally non-specialist front-line staff whom children and carers met when visiting a library. Start with the child recommended training in working with children and youth for all staff. The Reading Agency’s Their reading futures training framework50 set out the core skills and a training model for this, which was being used and supplemented by public libraries, but ASCEL members commented on the inhibition from engaging with young people felt by some library staff not specializing in this field, and that some staff were unhappy with how the recent growth in initiatives involving children and youth was impinging on their perceived sphere of work. There was a long way to go, but a positive step was an increase in formal expectation for all staff to be prepared to work with children and young people, as set out in job specifications within some library services.51
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Supporting guidance A number of support tools were published for school libraries between 2000 and 2005. CILIP produced the Primary school library guidelines in 2002 and a new edition of the Guidelines for secondary school libraries in 2004.52 In each, there was an increased emphasis over earlier editions on the library place in whole school reader development and information literacy and on the use of evaluation. In 2002 Tilke added to his handbooks Managing your school library and information service, providing practical advice and examples covering all aspects of running a school library.53 CILIP collaborated with the Department for Education and Skills, the School Library Association and ASCEL to produce School libraries making a difference, an advocacy pack to be used in conjunction with the website providing evidence, tips and case examples to argue the value of the library.54 Within this period the School Library Association updated and considerably extended its series of practical guidelines on aspects of school library activity.55 Some of these guides, such as Open all hours and Information matters, could be of benefit to public library staff also.56 By contrast, the UK guidelines for public children’s and youth libraries had not been updated since the 1990s. However, CILIP’s Youth Libraries Group published a number of themed case study compilations providing examples of good practice on topics such as services for teenagers and reader development,57 and the Literacy Trust website also provided information on reader development initiatives and specific issues such as gender, languages or needs of refugee communities.58 Conclusion Overall, 2001–2005 was a rapidly changing and highly demanding period for children’s and youth libraries, SLS and school libraries. Emphasis shifted to participation of young people and families in shaping services and judgement of these services on the basis of how they were benefiting users. Libraries were juggling multiple initiatives and had to target the needs of particular groups, while demonstrating effectiveness based on delivery of local authority priorities. The strong focus on children and young people’s learning, reading enjoyment, community engagement and welfare in national agendas gave libraries an unprecedented visibility. At the same time, there was a critical need to improve staff attitudes to young people, break down perceived barriers to library use, embed sustained funding, and recruit and train children’s specialists for public and school libraries.
Notes 1 2
Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Framework for the future: libraries, learning and information in the next decade. London: DCMS, 2003. Reading Agency, Fulfilling their potential: a national development programme for young people’s library services. London: Reading Agency, 2004. Available at: (accessed 6/06).
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5 6
7
8 9
10
11 12 13
14 15
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17 18
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Children Act. London: HMSO, 2004. Also available at: (accessed 6/06). Every child matters: change for children. London: DfES, 2004. Also available at: ; Department for Education and Skills, Every child matters: change for children in schools. London: DfES, 2004. Available at: ; Youth matters. London: Stationery Office, 2005; Department for Education and Skills, Five year strategy for children and learners: putting people and the heart of public services. London: DfES, 2004 (Cm 6272). Lucy Gildersleeves, Survey conducted of ASCEL members at ASCEL Conference, Bristol, 11–13 November 2005 (unpublished). Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, Start with the child: report of the CILIP Working Group on library provision for children and young people London: CILIP, 2002. Available at: (accessed 6/06). Resource, Inspiring learning for all: a framework for access and learning in museums, archives and libraries. London: Resource, 2002. Available at: . For a summary of the seven outcomes for users and four outcomes for services see p. 1. For case examples see Sarah Mears (ed.), Bright young things: libraries inspiring children’s learning. [UK]: Youth Libraries Group, 2004. Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, A safe place for children: guidelines from the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals to promote child safety in public libraries. Rev. London: CILIP, 2005. Library and Information Services Council (England) and the Working Party on Library Services for Children and Young People, Investing in children: the future of library services for children and young people. London: HMSO, 1995, vii. Department for Education and Skills, Extended schools: access to opportunities and services for all: a prospectus. London: DfES, 2005. Gildersleeves, Survey. Reading Agency, Their reading futures. The Reading Agency/ContinYou, Enjoying Reading: (accessed 6/06). Reading Agency, Fulfilling their potential. Children and Young People’s Unit, Learning to Listen action plan challenging all public services to involve young people in shaping services. London: Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, 2001. For an overview of the issues typically facing SLS in this period see J. Saunders, School libraries and schools library services: a review: a report on school libraries and school library services in the SE region for the South East Museum, Library and Archive Council (SEMLAC). 2003. Library and Information Services Commission, Empowering the learning community London: LIC, 2000. Claire Creaser and Sally Maynard, A survey of library services to schools and children in the UK. Loughborough: LISU. Annual. Vols. 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04 and 2004–05 consulted.
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19 Education Act 2002. London: HMSO, 2002. Also available at: (accessed 6/06). 20 Training and Development Agency for Schools, Raising standards and tackling workload: (accessed 6/06). 21 Department for Education and Skills, Building schools for the future: (accessed 6/060. 22 Department for Education and Skills, Key Stage Three national strategy: English framework. London: DfES, 2001: (accessed 6/06). 23 Department for Education and Skills, 14–19: opportunity and excellence. London: DfES, 2003. 24 Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, English 21 playback: a national conversation on the future of the subject English. 2005: (accessed 6/06). 25 Irwin Kirsch et al., Reading for change: performance and engagement across countries – results from PISA 2000. Paris: OECD, 2002; Liz Twist et al., Reading all over the world: Progress in International Literacy Study (PIRLS): national report for England. Slough: NFER, 2003. 26 For case examples on exploiting technology see Sue Jones (ed.), Bridging the digital divide: ICT in library services for children. [UK]: Youth Libraries Group, 2001. 27 Stories from the web: (accessed 6/06). 28 British Broadcasting Corporation, Reading and writing (RaW): ; Reading Agency/Orange, Chatterbooks: . 29 For case studies of example activities for early years see Sarah Wilkie (ed.), Take them to the library: early years promotion in children’s libraries. [UK] :Youth Libraries Group, 2002. 30 Department for Education and Skills, Birth to three matters: a framework to support children in the earliest years. London: DfES, 2002. 31 Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, Early Years Library Network: . 32 The Sunshine Library, Wakefield: . 33 Sure Start Children’s Centre database: . 34 B. Wade and M. Moore, ‘A sure start with books’, Early years 20 (2), 2000, 39–46. 35 F. Collins, C. Svensson and P. Mahony, Bookstart: planting a seed for life. London: Roehampton University, 2005; National Centre for Research in Children’s Literature, University of Surrey Roehampton Evaluation of Bookstart. London: Book Trust, 2001; Edward Melhuish et al., The effective provision of pre-school education (EPPE) project: findings from the pre-school period 1997–2000. London: Institute of Education, 2001. Also available at: (accessed 6/06). 36 Grace McElwee, ‘It’s never too early’, Library + information update 3 (11), 2004, 23–5. 37 Bright young things, ed. Mears, pp. 28–9.
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38 John Holden, Creative reading: young people, reading and public libraries. London: Demos, 2004; John Vincent and Jerry Hurst, ‘Teenagers: where do we start?’ Library + information update 3 (5), 2004, 38–9. 39 Book Trust, Bookheads: ; Reading Champions: . 40 Catherine Morris, ‘Libraries rock!’, Public library journal 20 (1), 2005, 18–20; Poetry Society, Respect Slam!: . 41 Lesley Sim (ed.), All our children: social inclusion and children’s libraries. [UK]: Youth Libraries Group, 2001. 42 Tricia Kings, ‘Inside out: the Big Book Share’, Library + information update 3 (1), 2004, 24–6. 43 Paul Hamlyn Foundation, Reading and libraries challenge fund: (accessed 6/06). 44 Beverley Ward, ‘Making reading SEXY for Socially Excluded Youth’, Public library journal 19 (1), spring 2004, 4–6. 45 Department for Education and Skills, The impact of study support. London: DfES, 2001. 46 Department for Education and Skills/School Libraries Working Group, Improve your library: a self-evaluation process for primary schools. London: DfES, 2004. Also available at: ; Department for Education and Skills/School Libraries Working Group, Improve your library: a self-evaluation process for secondary school libraries and learning resource centres (+ support booklet). London: DfES, 2004. Also available at: . 47 Research Foundation, School libraries work! Scholastic Library Publishing, 2004; Dorothy Williams, Caroline Wavell, Louisa Coles, Impact of school library services on achievement and learning: critical literature review. Aberdeen: Robert Gordon University, 2001; Dorothy Williams, Caroline Wavell, Louisa Coles, Impact of school library services on achievement and learning in primary schools: critical literature review. Aberdeen: Robert Gordon University, 2002. 48 HM Inspectorate of Education/Scottish Library & Information Council, Libraries supporting learners. Livingston: HMIe, 2005 (How good is our school? series). 49 Scottish Consultative Council on the Curriculum, Taking a closer look at the school library resource centre: self-evaluation using performance indicators. Dundee, SCCC, 1999. 50 Reading Agency Their Reading Futures: . 51 For example, Isle of Wight. See Rob Jones, ‘We all work with children – ’, Library + information update 4 (5), 2005, 39. 52 Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, The primary school library guidelines. Rev. London: CILIP, 2002: ; Lynn Barrett and Jonathan Douglas (eds.), CILIP guidelines for secondary school libraries. 2nd ed. London: Facet, 2004. 53 Anthony Tilke, Managing your school library and information service. London: Facet, 2002. 54 Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals et al., School libraries making a difference. 2003; website: . 55 School Library Association: .
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56 Fiona Devoy, Open all hours: out of hours learning and the secondary school LRC Swindon: School Library Association, 2004; Geoff Dubber, Information matters: developing information literacy skills in the secondary school LRC. 2nd ed. Swindon: School Library Association, 2005. 57 Ian Dodds, (ed.), Reading remixed: new approaches to library services for teenagers. [UK]: Youth Libraries Group, 2003; Christine Hall (ed.), Read smarter not harder. [UK]: Youth Libraries Group, 2000. 58 Literacy Trust: .
8
Government libraries Peter Griffiths
Introduction The previous survey in this series described a number of themes which it said would be developed further in this narrative; and so there will be more about information support to evidence-based policy-making, the roles of government information specialists (sometimes known as librarians, but increasingly less so), and continuing change. There will also be an account of new initiatives and achievements, including the recognition of the profession at the highest levels, and the development of a virtual consortium, within the evidence-based policy-making initiative, for collaborative acquisition of information resources. In this quinquennium there was consolidation of previous achievements, together with new developments that marked a high point in government information management and librarianship by its conclusion in 2005. At the same time, issues such as the role of information professionals were brought into sharp focus by important developments in information management, notably by the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA). This Act’s implementation was completed in 2005 and highlighted both the parallels and distinctions between records managers and information managers. Librarians continued to be involved in technical and communications issues, with the Electronic Library for Government being a significant achievement, and a number of librarians gaining membership of the Government Information and Communication Service (GICS, later GCN) through an ecommunicators assessment centre. Departmental changes The theme of constant change was present in this survey period as in the previous one. This change manifested itself in a number of ways. At the governmental level, responsibilities continued to move between departments in what are known as ‘machinery of government’ changes. Some major changes took place following elections or cabinet reshuffles, but others were minor changes (sometimes as part of the same exercises) which for library managers nevertheless entailed the transfer of stock along with policy, and the need for the receiving departments to develop knowledge rapidly in order to support the incoming teams. Thus, for example, following the general election, the Department
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for Work and Pensions was created in June 2001 from the Department of Social Security and its agencies, together with elements of the Department for Education and Employment. At the same time the issue of work permits moved from the Department for Education and Employment to the Home Office, a small change in relative terms but giving that department a sizeable group of library users in a city 200 miles from the main library. As will be seen later in this survey, an innovative solution emerged that allowed the needs of four departments to be met. Further changes in 2002 created Defra, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, from MAFF (the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, which had existed under that name for around half a century). Some other changes were however short-lived: following the 2005 general election, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) was renamed the Department for Productivity, Energy and Industry – a change that lasted just long enough for the website to be rebranded before the department bowed to public and business opinion and changed the name back to DTI within the week.1 Two significant improvements to information services were made at departmental level with the creation of the Knowledge Services Department (KSD) at Dstl, the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, in 2001 and the creation of a new information service at the Inland Revenue during 2002. Dstl’s KSD took over the management of the Ministry of Defence (MOD) collection of unpublished scientific and technical reports, which had been based in Glasgow (at the former Defence Research Information Centre, which closed on the formation of KSD), but added to this service a range of knowledge management activities giving access to a range of internal and (especially) external information services. The new service at Porton Down was notable for the introduction of a number of innovative services targeted at its sophisticated information users; in particular the role of ‘knowledge agent’ was developed to provide expert information management support to project staff within Dstl. These agents combined subject expertise (not just knowledge) with information and knowledge management skills, increasing their credibility within the organization.2 A brief overview of their activity is available on the Dstl website.3 The Inland Revenue made a major change in 2002 when it recognized its lack of an overall strategy for handling data despite its support for the principles of information management. The appointment of a director for information resources and the subsequent creation of an information resources team was an important step forward that assumed greater significance with the decision to integrate the Inland Revenue and HM Customs & Excise from 2005. Following a review of user needs, an information strategy was presented in 2003 in a report entitled ‘Information riches’. The Departmental Management Committee minutes for February 2003 (made available under the Freedom of Information Act) note the welcome for this report and strategy whilst also highlighting the budgetary and business issues with which government librarians have become familiar over time.4 The information strategy5 developed by the Revenue raised a number of similar issues to those seen at Dstl: the need to create a structure that would address the
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use of confidential as well as published information, the need to create a structure suitable for the needs of a dispersed organization as well as the needs of its headquarters location, the desirability of creating a culture of knowledge sharing (so far as this was allowed for by the protocols for handling confidential information), and the need to create a structure suitable for a business that had recognized the importance of information as the underlying element across its activities. Even here however further change was to take place, and the Inland Revenue merged with HM Customs and Excise to form HM Revenue and Customs in April 2005. The new organization included a Knowledge and Analysis and Intelligence (KAI) directorate, led at Senior Civil Service level, with four divisions: knowledge resources, analysis, information resources and a cross-cutting unit. Other change in individual departments was often driven simply by the need to save money when departmental budgets were under pressure. Thus for example Jackson states categorically in his account of the changes at Defra that the need to make savings was the reason that senior management commissioned a study of his service.6 Dudman examines the effect of these major changes on HMRC and on Defra, noting too the effect of machinery of government changes following the 2005 election.7 The Department of Trade and Industry aimed to improve efficiency by bringing together all the department’s information resources and managing them in a single structure based on a coherent information architecture.8 However, a key requirement in this strategy was seen as being the need to raise the level of information management skills in the department and to embed a different attitude in staff to the importance of those skills. The Government Actuary’s Department also underwent change as its library and information services were reviewed by a consultant charged with producing recommendations that would improve the services and their compliance with current standards,9 whilst the National Meteorological Library and Archive obtained new library management software (Unicorn) and moved to a new location in Exeter from its previous home in Bracknell.10 One major move of a departmental library to completely new central London premises took place in 2005, when the Home Office moved from the building it had occupied at 50 Queen Anne’s Gate since the late 1970s. The new library was located in offices designed by Sir Terry Farrell and located in Marsham Street, London,11 close to Parliament and, intriguingly, opposite Romney House which had been one of its homes from 1973 to 1977.12 The preparations for this move formed part of a larger change management exercise at the Home Office information services, marking a distinct stage in a longer cycle of development that had been going on since the mid-1990s.13 The Freedom of Information Act 2000 Around one half of central government department libraries were located within the same area of the organization as responsibility for records management. Thus
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the implementation of the Freedom of Information Act 2000, whose major provisions on disclosure came into force on 1 January 2005, was important to the departmental libraries with that responsibility and of considerable professional interest to librarians in the remaining departments. A number of departmental libraries were involved in the creation of publication schemes, and librarians often identified the practical issues involved in providing copies of items of departmental publishing that might be requested using FOI as justification. Anecdotal evidence suggests that the contribution of librarians became clearer after implementation as the business of locating and providing information became an operational rather than a theoretical issue. The requirement to create publication schemes highlighted the often erratic nature of departmental publishing, and the difficulty of creating a reliable bibliographic record. Government librarians contributed to the debate at the 2003 Umbrella Conference (although the papers were unfortunately not published) and at a seminar organized by SCOOP, the Standing Committee On Official Publications, in November 2003, where librarians were among the presenters and discussed the use of websites and other means of disseminating information about publications available from government departments.14 Librarians working in areas outside their departmental libraries were often leading the debate on how websites and other electronic resources could be improved to ensure currency and reliability of information there. Griffiths pointed out the issues in ensuring that information owners within departments took responsibility for the web pages and other information that they had created and reflected how these issues might work in practice when the provisions of the FOIA came into full effect.15 Change and opportunity Change remained a constant for government librarians during the survey period, bringing with it a further expansion of the opportunities to move into new areas of work. Taxonomy Activities such as thesaurus management and taxonomy tended to be regarded as somehow less exciting than website development and other ‘new librarianship’ initiatives in the late 1990s, yet within a short time they had gained both a prominence and a cachet that had eluded them for a considerable time. To a large extent it was the need to manage and in particular to retrieve information on departmental websites that brought the taxonomic approach to information architecture back into focus. The decision was eventually taken to develop a structure suitable for browsing rather than an extensive ‘pan-government thesaurus’ as earlier envisaged. The result was multiple vocabularies that required librarian skills to manage in several cases, and Dextre Clarke includes two examples from the Home Office websites and one from the Policy Hub.16 Librarians were closely involved in all of these projects. The importance of taxonomy grew during the period of this survey, although its use was not as obvious as might be thought from reading Dextre Clarke’s account.
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Anderson describes the issues of taxonomy-driven search taken into consideration during the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) research into intranet search engines, concluding that not only software but librarian skills are important in meeting end users’ requirements for relevant content.17 At the same time it should not be forgotten that the need for corporate thesauri and for subject headings is not removed by the introduction of enterprise taxonomies, and for example Defriez described the development of a thesaurus at the Department of Health, whose library catalogue and indexing had been published in electronic format over many years.18 Evidence-based policy-making Reference was made in the previous survey to the development of evidence-based policy-making, following the success of evidence-based medicine and the wider interests of authors such as Booth and Brice.19 Westcott identified issues concerned with evidence-based support to policy-making that were addressed in the creation of the portal giving access to ‘knowledge pools’, The Policy Hub, which described itself initially as ‘the first port of call for improvements in policy making and delivery’ and later as ‘the first port of call for all involved in policy making’.20 The National Audit Office’s report Modern policy-making described knowledge pools as being ‘about encouraging the sharing of information, engaging stakeholders involved in policymaking and improving understanding of ‘what works’ to create better evidence bases’.21 The NAO noted that the creation of five knowledge pools was under way, which would be accessed by an integrated portal. The content of the Policy Hub consisted initially of alerts and links about good quality research of relevance to government, as well as other linked content such as a toolkit on international comparisons in policy-making.22 As the archive contained within the site grew, the list of published research reports lengthened and a range of other resources to support social researchers was developed. The Better Regulation Task Force (later, the Better Regulation Commission) issued its report Local delivery of central policy in July 2002, calling for the further development of the Policy Hub as a key resource.23 Good relations between the librarian community and the social research community were reflected in the make-up of the small team that managed the Hub, which included a library and information professional seconded from the Home Office as an essential element in its skills mix. The Hub’s work involved identifying, listing and publicizing relevant and reliable items of research that had impact and importance for the work of government, and in particular its social research community. The website was one means of doing this, and the bulletin included within it provided links to the research items that had been evaluated. The techniques applied were relevant in departmental terms as well as for the Hub itself, and a project was undertaken at the Home Office by the returned secondee to identify the needs of its social researchers.24 The results of this work eventually formed the foundation of crossdepartmental agreements with information providers for the supply of their databases, contributing to the Gershon agenda that will be examined shortly. Of
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particular interest in this context is the development of the Magenta book, containing guidelines for policy evaluation and systematic review.25 In a survey such as the current chapter there is insufficient space to examine this area in depth, but it is notable that government social researchers, supported by their library and information professional colleagues, developed an entirely new way of carrying out reviews. Recognizing that, however desirable, there was not sufficient time to conduct reviews to the more extended timetables enjoyed by colleagues in academia, they adapted review techniques to take account of the fact that policymaking requires sound evidence and completed reviews in weeks rather than months. The Evidence Based Practice and Policy track at the Umbrella 2005 conference included a presentation by Davies that explained the various forms of review, their strengths and limitations, and made generous acknowledgement of the contribution of librarians and information specialists.26 It says much about how far this work had developed in five years, and its importance to government overall, that the report to CILIP’s biennial conference should be delivered by the Deputy Director of the government’s Social Research Unit. Other reported activities A number of accounts appeared during the survey period reporting on individual government libraries and their programmes of work. Sandford described information services at the Department of Health,27 Dudman reported developments at the Home Office,28 and Halls provided a description of the work of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office legal library.29 Professional skills and professional bodies Part of the civil service delivery and reform programme called for the recognition of the need for professionalism across the service, rather than the concept hitherto represented by the existing ‘traditional’ specialist professional groups, including librarians. It would be important that in future all civil servants should consider themselves professionals, rather than generalists who happened to be in a particular post for a particular period of time. Policy would only be delivered effectively if future senior staff had experience of a range of types of work in at least two professional areas. This new approach, known as the Professional Skills for Government programme or PSG,30 was announced in October 200431 and rolled out in 2005 following further work to define the requirements. It included three new professional groupings, operational delivery, policy delivery and corporate services delivery. Because the initial frameworks were introduced from the most senior level first and there were very few librarian professional posts at this level, the question was not fully addressed during this survey period of how existing structures such as those for librarians would align with this framework. It was not, for example, a foregone conclusion that the librarian professional group would sit within the corporate services delivery strand. CDL, the Committee of Departmental Librarians, responded to the Cabinet Office’s consultation paper expressing concerns that the new groupings might be seen as replacing existing groups, and
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that information management skills might wrongly be assumed to be subsumed within existing civil service management skills, but it nonetheless welcomed the initiative and any assurances that information management skills would be recognized within the new frameworks.32 Departments were asked to introduce PSG-compliant skills frameworks for Grade 7 posts by April 2006 and it was decided that below Grade 7 there would be no single framework because of the variety of work and grading systems in individual departments. Other issues that would require eventual resolution included the linking of government librarians to an appropriate sector skills council, since with the creation of the Government Sector Skills Council in 2005 they were not only represented here as civil servants but also in the Lifelong Learning SSC which represented librarianship in the national arena. CDL, which in 2005 began to adopt a revised identity as CDL: Heads of Profession for Library and Information Managers, took the opportunity offered by the arrival of the PSG programme and the publication of CILIP’s Body of Professional Knowledge33 to revise its competency framework.34 The six competency groups in the 1998 framework35 were replaced by a new PSG-compliant three-section scheme that could be incorporated into the PSG structure.36 Apart from CDL’s adoption of a strapline to explain its mission, both the membership-led professional organizations devoted to the interests of UK government librarians underwent a change of identity during this period. In the case of the Government Libraries Group (of the Library Association and then of CILIP from its vesting day in April 2002) the change was relatively straightforward, involving the addition of the word ‘Information’ so that it became the Government Libraries and Information Group. The proposal was put to the 2004 AGM following the Group committee’s discussion about the wider role of information professionals in government departments and agencies, and the new name adopted from the beginning of 2005.37 The Circle of State Librarians, whose history goes back to the 1920s, embarked on a change of name in 2004 after long debate. Grieg outlined the history of the Circle in a survey that also provided a snapshot of the state of government libraries.38 Cumming argued in what was still then State librarian (although that name had for some time been absent from the cover and title page) that the name of the Circle implied exclusivity, oppression (as the word State had acquired unpleasant associations that were absent when it was selected some half-century earlier) and the fustiness of librarianship.39 The 2004 AGM agreed that the name of the Circle should be altered to something that its membership considered more appropriate to government libraries in a time of change at the beginning of a new century; an extraordinary general meeting in 2005 confirmed the change to the Network of Government Library and Information Specialists. A long-standing issue about government libraries and their availability was raised by the speaker at the Government Libraries Group’s annual general meeting in 2002.40 To what extent should departmental libraries be a public resource and should their collection policies be a statement of wider interests than their strict
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departmental interests? On this occasion, there was an additional point of debate, which was whether the imminent arrival of Freedom of Information would make any difference to this argument. In the event there was no new debate on this topic, the approach to FOI varied department to department, and budget continued to be an important factor in determining how generous collection polices could be. A number of government librarians achieved a kind of ‘dual nationality’ by undertaking the assessment centre run by GICS, the Government Information and Communication Service, which later became the GCN or Government Communications Network.41 Working together As has been noted in other parts of this survey, CDL was active across a wide range of policy areas during this period. It submitted evidence to the Gershon review,42 drawing attention to the joined-up approach that departmental libraries had long taken and which was already contributing to efficiency and cost-saving. The response drew attention to the importance of information professional skills and the potential for further contributions by government librarians. In an article for State librarian Griffiths described this and other CDL approaches to the reform agenda, citing also CDL’s approach to copyright licensing issues and the contribution that government librarians were making to cross-cutting initiatives such as the Government Metadata Framework (especially the Government Category List).43 A major achievement by the end of the survey period was the agreement by the Cabinet Office that government librarians should represent all information managers at the Heads of Profession meetings, meaning that in effect the long sought after role of head of profession for librarians and information managers had been achieved. CDL published a number of guidelines which were regularly published in the professional press for government librarians. Reference is made elsewhere to the competencies framework: CDL’s working group on better quality services, set up in response to the cross-departmental agenda in this field, issued its list of common standards in 2002. This had a dual purpose: it could be used to assist departments to demonstrate the quality of existing services, but it also provided a checklist for setting up new library and information services – although it was not intended to be prescriptive. One of the most notable events in this collaboration agenda was the launch of the Electronic Library for Government. Intended both as a resource for government librarians and a showcase for departments, it was developed in collaboration with and hosted by the Knowledge Network, and provided a range of information on departmental libraries’ capabilities, including subject-specific information and an area for the librarian community of interest. Based on the template used for the LION electronic legal library system used by the Government Legal Service, the ELG was launched by Sir Richard Wilson at the CDL annual conference in May 2002.44 Plans for commercial content did not go forward, although a number of consortium-style purchasing agreements were set up with the collaboration of the
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Government Chief Social Researcher’s Office as noted above in the discussion of evidence-based research. In late 2005 work began on a revised information architecture and design following a consultancy study to examine future options. At the departmental level the usual cooperation continued in such areas as inter-lending, whilst longer-term ambitions such as the desire to provide unified access to catalogues continued to be addressed by CDL’s working groups – in this case the IT group. In late 2005 came a true first for government libraries with the launch of a joint service supported by three departments, later four. The services from the library in the Moorfoot building in Sheffield were formalized into a joint service, with the DfES team offering a basic enquiry and triage service to civil servants from their own department, DWP, the Home Office and the Learning and Skills Council. The new service was launched in December 2005 at an open day where all partners were present, along with database suppliers, and many potential users visited.45 An international profession: government librarians at IFLA IFLA’s 2002 conference was successfully held in Edinburgh. A pre-conference seminar was held in London on the theme of government libraries, jointly organized by the IFLA Section of Government Libraries and the Government Libraries Group of CILIP. A number of papers were given by government librarians from a number of countries, whilst delegates were also able to visit the libraries of several government departments and take part in workshops and seminars held there.46 Delegates were enthusiastic about the seminar, and its lessons were taken back to participants’ home countries where they were shared with the local professional community, for example in Finland.47 Conclusion At the end of the period government libraries and librarians – whether or not they used the words to describe themselves and their workplaces – had become well integrated into a number of areas of government strategy and policy-making. They worked closely with other professional groups, particularly the social research community, and the applicability of this model to other professional disciplines was becoming apparent. The rigour of librarians’ professional framework of competencies had passed muster with the Professional Skills for Government programme and there was de facto a recognition of the most senior information manager as the first head of profession. Events such as the IFLA pre-conference seminar and the Umbrella conferences gave government libraries a high profile that was echoed by awards to members of the profession – not only government library-focused awards such as the GLG Award, but by a clutch of national and international awards.48 The Electronic Library for Government was a practical example of joined up working that demonstrated the verity of the evidence submitted to Gershon by CDL. These were five important years for government librarians and information specialists and may well in retrospect be viewed as a turning point in the history of the profession.
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Notes 1 2
3 4
5
6 7 8 9
10 11
12 13 14
15
16
17
18 19
BBC, Jibes prompt DTI rebrand U-turn [web page]. 13 May 2005: (accessed 24/6/06). Jane Dudman, ‘Armed with knowledge’, Information world review 200, March 2004, 12–13; Steve Thornton and Chrissie McCracken, ‘Putting the human touch into knowledge management’, Vine 35 (3), 2005, 149–55. Dstl website: (accessed 24/6/06). Inland Revenue, Departmental management committee minutes, 11th February 2003. London: Inland Revenue, 2003. Available on website of HM Revenue & Customs at: (accessed 24/6/06). Jane Dudman, ‘Guiding the revenue in taxing times’, Information world review 205, Sept. 2004, 14–15; Gwenda Sippings, ‘Putting information on the map at the Inland Revenue’, Library + information update 3 (4), 2004, 30–3. Kevin Jackson, ‘All change at Defra’, Library + information update 4 (7/8) 2005, 44–6. Jane Dudman, ‘Putting it together’, Information world review 219, Dec. 2005, 20–2. Elpseth Hyams and Liz Maclachlan, ‘All change at the DTI’, Library + information update 1 (9), 2002, 46–7. E. Baratto, ‘The development of a coherent Information Service at the Government Actuary’s Department’, Government libraries journal 12 (3), 2002, 12–16; E. Baratto, ‘Information services at the Government Actuary’s Department’, Records management bulletin 113, Apr. 2003, 13–15. M. Kidd, ‘Interesting times at the Met Office’, Government libraries journal 12 (3), 2002, 10–11. Brian Warden, ‘Library in focus: the new Home Office library in Westminster’, Solar autumn 2005, 25. Available at: . D. B. Gibson, ‘Planning and executing a library move: the experience of the Home Office Library’, State librarian 26 (1), 1978, 9–10. Jane Dudman, ‘Driving change’, Information world review 208, Dec. 2004, 20–1. Valerie J. Nurcombe (ed.), Publication schemes: access to official information in the 21st century. Proceedings of a one day seminar 17 November 2003. Winsford: SCOOP, 2004. Peter Griffiths, ‘What’s the latest? Information ownership, archiving and the right of access’ in Online information 2002: proceedings [of the 26th Online Information Conference]. Oxford: Learned Information Europe, 2002, pp. 33–7. Stella Dextre Clarke, ‘A devolved architecture for public sector interoperability’ in Information architecture: designing information environments for purpose, ed. Alan Gilchrist and Barry Mahon. London: Facet, 2004, pp. 145–60. B. Anderson, ‘Case study of intrant search: gathering user requirements and mapping them to functionality’ in Online information 2004: proceedings, ed. Jonathan Lewis. [Oxford]: Learned Information, 2004, pp. 253–8. Phil Defriez, ‘Thesaurus development at the Department of Health’, Catalogue & index 140, summer 2001, 1–3. Andrew Booth and Anne Brice, Evidence based practice for information professionals: a handbook. London: Facet, 2004. For a current publications list including work in the
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21
22 23
24 25
26
27 28 29 30 31
32
33 34 35
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1990s with IFM Healthcare that involved the Department of Health Library see . S. Westcott, Linking up the knowledge: report to Centre for Management and Policy studies for the Knowledge Pools Resource Centre project. London: [Committee of Departmental Librarians?], 2000. National Audit Office, Modern policy-making: ensuring policies deliver value for money. London: TSO, 2001 (HC 2001–02; 289), 33. Also available at: (accessed 21/6/06). Cabinet Office. Policy Hub website: <www.policyhub.gov.uk> (accessed 21/6/06); some snapshots of the original site remain available at: <www.archive.org>. Better Regulation Task Force, Local delivery of central policy. London: Cabinet Office, 2002. Available at: (accessed 21/6/06). N. Owens, ‘Supporting the information needs of social researchers in the Home Office’, Government libraries journal 14 (1), 2004, 15–19 and 14 (2), 2004, 15–20. Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit, The magenta book: guidance notes for policy evaluation and analysis. London: Cabinet Office, 2003–. Available online at (accessed 21/6/06). Chapter 2 is particularly relevant to library and information professionals, and the attached checklist includes a number of questions that can only be answered by properly conducted literature reviews. Librarians are regularly involved in providing the training courses referred to on this checklist. Philip Davies, ‘How research supports evidence-based policy’. [Presentation at Umbrella 2005, Manchester, July 2005.] Available at: (accessed 21/6/06). P. Sandford, ‘Information services in the Department of Health’, Library and information briefings 93, Mar. 2001. 1–10. Jane Dudman, ‘Driving change’, Information world review 208, Dec. 2004, 20–1. S. Halls, ‘Member profile: The Foreign and Commonwealth Office legal library’, European information 20, Oct. 2002, 12–14. For more information on the content and development of the programme see . The press release announcing the programme contains links to further explanatory material including presentations to a senior civil service conference in February 2004. CDL, ‘Committee of Departmental Librarians response to the Professionalisation in the Civil Service Consultation exercise (CDL paper 2004/61)’, Government libraries journal 15 (1), 2005, 23–6. CILIP, Body of professional knowledge. London: CILIP, 2004. Available at: (accessed 21/6/06). Alison Raisin, ‘CDL Competencies – how (and why) we got to a new, simpler, and more widely applicable framework’, Government libraries journal 15 (3), 2005, 17–20. CDL Competencies Working Group, ‘CDL Competencies Framework’, State librarian summer 1999, 55–60.
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36 CDL, CDL competency framework 2005 (CDL 2005/69). Available at: (accessed 21/6/06). 37 CILIP, Government Libraries Group, [Minutes of the 2004 annual general meeting.] Available at: (accessed 21/6/06). 38 F. Grieg, ‘The state of the Circle’, Managing information 10 (4), 2003, 36–9. Also available at: (accessed 21/6/06). 39 Maevyn Cumming, ‘A circle by any other name’, State librarian winter/spring 2004, 8– 13; K. George, ‘GLIG members honoured at awards ceremony’, GLG newsletter 15 (1), Feb. 2005, 4–5. 40 Bernard Naylor, ‘Libraries and government: some reflections. Paper presented to the AGM of the Government Libraries Group of the Library Association by Bernard Naylor on 12th March 2002’, Government libraries journal 12 (2), 2002, 12–19. 41 Peter Griffiths, ‘GICS targets e-communicators in recruitment exercise’, Government libraries journal 12 (2), 2002, 7. 42 Peter Gershon, Releasing resources for the frontline: independent review of public sector efficiency. London: [Cabinet Office], 2004. (The ‘Gershon review’.) Available online at: (accessed 21/6/06). 43 Peter Griffiths, ‘The Committee of Departmental Librarians’ response to the reform agenda’, State librarian spring 2005, 17–20. 44 The launch was reported by Kable at: . 45 H. Challinor, ‘Moorfoot: practical collaboration in action’, Network 1, spring 2006, 36– 40. 46 For example L. Cooper, Workshop on Cataloguing Government Publications, Home Office, 14 August 2002: . 47 M. Jussilainen et al., ‘e-Government muuttamassa nopeasti julkishallinnon kirjastojen roolia Englannissa’ [= e-Government is changing the role of governmental libraries fast in England], Signum 35 (7), 2002, 137–9. 48 P. Bell, ‘Awards for government librarians 2004’ in ‘Editorial’, State librarian spring 2005, 6–9; K. George, ‘GLIG members honoured at awards ceremony’, GLG newsletter 15 (1), Feb. 2005, 4–5.
9
Learned, professional and independent libraries Mary Nixon with Carol Allison
Methodology In the new millennium, as in the previous one, the hard-pressed staff of learned, professional and independent libraries seem to have had little opportunity to publish in journals. As in the previous two editions of this work, therefore, this chapter draws on responses to a questionnaire.1 In addition, a number of librarians were kind enough to supply additional information by phone or email. Where no bibliographic reference is given in the notes, information came from one of these sources. Where percentages or proportions are given, they refer to the responses to the questionnaire. Background Many learned, professional and independent libraries are among the oldest in the country. In 2001 the Cranston Library at St Mary’s Church, Reigate, celebrated its tercentenary as the oldest lending library in England.2 The Leeds Library was celebrated in a work which included essays on its purchases in 1817 and its Foreign Circulating Library in the early nineteenth century,3 and another described the collections of the Royal College of Physicians – everything from books to ear trumpets apparently.4 Still new ones are created to serve hitherto unregarded subjects and groups. In the library world at large, the themes were lifelong learning and widening access – the Heritage Lottery Fund assisted a number of projects in these areas and the New Opportunities Fund enabled the digitization of a number of important collections of images. The Research Support Libraries Programme (supported by HEFCE and the British Library) gave funding mainly to academic libraries, though a few learned society and independent libraries managed to join the RSLP’s subject-based projects.5 The issue of electronic publishing opened up a gap between the learned societies, which depend in some cases to a large extent on income from their publications and other libraries which complain bitterly of increases in subscriptions and support open access publishing.
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Alice Prochaska commented that ‘the two functions of librarian and curator have been seen traditionally within their own professions as distinct and often incompatible’.6 Resource (in 2004 renamed the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council) and its regional councils sought to bring together all three sectors, something that learned and professional libraries already had experience of (not infrequently in one person). Electronic media increased in importance. Libraries broadened their thinking from computerized catalogues to the provision of a range of resources from their collections for users from researchers to school students and/or provided electronic journals and other resources for their members on site and elsewhere. Conservation seems to have loomed less large than it did in the previous decade, but a number of libraries took advantage of the National Preservation Office’s preservation assessment visits to take stock of the state of their collections.7 Activities Nearly half the libraries surveyed had taken on extra responsibilities in the period 2001–05. Some of these were extensions of library work: the Advocates Library, for example, was employing a rare books cataloguer to catalogue the Abbotsford Library and other pre-1801 imprints. The Médiathèque of the Institut Français added story-telling and reading groups to its repertoire. At the Institution of Electrical Engineers, the Library and Archives were merged, with the loss of two posts, while at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, the department grew to cover not just the library but archives, records management and web site. The British Geological Survey Library commented laconically that ‘We had an archivist for 8 months who left so Library looking after archives again’. New legislation produced yet more opportunities for diversification, with responsibility for data protection and/or freedom of information being added to the workload of some libraries. The Chartered Institute of Marketing Information and Library Service was undertaking tasks such as copyright checking, data protection, proof-reading and sitting on an editorial board. Records management fell to the Institute of Actuaries, the Zoological Society and the Royal Society libraries. The Library and Information Service of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) was responsible for the Institute’s website. At the Royal College of Nursing, the Library built on its success in developing an institutional information strategy in 1999 to take the lead in the institutional communications strategy.8 The National Library for the Blind organized more external events and found themselves training public library staff to provide better services for visually impaired people. Almost alone among respondents, the Library of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, had shed one of its responsibilities – for IT.
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Arrivals, departures, changes and moves The foundation of libraries by private benefactors has a long and honourable tradition. When Chawton House (once owned by Jane Austen’s brother Edward) came on to the market, Sandy Lerner, co-founder of Cisco Systems and a Jane Austen enthusiast, acquired the lease, restored it and made it the home of a Library and Centre for Early English Women’s Writing. Opened in 2003 the Library already contained more than 9,000 rare books and manuscripts and provides a setting for the study of some 2,000–3,000 women writers 1600–1830. Not all were writers of fiction; the collection covers the performing arts, education, cookery and advice to midwives.9 Several specialist libraries found homes in academia: the Institute of Actuaries and Faculty of Actuaries transferred part of their historical collection to Edinburgh University, the Women’s Art Library/MAKE (formerly the Women Artists’ Slide Library) moved to Goldsmiths College, after a stay at Central St Martin’s School of Art, and the Tony Arnold Library (the Library of the Chartered Institute of Taxation and the Association of Taxation Technicians) went to the Law Library of King’s College London in 2001. In 2004 management of the last named was outsourced to LexisNexis Butterworths, with an increase in staffing from eight hours a week to 37. The Library and Information Services of the Institute of Chartered Accountants had two changes of line management in the five year period. Finally, after some two decades of indecision, several reports, assorted architects’ plans and ‘many meetings, epic in length and drama’,10 a permanent home was finally found for the Royal Institute of British Architects’ magnificent Drawings Collection, which moved with its Manuscripts Collection to a new architecture gallery at the Victoria & Albert Museum. The Royal Asiatic Society vacated its premises in 2005 and relocated temporarily with the intention of moving to a new permanent home in Stephenson Way, NW1 in early 2006. The National Meteorological Library and Archive also moved, with its parent body, the Meteorological Office, from Bracknell to Exeter in 2004. At the same time, staffing was reduced from 14 to 11 (9 in the Library and 2 in the Archive) and its budget decreased. The picture was not entirely negative, however. Extra funding was made available for digitization to enable the Library to occupy smaller premises after the move and the cost of some journals was transferred to other sections. On 22 May 2003 the Dean and Chapter of York Minster announced the closure of the Minster Library ‘for financial reasons’.11 This provoked a flurry of protests and letters to the Times from, among others, the Bibliographical Society, the Association of British Theological and Philosophical Libraries, the Librarians’ Christian Fellowship, the Historic Libraries Forum, and the Library History Group, Rare Books Group and Chief Executive of CILIP. CILIP Council members expressed their concern forthrightly: ‘Our intellectual and cultural heritage is not safe in the hands of the Church’, stated Peter Harbord.12 A month later on 23 June, bowing to the inevitable, the Dean and Chapter issued another statement: ‘The
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Chapter recognizes that is has made an error of judgement. It got it wrong’.13 This unfortunate incident not only secured the future of the Minster Library but raised awareness, within CILIP and the Church of England, of the threats to other ecclesiastical libraries and led the Archbishop of Canterbury to commission a report on the central repositories of the Church of England. Another major library that came under threat in the period was the Science Museum Library, faced with a substantial rent increase from the landlords, Imperial College. Disappointingly, the Chairman of the Museum Trustees saw the library as ‘an expense too many, threatening the museum’s core work’.14 At the time of writing, funding had been given for another year, but its future was still uncertain. Collections Only a few of the libraries in the survey had made major acquisitions in the past five years. The Tony Arnold Library received material from the Inland Revenue’s International Library, closed as part of the merger between the Inland Revenue and HM Customs and Excise. The British Geological Survey Library acquired a collection of published and unpublished material from a former Director of the Survey, Sir Kingsley Dunham, while the Royal Society acquired three new collections of papers of former Fellows, Thomas Gold, Christopher Longuet Higgins and Sir Nicholas Shackleton. Chetham’s Library used finance from the Heritage Lottery Fund to purchase the chained library founded by Humphrey Chetham for the parochial chapel of Gorton.15 An anonymous donor helped the Lord Coutanche Library of the Société Jersiaise to purchase a large part of the late Ian Monins’s vast collection of Channel Islands books and ephemera, dispersed after his death. Funding Of those libraries in the survey, half reported that their spending had remained the same over the period 2001–2005, a third that it had gone down and a sixth had had an increase in their budgets. Professional libraries appeared to be the most likely to have above-inflation increases, to take account of ever-increasing journal prices, but a number of learned and professional libraries (e.g. Inner Temple) reported having to cancel subscriptions. At ICAEW and the Inner Temple spending on electronic resources increased, by 100% in the former case, while Lincoln’s Inn Library received significant extra funding for electronic services without significant reduction in hard-copy spending. The RCOG was another body which funded increases above inflation to safeguard its information provision, and the Information Service of the Scottish Accountancy Trust for Education and Research had an increased budget in 2005. The precarious nature of funding for independent libraries was illustrated by Chetham’s Library which suffered a fall in income due to a poor return on its investments; the National Library for the Blind suffered a similar experience and had to cut budgets each year. At the same time, both libraries received project funding from external bodies, Chetham’s a grant of £81,000 from the Heritage
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Lottery Fund for cataloguing the chained library at Gorton and the NLB £16,520 from the DfEES and DCMS/Wolfson to transcribe 50 non-traditional history books.17 Another hazard was reported by the Goethe-Institut Library, where funding for books was cut in favour of events – perhaps unsurprisingly this was one of the libraries which experienced a fall in use over the period. The Royal Asiatic Society was another to suffer budget cuts and a fall in use. The Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain (RPSGB) undertook a funding review exercise in 2001, as a result of which the library budget was significantly reduced. At the Royal Society, the Library’s funding was reduced during a five-year period of refurbishment, and funding for some activities such as conservation and microfilming was not restored; however it had Heritage Lottery funding for two projects, including £43,000 for its web of science project18 and a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for a third. Other beneficiaries of the Heritage Lottery Fund were the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Royal Geographical Society, which received over £4 million for its ‘Unlocking the Archives’ project.19 The Geological Society Library was one of a number that took part in a HLF bid for the Access to Archives (A2A) project and also benefited from the Society’s bicentenary appeal, which paid for a number of projects including retrospective cataloguing of the book collection to complete the online catalogue and for staff to work on a map catalogue project. At the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, the Library received increased funding for electronic resources, which it networked to the whole organization. Grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation paid for digitization of rare books and for contributing digitized illustrations, text and other material to the African Plants Initiative and the Aluka Project, while private sponsors supported the conservation and conversion from bound volumes to fascicules of 218 volumes of 19th- and early 20th-century correspondence. The Zoological Society of London received support for art cataloguing from the Michael Marks Trust and from the Wolfson Trust for reading room refurbishment. Donations from the Friends of Lambeth Palace Library continued to provide a catalyst for other grants for purchases from bodies such as the Art Fund.20 Another library reliant to some extent on private individuals was the Lord Coutanche Library of the Société Jersiaise, whose members were generous with donations and bequests, and an anonymous donor gave £10,000 to purchase items from an important local collection. The London Library appointed a full-time Fundraiser in 2004 to oversee a development appeal and membership promotion, and used its first-ever user survey to assist in its strategic planning.21 New sources of funding appeared at the beginning of the millennium: the New Opportunities Fund (NOF) offered grants for digitization.22 Lambeth Palace Library received a grant of £75,000 for the digitization of the architectural plans in the papers of the Incorporated Church Building Society,23 while the Commonwealth Institute was awarded £250,000 for its Commonwealth Learning Gateway. The Wellcome Trust with the British Library provided funding for the cataloguing
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of Research Resources in Medical History, from which the Royal College of Surgeons,24 the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Nursing all received grants.25 The success of the scheme (which was initially only for two years) led to its being extended for another two years.26 The Wolfson Foundation supported the National Library for the Blind’s ‘A touch more’ campaign to encourage visually impaired people to use local libraries.27 Buildings In 2003 the new building for the Women’s Library – a converted washhouse in Aldgate – was commended by the judges of the annual RIBA Architecture Awards, who described it as ‘a lovingly crafted work which has been carefully constructed and which is much appreciated by its users’.28 In addition to storage and reading rooms it featured a seminar room and exhibition area, where an early exhibition was, appropriately enough, on how laundry has changed from a Victorian profession to a modern obsession’.29 The building project, which was partially funded by a £4.2 million grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, was a flagship project for London Guildhall University and demonstrated the benefits for the collection of its academic setting.30 Chatham House Library reported a reduction in space for the Library in 2005, with a further reduction planned for 2006. The London Library acquired another building adjacent to its St James’s Square premises with a view to further expansion. The Royal Society underwent major building works which necessitated moving some stock to a remote store. Remote storage at Wansdyke was now used for records management. The Society’s Library also benefited from climate control in its book room and a large permanent exhibition area enabling a display of its varied collections. The Royal Society of Medicine also engaged in a major refurbishment to celebrate its 200th birthday. The Library underwent a number of improvements, including, crucially, strengthening its floors to current standards, and the provision of suitable environments for both rare books and readers.31 At the British Dental Association during a major refurbishment the multimedia room was turned into a Museum. A new Museum was also created at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, with Heritage Lottery funding, where library, archive and museum material could be displayed. At the Royal Academy of Arts a new muniment room for the archives was opened in 2002.32 The Members of the Royal College of Nursing (a trade union as well as a professional body) voted for an increase of 10% in subscriptions to cover a number of extra services; second on the list were improvements to information services. The Library was extended and refurbished.33 At the British Geological Survey, stock continued to grow and mobile shelving was installed in the strong room. The Geological Society Library also installed mobile shelving in a new monograph store in 200234 and a new periodical store in 2004, when separate rooms for storing maps and modern archives were also
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35
created. As part of the major project funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, three new archive strongrooms were created at the Royal Society of Arts. Lincoln’s Inn Library also gained new strongrooms for rare books, archives and manuscripts, with mobile shelving, and replacement air conditioning and fire protection systems, as part of a major refurbishment of the building. At the Inner Temple a comfort cooling system was installed. The reading room at the Institution of Electrical Engineers was refurbished in 2000, as was that of the Zoological Society of London, where works were also carried out to ensure compliance with the Disability Discrimination Act. At Lambeth Palace Library, an age-old tradition of making readers eat their lunch al fresco in the courtyard garden came to an end when a small tea room was created for them. Staff The number of staff employed in the libraries responding to the survey varied from one to 75; 14 libraries had two to five staff, and 10 had five to ten. There was no trend in staffing; equal numbers reported that staff numbers had risen, fallen, and remained the same in the period, and of those who employed volunteers, five had increased numbers, four had fewer, and three had remained at the same level. Two libraries that had not previously employed volunteers had started to do so, and another was considering it. One library mentioned a work experience trainee. At the British Geological Survey, staff became involved in the Survey’s overseas projects, and members of staff were sent to work in Afghanistan and Mozambique. Closer to home, the Librarian of the Alpine Club was one of 11 librarians to win a Churchill Fellowship in 2001 – to visit major mountaineering libraries throughout Europe.36 Access and use The majority of respondents did not change their rules for access between 2001 and 2005. Those who did made small moves in the direction of wider access. The Chartered Institute of Marketing Information and Library Service, which had formerly charged a fee to non-members, abandoned this charge in 2003, when they considered becoming a charity; from January 2006 however the charges for nonmembers were to be reinstated. The Zoological Society Library dropped its previous nominal charges for non-members in 2005. At the Tony Arnold Library nonmembers were always admitted because of the specialist focus of the collection, but after its move to King’s College, there was a greater emphasis on access for King’s staff and students. Several professional bodies, whose libraries were previously open only to their own members and students, widened access to include allied professionals and/or students; the Inner Temple started to admit student members of other Inns of Court, while the ICAEW admitted members of the Association of Corporate Treasurers by special arrangement and the Library of the RPSGB came to a formal arrangement for pharmacy technicians. The Royal Society for the Arts admitted non-Fellows only by appointment. The Médiathèque of the Institut Français widened access in a different way, by instituting a free
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mobile library (30–40 items at a time from their collections going to other libraries and institutions). Nearly half the libraries in the survey reported that use had increased over the past five years, with only a sixth saying that it had gone down. Particular patterns of use suggest that in some cases electronic access could be a substitute for personal visits and enquiries, but in other cases making some information available electronically whetted the appetite of potential visitors. The Royal Society found that registered users had nearly doubled between 2000/01 and 2004/05 from 948 to 1,635 and enquiries had increased over the same period from 3,372 to 4,538. The Library and Archives of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew had an even higher rate of increase, from approximately 1,500 in 2000/01 to 2,675 in 2004/05. The RPSGB Library on the other hand found that while more users accessed their services, enquiries were beginning to fall. The Institution of Electrical Engineers also found that the number of loans, enquiries and photocopy requests had fallen but the introduction of electronic content services had brought in new users. The Institute of Chartered Accountants reported a fall in enquiries, owing to a concerted effort to deliver information over the web, while the Chartered Institute of Marketing saw a fall in visitors, attributed to shorter opening hours. The British Geological Survey also noted that fewer visits by BGS staff were offset by increased use of electronic access, and that external use remained the same. The Geological Society Library had experienced a fall in visitors but an increase in enquiries, and those enquiries tended to be more complex and require more in depth research. It also experienced tension between the needs of individual Fellows and the large, often multinational, firms which had the status of Corporate Affiliates.37 Solving this problem was particularly important, given that Fellows saw the Library as one of the major benefits of membership. The National Library for the Blind, the Scottish Accountancy Trust for Education and Research (SATER) and the London Library all reported a fall in use, starting to rise again, in the NLB’s case because of the introduction of giant print books. Catalogues In the survey libraries were asked whether they had a computerized catalogue and if so, whether it was online. Only 3 out of 30 answered ‘no’ to the first part of the question; Westminster Abbey reported that they were hampered by systems difficulties. Many qualified their reply: ‘Still retroconversion work to do’, said the Advocates Library, a sentiment echoed by others. Some had contributed catalogue records to joint projects, notably the consortium of scientific libraries which contributed to the Access to Archives (A2A) project and comprised the libraries of the Geological Society, the Natural History Museum, the Royal Society, and the Institutions of Civil and of Mechanical Engineers. Cataloguing and classification can be a special problem for learned and professional libraries, which may require greater depth than a conventional academic or public library, or simply have material that is hard to catalogue. The Society for Co-operation in Russian and Soviet Studies admitted that not all its varied
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resources were catalogued and that, perhaps uniquely in the UK, used the classification system of the Lenin Library.38 The Northern Ireland Political Collection of Belfast’s Linen Hall Library has among its 250,000 items ‘badges, calendars, Christmas cards and defaced coins, not to mention baby’s [sic] bibs, bullets, political lollipops and jam …’. 39 Their unique collection of posters was catalogued on a CD-ROM, with a brief commentary on each, and in order to produce this staff had to track down and interview key poster designers from all sides of the political divide. Collections such as these have their own unique problems, such as thesauri (‘do you use “murders” with its judgemental and often disputed connotations, or do you use “deaths”?’ mused John Gray)40 and the possible reaction of users; much of the Wiener Library’s stock – ranging from antiSemitic children’s books to 1,200 eyewitness accounts of Holocaust survivors – is distasteful, distressing or shocking.41 2003 saw the publication of the final volume of the Royal Institute of British Architects’ catalogue of early imprints, the end result of 30 years’ work by half a dozen curators.42 Far more than a conventional library catalogue, it contains exhaustive descriptions of each graphic element in every book and a very detailed descriptive bibliography.43 The 4,205 works (described in 3250 pages) include dozens of different editions of major architectural writers such as Vitruvius and Palladio. It seems improbable that works on such a scale will be printed in the future. At Westminster Abbey Library (surely one of the oldest in the country) the Librarian compiled a bibliography of 3,394 books and articles about the Abbey published in the past 425 years.44 Services It is frequently quite difficult to distinguish between learned society and professional libraries, since many organizations combine both functions. However, in the introduction of electronic services a distinction appeared, although it was not entirely clear-cut. Most professional institutes offered their members online access to electronic journals and databases by 2005, while learned society libraries tended to concentrate on making their own resources available to a wider public. Independent libraries appeared to be little affected by the online revolution. The Advocates Library introduced online and other electronic services and the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew online journals and abstracts. The latter also planned its digital strategy to make available its superb collections of botanical illustrations.45 The Tony Arnold Library installed a PC for users with online databases and CD-ROMs, and intended in the longer term to move from print to electronic resources for the benefit of their members outside London. The Geological Society Library offered access to over 100 e-journals, and also provided internet and email access for visitors from 2002, and wi-fi access in 2005. It was one of a number of libraries which also began to put additional information on its website, including lists of presidents, medallists and obituaries. The Inner Temple added word processing facilities to email and online database access for its members. The IEE
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offered access to e-books as well as e-journals. The British Geological Survey introduced online circulation and reservations, access to e-journals and abstracting services, and made their own publications available in electronic format to the Survey staff. The RPSGB Library offered online access to staff and walk-in users with a view to extending this to members off-site. It also systematically automated its procedures and started selling the Society’s publications. The Institute of Physics made all its journals available electronically.46 The National Library for the Blind piloted Daisy books, CDs containing both text and audio, which were navigable. The Goethe-Institut introduced new online services for ‘A’ level students and others, the Working Class Movement Library also produced schools packs, including a CD, The children of the Industrial Revolution, and the Royal Society Library collaborated on an AS level in the History of Science and with ALM London and others on educational resources for secondary schools. The Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine catalogued and digitized its vast collection of images covering all aspects of medical history,47 and found that its website got 2,500 hits a day.48 It also created a portal, MedHist, which formed part of the Biome hub of the Resource Discovery Network.49 Following the report on ecclesiastical repositories mentioned above, a portal was created for Lambeth Palace Library, the Church of England Record Centre and all the cathedral libraries and archives.50 The National Maritime Museum took the lead in a programme to provide resources and events on the history of slavery51 and, as the owners of ‘the world’s most comprehensive maritime collection’, created E Library @ the Caird Library.52 This venture, coupled with making the building more welcoming, was a ‘key element in [their] strategy to widen access for “lifelong learners”’, according to the Museum Director. Visitors increased from 400 in April 2002 to 2,000 in April 2003.53 Another innovative website, the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh’s James Lind Library,54 was named as one of the top five sites for those seeking information on science and technology by scientificamerican.com.55 Not all services were electronic, even in the twenty-first century. The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Library offered teaching workshops as well as online services. The Royal Society of Arts Library also started freepost borrowing. Lincoln’s Inn started Saturday opening in 2004, in conjunction with the other Inns of Court libraries. The NLB started a giant print service for children and established a small audio collection, as well as providing more electronic services. The Chartered Institute of Marketing found that changes to the copyright law had the effect of killing off the desk research service. At Chatham House library, with falling budgets and staff numbers, lists of new acquisitions were no longer produced. ICAEW withdrew its Historic Share Price Service in 2003, although like many other professional libraries it offered electronic access to databases and to full text journals.
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Collaboration ‘These learned and professional libraries are often not very well known and their profile is low’, wrote Nigel Lees in 2000. ‘If you laid [them] end to end what would you have? The answer, I suspect, is a resource of such richness and magnitude that it would rival the British Library’s collection’.56 He went on to urge these libraries to collaborate more among themselves to make this distributed resource better known and more easily available. Some progress was made in this direction: medical and allied libraries formed the Consortium of Health Information Libraries in London (CHILL), legal libraries formed the Bar Librarians’ Group, while a number of learned society libraries formed their own group. Others joined existing associations; by 2005, the M25 Consortium of Academic Libraries (originally a grouping of University of London libraries) had broadened its remit to include not only university libraries from as far afield as Canterbury, Brighton and Hatfield, but had also stretched out a welcoming hand to a number of learned libraries, including the Wellcome Trust Library, the Wiener Library, the Royal Society of Chemistry, and the British Library for Development Studies. The Association of Independent Libraries had expanded to include 28 subscription and other libraries. Two long-standing groups were the Cathedral Libraries and Archives Association and the Association of British Theological and Philosophical Libraries. Informal networks were also set up for particular purposes; as a result of the new Copyright Act, the Geological Society Library brought together a working group of learned and professional libraries to negotiate with the Copyright Licensing Agency for a licence designed for membership organizations. The Linnean Society Library was part of the Linnaeus Link project, which was building a web-based union catalogue of all the works of Linnaeus, while the Royal Society was part of a ‘Culturegrid’ bid to the EU for a data-mining project and worked in close association with the Newton Project and Centre for Early Letters and Literature. On a practical level, the libraries of Westminster Abbey and Lambeth Palace, and the Church of England Record Centre, established a conservation consortium. In 2005 the Research Information Network was set up as successor to the Research Support Libraries Programme, with part of its remit to make contact with all libraries supporting research from whatever sector. It was to be hoped that this might start to bridge the divide between academic and learned and professional libraries. Designation Many learned and professional libraries are outstanding in their field and this fact was formally recognized at the end of 2005, when the MLA announced the first library collections Designated as being of ‘outstanding national and international importance’. Among the 38 Designated collections were those of the Britten-Pears Foundation, Lambeth Palace Library, the Royal Institute of British Architects, the geographical collections of the Royal Geographical Society and British Institute of
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Geographers, the Wellcome Trust Library, and the collections on Shakespeare’s life and times and the performance and study of his works held by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust and Royal Shakespeare Company.57 Conclusion The image of the librarian (and particularly those of small, specialized libraries) tends to be one of a retiring creature, at home only with musty tomes. I hope that this brief survey shows that in fact the staff of learned and professional libraries are a lively, multi-talented and innovative group, introducing new services and responding to the needs of their members and the wider community. They are, above all, cooperative and helpful. My thanks to those who have contributed so much information (more than I could possibly use) to this chapter.
I N D E P E N D E N T L I B R AR I E S
Carol Allison Independent libraries are generally defined as institutions where the provision of a library is the main objective rather than a subsidiary one. Many of them continued to belong to the Association of Independent Libraries (AIL), founded in 1989 and with 28 institutional members by the end of 2005. The Association exists to further the conservation, restoration and public awareness of independent libraries, and to develop links between them. The two newest members of the Association were the Sybil Campbell Library in London, and St Deiniol’s Library at Hawarden, north Wales, unusual in being a residential library. Following the death in March 2003 of the president of the AIL, Barry Bloomfield, who had served from 2001, Robert Anderson took over the presidency in 2004. Dr Anderson had a museum background, including ten years as Director of the British Museum. Having an interest in the history of making collections available to the working classes, Dr Anderson was involved in the Worldwide Conference of Mechanics Institutes in Melbourne, Australia in September 2004, organized by the Mechanics Institute of Victoria, Inc., and held at the Swinburne University of Technology, Prahran, Melbourne. There were two days of papers on a variety of topics including the architecture of Mechanics Institutes, Mechanics’ libraries and one on Mechanics’ museums from Robert Anderson himself.58 The event was successful, and a decision was made to hold another international meeting. The Royal Literary & Scientific Institute of Bath offered to host this event in 2009, and plans for this were under way. Membership Independent libraries are dependent for their very existence on the members they serve, and as such have a different relationship with their members from that of other types of library. Traditionally the members of subscription libraries were the
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owners of the library, and would appoint a committee to run the affairs of that library, to which the librarian answered. Membership numbers vary greatly between the libraries; some have no official membership, but are effectively open to the public. The largest library by far continued to be the London Library with 8,500 members, followed by the Linen Hall Library in Belfast with 4,000. Ipswich had 2,600 and Highgate and Newcastle had 1,300 and 1,200 respectively. The rest had fewer than a thousand members, with the lowest, the Plymouth Athenaeum, having only 96 at the time of writing, with the majority around 300–800. Those whose members were still share-owners had restricted membership numbers, or introduced two levels of membership, an example being Leeds, which had 500 proprietors who owned a share and have voting rights, and 300 associates who did not. Membership numbers were a cause for concern for some libraries, and others saw the need to expand their membership: both the Mechanics Institute in Bradford and the Newcastle Literary and Philosophic Society had recruitment drives in 2004. For the former this was because their membership had fallen from 315 to 280 over the previous year. The latter wished to increase their membership and applied for funding for a marketing officer to be shared between themselves and the Mining Institute. Buildings Many libraries had buildings which had been outgrown by their collections. Older buildings at best provided a less than ideal environment for the storage of books and documents, and at their worst had very damp areas, particularly in basements or in attics under leaky roofs. These can be difficult problems to solve, and even where finance may be available to make improvements, there is still the problem of maintaining the integrity of the historic building itself. Accessibility was an issue for many libraries: the majority were housed in historic buildings, one of their strengths as far as ambience is concerned, but often an obstacle to disabled access. Many were listed buildings, providing protection for the historic fabric, and overriding the Disability Discrimination Act, but even where modest changes could be made to improve the situation, it could take a considerable time to obtain planning permission. Often the only way was either to extend the building or to take in a neighbouring building that could be adapted. This was the route taken by both the London Library and Ipswich. The London Library, having already extended in 1995, acquired adjacent premises so that it could extend along Mason’s Yard, with a view not only to meeting the needs of the expanding collection and current membership, but also serving the needs of the 21st century. Ipswich Institute also expanded into an adjacent building, providing an area to use as a café/restaurant and allowing the library to expand into the area previously used as a coffee area.
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Guildford Institute’s refurbishment, started in 2001, allowed an unworkable shelving arrangement to be replaced, and the provision of additional storage space in the basement. The provision of a pleasant environment in which to enjoy food is an example of the dual role that many libraries have. As well as being a centre of culture and learning with their research collections and general interest collections, many offered a programme of lectures or talks, but they also served another, usually secondary, role as a club, with some arranging visits as well, either to local places of interest, or, as in the case of Ipswich, trips abroad. Tavistock Subscription Library was under threat when its landlord, the town council, gave notice on the one room it rented. Thanks to a campaign of support, both locally and from other libraries, whose level astonished the council, and the findings of a feasibility study on the future use of the room, not only was the Library invited to retain the room, but it was also invited to take up another one that it had formerly used. Funding Most libraries were funded by members’ subscriptions, and where they owned the building, often in prime city centre sites, part of the premises might be let out, bringing in crucial rental income. Membership fees varied with the size of the library, the lowest being £5 per annum, at Saffron Walden, the highest the London Library at £170. Many had differing rates for partners or families. Grants might be available, for either the conservation of the fabric of the building, or for the books themselves. It was often a condition of grants that they were made to a charitable institution and for this end, and other financial benefits, libraries were looking at changing to charitable status. There were differing responses by the library members to this suggestion, some being resistant to the idea, whilst other libraries, such as Bromley House Library, Nottingham, made the change and benefited from it. It enabled any donations made by a taxpayer to be gift-aided. There seemed, however, to be some confusion as to whether any tax could be reclaimed on subscriptions, as these were regarded as payment for a service. Other issues Meetings held by the AIL reflected the concerns of independent libraries generally. ‘Conservation or deterioration’ in 2001 looked at preservation management in libraries and archives housed in historic buildings. Other workshops included collection development policies, and meetings on subjects such as the New Oxford dictionary of national biography, and libraries and subversion. Looking to the future, many libraries were still working on card catalogues and manual issue systems, which often had a fond place in members’ hearts. However, they did not meet the needs of current society as well as they did when they were introduced. Consequently some libraries moved over to electronic library management systems, and others were considering the change. The Newcastle Literary and Philosophical Society undertook a major project to
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computerize its catalogue, which was made available over the internet. The automated issue system went live in 2003. The cataloguing work was outsourced to the United States and then edited in-house. Leeds also went online in 2001, moving away from the traditional family ticket book and barcoding the stock. Similarly Chetham’s in Manchester had been computerizing its catalogue since in 2001, concentrating on its pre-1801 material. Other libraries were investigating the possibilities of converting their catalogues, although not all might make these publicly available. The question of security was one of the issues of concern if the library’s holdings were to be made publicly accessible, and the AIL addressed this in a meeting in 2004. Whilst the world wide web might no longer seem to be new technology, only approximately half of the members of the AIL had their own websites. It was one of the advantages of the Association that it was able to give those of its membership who did not have their own website a web presence.
Notes 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14
Peter Hoey, ‘Learned, professional and other independent libraries’ in British librarianship and information work 1985–1990, ed. David W. Bromley, Angela M. Allott. London: Library Association, 1993, v. 2, pp. 10–26; Mary Nixon, ‘Learned, professional and independent libraries’ in British librarianship and information work 1991–2000, ed. J. H. Bowman. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006, pp. 137–51. ‘300 years of lending’, Library Association record 103 (10), 2001, 579. Geoffrey Forster, A very good public library: early years of the Leeds Library. Wylam: Allenholme Press for the History of the Book Trade in the North, 2001. Geoffrey Davenport, Ian McDonald and Caroline Gibbons-Moss, The Royal College of Physicians and its Collections: an illustrated history. London: James & James, 2001. Ann Chapman, ‘Collection descriptions: state of play’, Library + information update 4 (4), 2005, 35–7. Alice Prochaska ‘Librarians as curators’, Library Association record 103 (9), 2001, 546–7. Alison Walker, ‘Preservation: the future of collections’, Library + information update 5 (4), 2006, 24. Jackie Lord, ‘Information to communication’, Library + information update 2 (12), 2003, 37. Helen Scott, ‘Jane Austen’s text in context’, Library + information update 3 (3), 2004, 28–31. Mark Haworth Booth and Michael Snodin, ‘Architecture for all: the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Victoria and Albert Museum’ Art libraries journal 26 (2), 2001, 5–8. ‘York Minster’, Library + information update 2 (7), 2003, 11. ‘Council’s York resolution’, Library + information update 2 (8), 2003, 25. ‘York Minster Library’, Bulletin of the Association of British Theological and Philosophical Libraries 10 (3), 2003, 25. ‘DCMS cash buys one-year respite for Science Museum’, Library + information update 4 (5), 2005, 11.
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15 Fergus Wilde, ‘Chetham’s Library Manchester’, Local historian 33 (4), 2003, 221–5. 16 Heritage Lottery Fund, Annual report and accounts. London: National Heritage Memorial Fund, 2001. 17 ‘It’s all history’, Library Association record 103 (1), 2001, 5. 18 Heritage Lottery Fund, Annual report and accounts. London: National Heritage Memorial Fund, 2002. 19 Heritage Lottery Fund, Annual report and accounts. London: National Heritage Memorial Fund, 2001. 20 Lambeth Palace Library, Annual report of the Friends of Lambeth Palace Library. London: Lambeth Palace Library, 2000–2004. 21 Alison Sproston, ‘Temple of serendipity’, Library + information update 3 (3), 2004, 40– 1. 22 ‘£50m bonanza for digital content’, Library Association record 103 (8), 2001, 451. 23 Church plans on-line: (accessed 15/6/06). 24 Library Association record 104 (3), 2002, 136. 25 ‘More medical marvels’, Library + information update 1 (4), 2002, 16. 26 ‘Medical history’, Library + information update 1 (6), 2002, 8. 27 ‘£2m boost from Wolfson’, Library Association record 103 (9), 2001, 519. 28 ‘Women’s Library wins RIBA prize’, Library + information update 2 (8), 2003, 11. 29 ‘Wash on at the Women’s Library’, Library + information update 1 (7), 2002, 3. 30 Antonia Byatt, ‘The Women’s Library’, Library + information update 1 (2), 2002, 44–5. 31 Ian Snowley ‘Building for the future’, Library + information update 4 (3), 2005, 28–31. 32 Mark Pomeroy, ‘The archives of the Royal Academy of Arts’, Art libraries journal 30 (1), 2005, 5–9. 33 Elspeth Hyams, ‘Nursing the evidence’, Library Association record 103 (12), 2001, 747–9. 34 Geological Society Library, Annual report, 2002. 35 Geological Society Library, Annual report, 2004. 36 ‘Have Churchill will travel’, Library Association record 103 (4), 2001, 198. 37 P. Sandford, ‘Serving members of the Geological Society of London’, Library and information briefings 101, 2001, 1–9. 38 Jane Rosen, ‘The SCR Library: from Bloomsbury to Brixton’, Focus on international and comparative librarianship 32 (2), 2001, 51–6. 39 John Gray, ‘The Northern Ireland Political Collection at the Linen Hall Library: a unique collection and its cataloguing and indexing needs’, Indexer 22 (4), 2001, 175–7. 40 Ibid. 41 Colin Clarke, ‘The history library with its own history’, German Studies Library Group newsletter 30, 2001, 1–8. 42 Early printed books 1478–1840: catalogue of the British Architectural Library Early Imprints Collection. Munich: Saur, 1994–2003. 43 Paul W. Nash, ‘Cataloguing rare books at the Royal Institute of British Architects’, Refer 19 (3), 2003, 7–11. 44 Tony Trowles(ed.), A Bibliography of Westminster Abbey: A Guide to the Literature of Westminster Abbey, Westminster School and St Margaret’s Church Published Between 1571 and 2000. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2005. 45 Marilyn Ward and John Flanagan, ‘Portraying plants: illustrations collections at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew’, Art libraries lournal 28 (2), 2003, 22–8. 46 ‘500 years of physics’, Library + information update 2 (5), 2003, 10.
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47 Wellcome Library, Medical photographic library: (accessed 15/6/06). 48 Wellcome Library: . 49 David Little, ‘Medical history and the politics of portals’, Library + information update 2 (3), 2003, 40. 50 Church of England, Libraries and archives: (accessed 15/6/06). 51 ‘Museum millions shared out’, Library + information update 2 (8), 2003, 15. 52 (accessed 15/6/06) 53 ‘Surf’s up’, Library + information update 2 (7), 2003, 6. 54 The James Lind Library: (accessed 15/6/06). 55 ‘Scurvy site wins award’, Library + information update 2 (8), 2003, 19. 56 Nigel Lees, ‘Learned and professional libraries: our role as “national libraries”’, Managing information 7 (10), 2000, 11–12. 57 ‘Top collections chosen’, Library + information update 4 (12), 2005, 7. 58 Buildings, books and beyond: Mechanics’ Worldwide Conference 2004: proceedings of an international conference convened by the Mechanics’ Institutes of Victoria at Swinburne University, Prahran Campus, Melbourne, Australia, 2-4 September 2004. 2nd ed. Windsor, Vic.: Praahran Mechanics Institute Press, 2004.
10
Library and information history Peter Hoare
Library history, in the period under review, continued to progress on many fronts. The two main agents of change, as noted in the volume for 1991–2000, were the development of book history as a distinct discipline, and the growth of interest in the history of information and its management; both areas figure in publications listed in this survey. The approach to publication of the three-volume Cambridge history of libraries in Britain and Ireland, due to appear in 2006 after several years’ preparation, also focused attention on the subject, with much research taking place outside professional LIS circles.1 Institutional libraries of all kinds, from across the world, are featured in Stam’s International directory of library histories, which includes many British libraries (mostly national or university libraries) with accounts usually by British writers providing a convenient source of reference on these libraries.2 The Library History Group The centre of interest within the profession remained the Library History Group of the Library Association (from 2002 of CILIP), which marked the growth of a wider interest by changing its name in 2003 to the Library and Information History Group (LIHG). Discussion of the implications of the name change among its members led to the presentation of some interesting points, not least the lack of definition of ‘information history’.3 It had by now, however, become a recognized area of research, notably in the hands of Alistair Black, already well known as a library historian.4 The topic of the ‘information society’ was becoming popular among historians, with significant contributions on half a millennium of central collection of information by Higgs, and on the social and technological developments of the 19th century by Weller and Bawden.5 It was encouraging to see a strong attendance for Dave Muddiman’s paper on ‘The early information society in Britain’ at CILIP’s 2005 Umbrella conference, one of several successful contributions from the LIHG to reach a wider audience at this and the two preceding Umbrellas in 2003 (under the title ‘From library history to library and information history’), and in 2001 (an international range of historical papers on the theme ‘Libraries and war’, from the 16th century to the Balkan wars of the later 20th century, but including also consideration of information procedures in MI5).
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More traditional areas of library history were of course strongly supported by the Group, as by researchers more widely, though the presence of library history within basic professional education appeared to be less strong than in the past.6 News of the imminent appearance of the Cambridge history of libraries was welcomed by the Group, which had supported the project since its inception; several members of the Group attended the seminar in January 2001 on ‘Libraries for leisure and learning’, intended as an exchange of experience for contributors to the Cambridge history. The availability of a good supply of research-based writing and of material for review allowed the LIHG’s subscription-based journal Library history to move from two to three issues a year from 2001. In 2005 its American ‘elder sister’ Libraries & culture (originally the Journal of library history) announced that it would expand its focus and become Libraries & the cultural record, leaving the Group’s journal as the longest-established – and perhaps the only – title in the world to specialize solely in library history (it was first published in 1967, a year after JLH). No change of name was proposed at the time of writing, despite the inclusion of information history as part of its subject coverage. CILIP’s review of group structures in 2005 gave the LIHG the opportunity to stress the importance of the discipline within the profession. The question of library archives (and those of professional bodies) continued to be pressed, with an apparent resolution of the problem of CILIP’s own archives and a seminar in 2004 on the importance of archives for historical research, held at CILIP headquarters. Group representation on CILIP’s Advisory Panel on Preservation and Conservation proved a valuable additional channel for publicizing historical approaches to library activity, and good input was made to efforts to preserve threatened libraries, such as York Minster Library. In this area Group members were involved in the seminar run by the Panel and the Rare Books Group in 2004, on the topic of ‘Libraries at risk’. The Group was also involved in sponsoring a number of research projects, such as the ‘Electronic memory’ project which recorded reminiscences by 16 librarians,7 and also other efforts to record biographical information both about living librarians and those from the past. CILIP’s ‘Professional Achievements Register’, established under the leadership of Peter Chapman, was described at an LIHG Umbrella session in 2005, as was Peter Hoare’s proposal to update Who was who in British librarianship 1800–1985, by the late Dr William Munford, the Group’s principal founder in 1962 who died in 2002.8 The project was taken on by John Bowman of UCL, with the LIHG continuing to take a close interest in developments. In the field of library buildings, the LIHG sponsored a feasibility study on a directory of historic library buildings, completed in 2002.9 The Group also supported a major project at Leeds Metropolitan and Liverpool universities, approved in 2003 by the Arts and Humanities Research Board with over £130,000 of research funding, to investigate ‘Early public library buildings: their origins, condition and future use’. An important database of surviving buildings was built up and regular reports on progress were made to the Group. The LIHG also took an
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interest in the AHRB-funded projects at the University of Wales Aberystwyth to produce an index to early annual reports from public libraries10 and at Leeds Metropolitan University on the early information society in Britain. Conferences and seminars Conferences and seminars, one of the main means for library historians to exchange ideas with each other and with scholars in other disciplines, have multiplied over the years and every issue of the Library and information history newsletter included many notifications and calls for papers from organizers of conferences all over the world. Some of these, such as the SHARP (Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing) conference in London in 2002, were run by bodies outside the LIS world, but included many important contributions relevant to library historians; the same is true of the two continuing series of annual conferences offered by the Book Trade History Group and published as ‘Print networks’,11 and the ‘Publishing pathways’ series under the aegis of Birkbeck College,12 both of which published excellent volumes of proceedings, which despite their origin in the history of the book trade are indispensable for library history. The LIHG itself was instrumental in organizing a number of important meetings. Two Anglo-German conferences on library history continued the Group’s earlier collaboration with its German counterpart the Wolfenbütteler Arbeitskreis für Bibliotheksgeschichte. One was held at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel in 2001, on the theme of ‘Philanthropy and libraries’, which allowed very interesting comparisons between practices in Germany and Britain over the centuries, as well as producing a substantial volume of proceedings.13 The second was held in 2005, at the British Library, under the title ‘Libraries and innovation’, which again produced a wide spread of papers, ranging from Ireland to Italy as well as Britain and Germany (with a diversion on the cataloguing of early Arabic manuscripts), and including the first showing of a film on the life of the German public library pioneer Walter Hofmann. IFLA met in Glasgow in 2002 and the notable history of Scottish libraries featured in the excursion programme and in discussions of the Round Table on Library History. As a pre-IFLA event the LIHG organized a well-attended international seminar at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, on the theme ‘The community library’, a topic with particular resonance in Scotland but with papers on other countries too.14 A similar theme was followed by a two-day conference at Leeds Metropolitan University in 2004, ‘Libraries and the working classes since the eighteenth century’, where the keynote paper was from Jonathan Rose, author of the recent major study of British working-class reading,15 and with a number of contributions on European and American topics. Publications Apart from conference proceedings there was no shortage of publications in the field of library history. The present survey cannot claim to be at all comprehensive,
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but some of the more substantial material should be pointed out, together with some examples of the flow of periodical articles and pamphlets on specific topics. The medieval period is well represented by the continuing series of Corpus of British medieval library catalogues published by the British Library in association with the British Academy: more recent publications in the series deal with the abbey libraries of Peterborough and Syon, with medieval libraries in Cambridge, and with the bibliography of Henry de Kirkestede.16 Carley continued his exhaustive studies of the late medieval and early modern period, notably on the dispersal of the monastic libraries17 and on the origins, in Archbishop Bancroft’s collections, of Lambeth Palace Library.18 Rawcliffe’s investigation of libraries in medieval hospitals and almshouses faced problems of lack of direct evidence but she creates a good picture of their contents and the motivation behind them.19 Private libraries have always had a place in library history, though not necessarily within a professional context. The collection of Lady Burghley (1526– 1589) is studied by Bowden, with notes on her benefactions to university and college libraries;20 West’s analysis of the physical setting for the library of the Sidney family at Penshurst is valuable in its discussion of the planning of country house libraries.21 The development of modern techniques in recording and caring for a large group of country house libraries, those in National Trust properties,22 led to a number of studies of these libraries, and a special issue of Library history was devoted to a number of them, including Montacute, Wimpole, Saltram, Kingston Lacy, Belton and Knightshayes – each article bringing out the growth of the collections still preserved at the property – with overview articles on the country house library and its architecture by Mark Purcell and Simon Jervis.23 A well-illustrated account of another library in National Trust hands, at Blickling, contributes to the history of 18th-century collecting in the person of Sir Richard Ellys.24 Other libraries of this period studied at book length have been those of Archbishop William King and of the Oxford historian Anthony Wood.25 The journal of the Bookplate Society was handsomely revived in 2003 and produced some articles of interest to library historians.26 One of the core collections of the British Museum (and therefore of the British Library) is the Cottonian Library, whose early history was studied by Tite.27 The original conception of the library collected by George III, which also later came to the British Museum, is the subject of an intriguing article from an unusual perspective.28 Another national library received monographic treatment by its former librarian, the National Library of Wales.29 Among academic libraries, the Bodleian Library notably celebrated its quatercentenary with an international conference and a major exhibition in 2002,30 while Beddard described the opening ceremonies in 1602.31 A study of a group of early Portuguese books in that library leads Purcell to explore the Earl of Essex’s military activities in 1596.32 Vaisey writes engagingly on aspects of the life of successive Bodley’s Librarians up to his own time,33 while a pleasant collection of writings on the Bodleian provides a useful historical overview, sometimes of less formal aspects of its life.34 From Cambridge come Sargent’s publication of two 16th-century book lists from the
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chained library at Queens’ College,35 and Decker’s analysis of Thomas Gray’s use of the libraries at Peterhouse and Pembroke College.36 Ecclesiastical libraries of various kinds are attractive subjects for historical study. A major contribution to their history, as well as a reference work of permanent value, is Perkin’s directory of parochial libraries, much revised and expanded from the 1959 edition by Ker and with valuable bibliographical data.37 Bookplates from such libraries can throw more light on their history, as Lee’s book shows.38 A study of books (not only parochial libraries) in London churches by Kisby looks at the pre-Stuart situation.39 The cathedrals of two English cities, Ely and London, published histories, each with a chapter by Ramsay on the library and archives.40 Archbishop Marsh’s Library in Dublin celebrated its tercentenary with a new edition of McCarthy’s standard history and a fine exhibition catalogue, and with a new collection of essays on the library’s history.41 Quite different in its purpose from all these was the Jesuit library developed for missionary purposes in England and confiscated in 1679, which has been reconstructed from the archival documents, with a long introduction by Dijkgraaf setting it in its various contexts.42 Finally Chetham’s Library in Manchester, a public rather than an ecclesiastical foundation but housed since the 17th century in a former monastic setting, is described – mainly but not solely in its architecture – in Hartwell’s well-illustrated book.43 Subscription and circulating libraries, the dominant development of the 18th and 19th centuries before public libraries, also feature in the literature, if not so strongly as in some earlier surveys. Their use in the Romantic period is one of the main elements in St Clair’s study of reading, which includes some useful analyses of such libraries.44 Allen looks at subscription libraries in Scotland and in northwestern England,45 while two essays by Hamilton and Robinson on the Leeds Library – with a foreword on subscription libraries in general by Forster – provide valuable detail about the Library’s early history.46 Scragg’s account of the early years of the Portico Library in Manchester adds to earlier histories of this notable subscription library.47 The Devon & Exeter Institution produced a new edition of its history.48 The mechanics’ institute movement, a parallel to the middle-class subscription libraries, was the subject of an international conference in Melbourne: Manley’s paper on the British scene shows how their nature changed through the 19th century.49 The commercial library scene is covered by Jacob’s paper setting circulating libraries in a cultural context, with many useful references,50 and by Grenby’s consideration of books for children in such libraries.51 Colclough’s paper on the library operated by W. H. Smith & Son looks at a rather later period, with commercial difficulties becoming apparent.52 Public libraries, in their modern form from the 1850s onward, are naturally well represented, both with studies of individual libraries and more general accounts. McKitterick considers public libraries particularly, though among other types, in relating them to a sense of public identity in the Victorian period,53 and Peatling writes about the relationship between public libraries and national identity up to the end of the Great War.54 Another paper by Peatling discusses the sub-discipline of
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public library history, while Sturges looks at the major city libraries in comparison with the different traditions of their European equivalents.56 Manley examines the political background of the original enabling legislation, less straightforward than might be expected.57 Baggs studied in particular the position in the Welsh valleys, where the relationship between miners’ institutes and public libraries was also less than straightforward.58 Pressure against the public funding of libraries was often a cause of slow development, as Webster and Armstrong show in Whitby and Burnley respectively.59 Johansen’s study of the often-neglected Charles Goss indicates the rivalries within the late-Victorian public library profession,60 and Sherriff looks at the architecture of the Edwardian public library.61 Blaikie edited a well-illustrated website on ‘Carnegie libraries in Scotland: architecture and history’.62 Another paper by Baggs considers how public librarians reacted to Britain’s first war of the 20th century.63 A history of mobile libraries by Stringer was published for the Library Association’s Branch and Mobile Group, an illustration of how other specialist groups can also be concerned with library history.64 The later history of Irish public libraries is given in Ellis-King’s contribution to a survey of the contemporary library scene.65 The crucial question of classification has occupied all librarians and the story of the public library approach is given by Bowman.66 The origin of the Classification Research Group, which influenced much work in special libraries from the mid20th century onwards, is discussed by Justice in the context of the history of science.67 Special libraries – in effect, those not discussed above – were not neglected in the literature. Meadows gives some recollections of changes in the use of journal literature in scientific libraries,68 and Brian Vickery’s autobiographical review provides a good view of his work in industrial libraries, at Boston Spa, at University College London and at Aslib.69 In contrast to these valuable collections of personal evidence, Muddiman’s account of Aslib’s development up to 1950 takes perhaps a more properly historical path.70 Pond’s booklet on the House of Commons Library uses committee reports to illustrate its early years.71 Medical librarianship has long had an interest in history, shown in the memorial issue of the Health information and libraries journal in honour of Leslie T. Morton, with articles on the growth of a profession of health librarianship through the 20th century and on the development of electronic information for medicine – a relatively recent phenomenon but old enough to be considered historically.72 The provision of library services for nurses developed more slowly than that for doctors, and the story is given by Wakeham.73 Libraries in commerce and industry are covered by two papers by Black,74 and Plant examines their pattern of employing women.75 To complete this survey in an unusual and largely unstudied area, and to cite once more a publication from outside the narrower LIS field, we should mention Homan’s study of libraries in prisoner-of-war camps in World War II.76
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Notes 1
The Cambridge history of libraries in Britain and Ireland; general editor Peter Hoare. 3 v.: To 1640, ed. Elisabeth Leedham-Green and Teresa Webber; 1640–1850, ed. Giles Mandelbrote and Keith Manley; 1850–2000, ed. Alistair Black and Peter Hoare. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. 2 David H. Stam (ed.), International directory of library histories. Chicago and London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001. 2 v. 3 Some of the discussion, including email responses, is reported in Library history newsletter, ser. 3, 3, 2003. Available on the LIHG website at: (accessed 6/7/06). 4 Alistair Black, ‘Information history and the information professional’, Library history 20 (2), 2004, 3–6; Alistair Black, ‘Every discipline needs a history: information management and the early information society in Britain’ in Aware and responsible: papers of the Nordic International Colloquium, ed. W. Boyd Rayward. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow, 2004, pp. 29–47. 5 Edward Higgs, The information state in England: the central collection of information on citizens since 1500. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003; Toni Weller and David Bawden, ‘The social and technological origins of the information society: an analysis of the crisis of control in England 1830–1900’, Journal of documentation 61 (6), 2005, 777–802. 6 Alistair Black and John Crawford, ‘The identity of library and information history: an audit of library and information history teaching in Britain and Ireland’, Library history 17 (2), 2001, 127–32. 7 Available on the LIHG website at: (accessed 6/7/06). 8 Peter Hoare, ‘A revision of Munford’s “Who Was Who”’, Library and information history newsletter ser. 4, 5, 16–20. Obituaries of W. A. Munford, stressing his importance for the development of historical studies particularly of public librarianship, appeared in the national press as well as in professional journals. 9 Elizabeth Quarmby Lawrence, ‘Researching historic library buildings in the British Isles: problems and ways forward’, Library history 19 (1), 2003, 39–54. 10 G. K. Peatling and Chris Baggs, ‘Early British public library annual reports’, Library history 20 (3), 2004, 223–38 and 21 (1), 2005, 29–45. 11 Light on the book trade: essays presented at the nineteenth seminar on the British book trade in honour of Peter Isaac, ed. Barry MacKay, John Hinks and Maureen Bell. London: British Library, 2004 commemorates one of the important figures in book history to have come from other disciplines (Isaac, who died in 2004, was originally a professor of civil engineering but became a major figure in the history of the book trade – including libraries). Isaac and MacKay edited many of the earlier volumes in the series, such as: The moving market: continuity and change in the book trade. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll, 2001. John Hinks and Catherine Armstrong (eds.), Printing places: locations of book production and distribution since 1500. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll, 2005, the latest volume in the series, is particularly useful to library historians, with contributions such as K. A. Manley’s ‘Lounging places and frivolous literature: subscription and circulating libraries in the West Country to 1825’ (pp. 107–20). 12 For example: Robin Myers, Michael Harris and Giles Mandelbrote (eds.), Under the hammer: book auctions since the seventeenth century. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll,
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14
15
16
17
18 19 20 21
22 23
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2001, and Robin Myers, Michael Harris and Giles Mandelbrote (eds.), Owners, annotators and the signs of reading. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll, 2005. The latter conference fitted well with the 2005 Cambridge conference of the CILIP Rare Books Group, ‘Whose book was it anyway?’ – both contributing to the study of provenance, an important element in the history of libraries. Peter Vodosek, Alistair Black and Peter Hoare (eds.), Mäzenatentum für Bibliotheken = Philanthropy for libraries. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2004. British contributors include Peter Hoare on the motivation for 17th-century library foundations (pp. 229–44), Christopher Skelton-Foord on the philanthropic ethos in community libraries, 1780– 1840 (pp. 67–88), Robert Snape on the Harris Library at Preston (pp. 111–24), Chris Baggs on stock donations in early public libraries (pp. 143–53), and Alistair Black on the ‘social libraries’ provided by large business enterprises, 1850–1950 (pp. 177–191). Several of these papers appeared in Library history 19 (3) 2003: K. A. Manley, ‘Scottish circulating and subscription libraries as community libraries’, 185–94; Ruth Clayton, ‘Masses or classes: the question of community in the foundation of Gladstone’s library [at St Deiniol’s in Hawarden]’, 163–72; Peter Hoare, ‘The operatives’ libraries of Nottingham: a radical community’s own initiative’, 173–84; and Bob Duckett, ‘From village hall to global village: community libraries in England’s largest county’ [Yorkshire], 195–209. Jonathan Rose, The intellectual life of the British working classes. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2001, a worthy sequel to Hoggart’s The uses of literacy (1957), with many reports of library use by workers in the early 20th century. Rose also edited an important study of The Holocaust and the book: destruction and preservation. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001. Kristian Friis-Jensen and James M. W. Willoughby (eds.), Peterborough Abbey, 2001; Vincent Gillespie (ed.), Syon Abbey, 2001; Peter D. Clarke (ed.), The university and college libraries of Cambridge, 2002; Henry de Kirkestede, Catalogus de libris autenticis et apocrifis, ed. R. H. and M. A. Rouse, 2004. James P. Carley, ‘Monastic collections and their dispersal’ in The Cambridge history of the book in Britain, v. 4, ed. John Barnard and D. F. Mackenzie. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002, pp. 339–47. J. P. Carley, ‘“A great gatherer together of books”: Archbishop Bancroft’s library at Lambeth (1610) and its sources’, Lambeth Palace Library annual review 2001, 51–64. Carole Rawcliffe, ‘“Written in the book of life”: building the libraries of medieval English hospitals and almshouses’, The library ser. 7 3 (2), 2002, 127–62. Caroline Bowden, ‘The library of Mildred Cooke Cecil, Lady Burghley’, The Library ser. 7 6 (1), 2005, 3–29. Susie West, ‘Studies and status: spaces for books in seventeenth-century Penshurst Place, Kent’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 12 (3), 2003, 266– 92. A recent account of one aspect of this is Edward Potten, ‘The National Trust cataloguing project’, Bookplate journal new ser. 4 (1), 2006, 41–7. Library history 18 (3), 2002, 153–238. Other articles on National Trust properties in the same journal include Mark Purcell, ‘Books and readers in 18th-century Westmorland: the Brownes of Townend’, Library history 17 (2), 2001, 91–106, and Felicity Stimpson, ‘Servants’ reading: an examination of the servants’ library at Cragside’, Library history 19 (1), 2003, 1–11.
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24 Giles Mandelbrote and Yvonne Lewis, Learning to collect: the library of Sir Richard Ellys (1682–1742) at Blickling Hall. London: National Trust, 2004. 25 Robert S. Matteson, A large private park: the collection of Archbishop William King 1650–1729. Cambridge: LP Publications, 2003. 2 v.; Nicolas K. Kiessling, The library of Anthony Wood. Oxford: Oxford Bibliographical Society, 2002. 26 Two dealing with National Trust properties are: Paul Latcham, ‘William Blathwayt of Dyrham and some of his descendants’, Bookplate journal new ser. 1 (2), 2003, 99–103; Edward Potten, ‘The bookplates of the Egerton and Tatton families of Tatton Park and Wythenshawe Hall’, Bookplate journal new ser. 3 (2), 2005, 75–95. 27 Colin G. C. Tite, The early records of Sir Robert Cotton's library: formation, cataloguing, use. London: British Library, 2003. 28 Robert Lacey, ‘The library of George III: collecting for crown or nation?’, The Court historian 10 (2), 2005, 137–47. 29 David Jenkins, A refuge in peace and war: the National Library of Wales to 1951. Aberystwyth: NLW, 2002. 30 The proceedings of the conference are given in the special commemorative issue of the Bodleian Library record 17 (6), 2002, including D. G. Vaisey on ‘The legacy of Sir Thomas Bodley’ (419–30); cf. the exhibition catalogue Sir Thomas Bodley and his library. Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2002. 31 R. A. Beddard, ‘The official inauguration of the Bodleian Library on 8 November 1602’, The Library ser. 7 3 (4), 2002, 255–83. 32 Mark Purcell, ‘Warfare and collecting: the Faro Raid of 1596’, Library history 18 (1), 2002, 17–24. 33 David Vaisey, ‘Overtravelled with the librarie business’, Book collector 52 (1), 2003, 46–58. 34 Ursula Aylmer (ed.), Most noble Bodley! A Bodleian Library anthology. Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2002. 35 Clare Sargent, ‘Two sixteenth-century book lists from the library of Queens’ College Cambridge’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographic Society 12 (2), 2001, 161– 78. 36 Christopher Decker, ‘The poet as reader: Thomas Gray’s borrowings from Cambridge college libraries’, The Library ser. 7 3 (2), 2002, 163–93. 37 Michael Perkin, A directory of the parochial libraries of the Church of England and the Church in Wales. London: Bibliographical Society, 2004. 38 Brian North Lee, Some Church of England parochial library and cathedral ex-libris. London: Bookplate Society, 2004. 39 F. Kisby, ‘Books in London parish churches before 1603: some preliminary observations’ in The Church and learning in late medieval society: studies in honour of Professor R. B. Dobson, ed. Caroline M. Barron and Jenny Stratford. Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2002, pp. 305–26. 40 Nigel Ramsay, ‘The library and archives 1109–1541’ in A history of Ely Cathedral, ed. Peter Meadows and Nigel Ramsay. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2003, pp. 157–68; Nigel Ramsay, ‘The library and archives to 1897’ in St Paul’s: the cathedral church of London 604–2004, ed. Derek Keene, Arthur Burns and Andrew Saint. New Haven, Conn. and London: Yale University Press, 2004, pp. 413–25 (complemented by a shorter article by J. J. Wisdom on the library 1897–2004). 41 Muriel McCarthy, Marsh’s Library, Dublin: all graduates and gentlemen. [New ed.] Dublin: Four Courts, 2003; Muriel McCarthy and Caroline Sherwood-Smith (eds.), This
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46 47 48 49
50 51 52 53
54 55 56 57 58
59
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golden fleece: Marsh’s Library 1701–2001: a tercentenary exhibition. Dublin: Marsh’s Library, 2001; Muriel McCarthy and Ann Simmons (eds.), The making of Marsh’s Library: learning, politics and religion in Ireland 1650–1750. Dublin: Four Courts, 2004. Hendrik Dijkgraaf, The library of a Jesuit community at Holbeck, Nottinghamshire. Cambridge: LP Publications, 2003. Clare Hartwell, The history and architecture of Chetham’s School and Library. New Haven, Conn. and London: Yale University Press, 2004. Wiliam St Clair, The reading nation in the Romantic period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. David Allen, ‘Provincial readers and book culture in the Scottish Enlightenment: the Perth Library, 1784–c. 1800’, The Library ser. 7 3 (4), 2002, 367–89; ‘Eighteenthcentury private subscription libraries and provincial urban culture: the Amicable Society of Lancaster’, Library history 17 (1), 2001, 57–76. Geoffrey Forster, Alice Hamilton and Elaine Robinson, ‘A very good public library’: early years of the Leeds Library. Wylam: Allenholme Press, 2001. Brenda J. Scragg, Portico 1806: the founding fathers. Manchester: Portico, 2005. Richard J. Longridge, The Devon and Exeter Institution 1813–1988. Exeter: D&EI, 2002. K. A. Manley, ‘From workers’ libraries to public libraries’ in Buildings, books and beyond. Melbourne: Mechanics’ Institutes of Victoria, 2004, pp. 161–73. Other work by Manley, together with articles on related topics by Hoare and others, is listed in notes 11 and 14 above. Edward Jacob, ‘Eighteenth-century British circulating libraries and cultural book history’, Book history 6, 2003, 1–22. M. O. Grenby, ‘Adults only? Children and children’s books in British circulating libraries, 1747–1848’, Book history 5, 2002, 19–38. Stephen Colclough, ‘“A larger outlay than any return: the library of W. H. Smith & Son, 1860–73’, Publishing history 54, 2003, 67–93. David McKitterick, ‘Libraries, knowledge and public identity’ in The organisation of knowledge in Victorian Britain, ed. Martin Daunton. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 287–312. G. K. Peatling, ‘Public libraries and national identity in Britain, 1850–1919’, Library history 20 (1), 2004, 33–47. G. K. Peatling, ‘Discipline and the discipline: histories of the British public library’, Libraries & culture 38 (1), 2003, 50–60. Paul Sturges, ‘Great city libraries in Britain: their history from a European perspective’, Library history 19 (2), 2003, 93–111. K. A. Manley, ‘Food for the mind or for the belly? The Irish famine and the Public Libraries Act of 1850’, Library history 17 (3), 2001, 203–12. Chris Baggs, ‘“Carnegie offered money and a lot of South Wales refused to have it: it was blood money”: bringing libraries to the South Wales valleys 1870 to 1939’, Library history 17 (3), 2001, 171–80. Cf. also his ‘How well read was my valley: reading, popular fiction and the miners of South Wales, 1875–1939’, Book history 4, 2001, 277– 301, and ‘“The whole tragedy of leisure in penury”: the South Wales miners’ institute libraries during the Great Depression’, Libraries & culture 39 (2), 2004, 115–36. Jon Webster, ‘“Don’t have a library rate thrust upon you”: the libraries debate in Whitby, 1878’, Library history 20 (2), 2004, 117–35; Gordon Armstrong, ‘Libraries in
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61 62 63 64 65
66 67
68 69
70 71
72
73 74
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Burnley, 1900, and the absence of a public library’, Library history 19 (3), 2003, 211– 25. Michelle Johansen, ‘A fault-line in library history: Charles Goss, the Society of Public Librarians, and the “Battle of the Books” in the late 19th century’, Library history 19 (2), 2003, 75–91. Clare Sherriff, ‘“But the empire cannot live by muscle alone”: an architectural history of the Edwardian public library’, Library history 21 (3), 2005, 195–211. Carnegie libraries of Scotland: (accessed 6/7/06). Chris Baggs, ‘“Librarianship’s a fraud, that’s clear; for Africa I’ll volunteer”: public libraries and the Boer War’, Library history 18 (2), 2002, 99–115. Ian Stringer, Britain’s mobile libraries. Appleby: Trans-Pennine, 2001. Deirdre Ellis-King, ‘Decades of aspiration: public libraries 1947–87’ in The university of the people: celebrating Ireland’s public libraries. Dublin: An Chomhairle Leabharlanna, 2003, pp. 43–55. J. H. Bowman, ‘Classification in British public libraries: a historical perspective’, Library history 21 (3), 2005, 143–73. A. Justice, ‘Information science as a facet of the history of science: the origins of the Classification Research Group’ in The history and heritage of scientific and technological information systems, ed. W. Boyd Rayward and Mary Ellen Bowden. Medford, NJ: Information Today, 2004, pp. 267–80. Jack Meadows, ‘The immediacy effect: then and now’, Journal of documentation 60 (6), 2004, 601–8. Brian Vickery, A long search for information. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Graduate School of Library & Information Science, 2004 (Occasional paper; no. 213). Dave Muddiman, ‘A new history of Aslib, 1924–1950’, Journal of documentation 61 (3), 2005, 402–28. Chris Pond (ed.), The early history of the House of Commons Library: reports from Standing Committees on the Library of the House, 1840–1856. London: Stationery Office for the Commons Library, 2001. Health information and libraries journal 22 Suppl. 1, 2005: Valerie Ferguson, ‘The professionalization of health librarianship in the UK between 1909 and 1978’ (8–18); Steve Pritchard and Alison L. Weightman, ‘Medline in the UK: pioneering the past, present and future’ (38–44). Maurice Wakeham, ‘From locked cupboard to university library: libraries for nurses in the UK after 1955’, Library history 18 (1), 2002, 39–60. Alistair Black, ‘Hidden worlds of the early knowledge economy: libraries in British companies before the middle of the twentieth century’, Journal of information science 30 (5), 2004, 418–35; Alistair Black, ‘Technical libraries in British commercial and industrial enterprises before 1950’ in The history and heritage of scientific and technological information systems, ed. Rayward and Bowden, 281–90. Helen Plant, ‘Women’s employment in industrial libraries and information bureaux in Britain, 1918–1960’, Library history 20 (1), 2004, 49–63. Valerie Homan, ‘Captive readers in the Second World War’, Publishing history 52 (1), 2002, 83–94.
11
Rare book librarianship and historical bibliography K. E. Attar
Introduction Rare book librarianship deals, traditionally, with material printed in the hand-press period, from Gutenberg’s introduction of movable type in 1452 until the mechanization of book production, completed in Western Europe by 1850. It further incorporates material rendered rare by small print runs, such as private press books, or by such copy-specific features as special provenances or binding. Historical bibliography is concerned with the book as a physical object – for example, printing, paper, binding, and also ownership – similarly focusing on the hand-press period, and providing the scholarship backing rare book librarianship. An extension of both areas was evident in the first five years of the twenty-first century. In historical bibliography, interest in the history of the book, noted in the reviews of British librarianship for 1986–1990 and for 1991–2000, continued, with several studies on the interaction between book and reader; an ongoing interest in provenance is an aspect of this. The concept of rare book librarianship expanded to pay more heed to the second half of the nineteenth century and beyond. To an extent this was a practical measure to come to terms with the difficulty of replacing even some machine-press titles: for example, Cambridge University Library removed books published 1851–1900 from its open shelves for consultation in its Rare Books Reading Room.1 In other ways the shift took cognizance of modern special collections which do not necessarily house rare items but which libraries may wish to single out for particular treatment. Drafts of Descriptive cataloging of rare materials (books), DCRM(B), the revision of the 1991 publication Descriptive cataloging of rare books (DCRB), responded to a perceived desire for more detailed cataloguing of materials from the machine-press period, for example, through examples, through specific references to the nineteenth century, and through expanded discussion of the treatment of series.2 On a wider curatorial level, at its Annual General Meeting of 2005 the CILIP Rare Books Group, the major professional body representing and providing training for rare books librarians in Great Britain, voted to change its name to the Rare Books and Special
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Collections Group (RBSCG), in order more accurately to reflect the needs of its members. A hallmark of rare book librarianship 2001–05 was the provision of electronic access to books. This was a two-pronged measure, concerning retrospective cataloguing projects on the one hand (sometimes crowned by the development of websites) and the digitization of texts on the other. Cataloguing Cataloguing of early printed books took place across a wide spectrum of libraries, at various levels and under different funding schemes. In 1999 the Research Support Libraries Programme (RSLP) had launched several cataloguing projects, mainly discipline-oriented, occasionally format-oriented; these extended into the twenty-first century, with time-spans depending on the quantity of material per project.3 One of the largest projects, the CURL-led 19th-Century Pamphlets Project, was completed in 2002. It involved the retrospective cataloguing, from catalogue cards, of 179,090 pamphlets published between 1801 and 1914 and a webbased guide of collection-level descriptions. The work embraced 49 pamphlet collections in 21 partner libraries, with subject coverage ranging from anthropology to education, magic, law and theology.4 The BOOKHAD project, led by the London Institute Higher Education Corporation, was responsible for the cataloguing of approximately 125,000 records from 23 collections at six partner institutions concerning book history and book design, including 50,000 records of monographs and periodicals at the St Bride Printing Library.5 King’s College, London, led HOST (2000–02), the history of science and technology 1801–1914, for which eight institutions catalogued over 38,000 printed items and over 69,000 archival items online in addition to conserving over 22,000 items and conducting a programme of promotion and dissemination.6 In another project which finished in 2002, the Universities of St Andrews, Aberdeen and Wales united to provide approximately 24,000 records for pamphlets from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries covering primarily theology, politics, economics and history.7 Collaborative retrospective conversion projects did not end with the termination of RSLP funding. CURL led a brief ‘Revelation Plus’ project with eight partner libraries from October 2003 to March 2004 to catalogue 5,000 items of nineteenthand twentieth-century church history and Christian theology and where relevant to create collection-level descriptions.8 In January 2003, ‘Britain in Print’ was launched. This project, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and led by the University of Edinburgh, claimed to offer for the first time free access for all – from home, school, library or workplace – to information about the collection of early British books in 22 of the nation’s most important libraries. The first phase resulted in the production of a web tool and e-learning resource. The second phase, begun in July 2005, was a 30-month project involving ESTC and CURL to catalogue material either in English or with a British imprint up to and including 1701, with catalogue records available via COPAC and on the OPACs of the contributing libraries, and items being reported to ESTC. The 22 partner libraries – chiefly
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CURL members, but also the Mitchell Library, Glasgow and the Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh – aimed to produce 41,200 records. Cataloguing, unlike that for several RSLP projects, was done from the book in hand, with attention paid to salient copy-specific features.9 The Natural History Museum in London led a two-year international collaborative project to produce an online union catalogue of material relating to Carl Linnaeus and his students. The project involved Great Britain, Europe and the United States and was funded by the Linnean Society of London from January 2004.10 In October 2005 at the instigation of the Bibliographical Society a seminar took place at the Victoria and Albert Museum to investigate a joint project to provide a comprehensive national database of British chapbooks. In addition to large collaborative projects, individual libraries, public, private and academic, small and large, obtained external funding or provided their own in order to catalogue their rare books, and occasionally publicized their work in the professional literature.11 The Oxford Early Printed Books Project to catalogue books in Oxford college libraries continued after RSLP funding ended, adding 59,569 books to the Oxford University on-line catalogue, OLIS, between 2001 and 2005.12 With the help of funding from the Andrew Mellon Foundation in 2003, in 2005 Cambridge University Library completed the retrospective conversion of its guardbook catalogue; over 1.3 million records were converted in all, 900,000 of them during 2001–05, encompassing a significant number of rare books. The Bible Society retrospective conversion project at Cambridge University Library ended in 2003; it had led to the cataloguing of about 30,000 bibles, including substantial amounts of rare material.13 Elsewhere in Cambridge, projects took place to catalogue the Old Library of St John’s College (about 30,000 items), approximately 40,000 volumes published before 1850 at Trinity College, and the famous Parker Library at Corpus Christi College (project 2003–06; ca. 5,000 items).14 Cataloguing at the National Library of Scotland included the cataloguing of 2,540 Scottish chapbooks between November 2004 and December 2005, as part of a Full Disclosure project, and 18,600 pre-1801 British items between 2001 and 2005.15 Projects elsewhere included the commencement of the cataloguing of Sir Walter Scott’s library at Abbotsford (commenced April 2003) and of the collection of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow (begun 2002; an estimated 10,000 rare books), the cataloguing of about 44,200 pre-1800 items in Lambeth Palace Library; three historical medical collections at King’s College, London (about 6,200 items, with the projects ongoing, funded partly or wholly by the Wellcome Trust; King’s College was also cataloguing two general rare book collections); about 10,000 items at the Royal College of Physicians; about 3,200 rare science books at the Science Museum Library; and, on the public library front, approximately 3,600 items at Liverpool City Libraries, with further activity planned.16 In addition to cataloguing for their own purposes, British libraries contributed records to the major union catalogues. In 2005 the Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL) reported the presence on its Hand Press Book (HPB)
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database of over 1.6 million records for books printed ca. 1450–1830, with the expectation of soon exceeding two million records, an increase of one million records over five years.17 Although RLG migration hindered the loading of files from March 2005, CERL continued to prepare files for loading, including updates from Oxford University libraries and the Wellcome Library.18 The third edition of the ESTC on CD-ROM was released in June 2003, with 465,000 records. The reporting of records to ESTC continued busily, in particular with the National Library of Ireland entering or verifying all its pre-1701 holdings (4,289 entries) and the Royal Society and the National Trust submitting 7,332 and 10,159 holdings respectively; on the whole, in the period 2001–05 libraries in the United Kingdom added 55,237 and libraries in Ireland added 22,819 records to the ESTC.19 The provision of access continued at collection as well as item level. In print form, 2004 saw the publication, under the auspices of the Bibliographical Society, of Michael Perkin’s Directory of the parochial libraries of the Church of England and the Church in Wales. This expanded revision of Neil Ker’s 1959 directory covered 1,021 libraries with their brief history where applicable, statements of their extent and contents, and references.20 Electronically, university libraries in the M25 Consortium launched MASC25 (Mapping Access to Special Collections in the London Region) in December 2004, a project managed by University College London. This database of special collections provided free-text collection profiles together with an indication of the extent, subject, period, significance of coverage, Library of Congress subject headings, and links to the holding libraries. It allowed cross-searching and gave participating libraries the opportunity to update their records from the second edition of Bloomfield’s Directory of rare book and special collections,21 for example drawing attention to additional finding aids or reporting newly acquired collections.22 Digitization Complementing descriptions of items or collections was full-text access to collections. As reported in British librarianship and information work 1991–2000, Early English books online (EEBO), digitizing books with seventeenth-century British imprints or published in the English language elsewhere in the world, had been launched in 1998 with the Text Creation Partnership, to enable full-text searching for selected items beginning in 1999.23 In 2003 it was joined by Thomson Gale’s Eighteenth century collections online (ECCO), aiming to supply full digitized text for every significant eighteenth-century printed item (over 135,000 printed books and editions, totalling approximately 26 million pages) with a British imprint or in the English language.24 From the outset ECCO included fulltext searching. While ECCO was originally prohibitively expensive for smaller institutions, in June 2005 JISC licensed the content and made it available to all higher and further education institutions for a modest annual hosting fee (between £2,250 and £3,500 per institution).25 Thomson Gale also made available the Times digital archive, enabling full searching of the Times from 1785 to 1985, in 2003, and The making of the modern economy (MoME) in 2004. The latter database
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digitized works published up to 1850 in the two libraries of the Cambridge economist Herbert Somerton Foxwell (1849–1936), the Goldsmiths’ Library of Economic Literature at the University of London and the Kress Collection of Business and Economics at Harvard Business School, supplemented by works from the Seligman Collection in the Butler Library at Columbia University and from libraries at Yale University; whereas the focus of EEBO and ECCO was British, the 61,000+ monographs and 466 serials (over 11 million pages) covering all aspects of economic literature digitized on MoME included foreign works.26 The University of Oxford concluded a mass-digitization agreement with Google to digitize over one million of the Bodleian Library’s pre-1920 printed books, with copies to be available via the Oxford Libraries Information Service (OLIS) and Google.27 In 2005 ProQuest Information and Learning announced its plan to digitize nearly six million pages of British periodicals from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries, beginning with 160 periodicals in 2006 and expanding to almost 500 within the following two years.28 Not all digitization projects were on such a major scale. The British Library’s online gallery ‘Turning the Pages’, launched in 1999 and inviting computer users to leaf through books and magnify the details, increased to include fifteen books, chiefly manuscripts, and made the items available via the internet.29 These were joined by 71 selected pages from two manuscripts (the Wellcome Apocalypse and Nujum al-’Ulum) and Robert Willan’s On cutaneous diseases (1808) at the Wellcome Library.30 Featuring the book as artefact, the British Library’s database of bookbindings originated a stand-alone database in the Library’s Rare Books and Music Reading Room in April 2001 and was opened officially in July 2001, providing information and images from its collection of fine bindings from the fifteenth century to the present. A web version, with fewer facilities than the standalone version but with access to all the images and a wide range of information, followed. By the end of 2002 the database contained 2,280 records, searchable by such features as binder, ownership mark, country, cover material, colour, edges, decorative technique and style of binding; work on the database was ongoing.31 Databases Bibliographical databases assisted the study of rare books. In May 2001 the Koninklijke Bibliotheek launched Book history online, enhancing access to ABHB, Annual bibliography of the history of the printed book and libraries. Although a Dutch initiative, the bibliography included British contributors and was relevant for British librarians and book historians.32 The British book trade index (BBTI), providing information about individuals, companies and places involved in printing, bookselling and other book-related trades in England and Wales to 1851, moved to the English Department of the University of Birmingham in April 2002. Here three years of funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Board enabled the transfer of the existing database to the website, the provision of an enhanced search facility, the addition of thousands of new records, bringing the total to some 134,000 records, the inputting of John Feather’s checklist of secondary sources,
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and the conducting of research projects to test the database.33 The Arts and Humanities Research Board further enabled the development at Cardiff University of British fiction 1800–1829: a database of production, circulation and reception. The database, launched in summer 2004, was based on the two-volume The English novel, 1770–1828: a bibliographical survey of prose fiction published in the British Isles.34 It ‘allows users to examine bibliographical records of 2,272 works of fiction written by approximately 900 authors, along with a large number of contemporary materials (including anecdotal records, circulating-library catalogues, newspaper advertisements, reviews, and subscription lists’.35 The National Trust National Trust libraries hold between them approximately one quarter of a million books, about 70% of which pre-date 1860. These libraries gained markedly in prominence during the first five years of the twenty-first century, following the appointment in 1999 of a Libraries Curator. The reporting of books to ESTC has already been mentioned; almost all books in National Trust libraries were catalogued, detailed descriptions and analyses of collections were compiled, and libraries gained a presence on the National Trust website.36 Outreach included publications, notably the beginning of a series of articles about National Trust libraries in The book collector, and exhibitions.37 Collections Elsewhere, books changed hands and libraries were formed or threatened. The most significant single acquisition of the period was the purchase by the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge of the Macclesfield Psalter, described as ‘the most important discovery of any English illuminated manuscript in living memory’;38 the purchase followed a fundraising campaign begun in autumn 2004 and just finished before its February 2005 deadline. Chawton House Library, an independent research library and study centre of over 9,000 volumes devoted chiefly to women’s writing in English from 1600 to 1830, opened in 2003.39 In November 2004, the Designation scheme which since 1997 had identified outstanding collections in non-national museums in England was extended to libraries and archives for collections considered to be of national or international importance. In October 2005 the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council named 38 collections which had been granted Designated status. These included among archives and modern special collections some rare book collections, such as the British Architectural Library at the Royal Institute of British Architects and all collections within the Wellcome Library relating to the study of the history of medicine.40 Less positively, Oriel College, Oxford, sold a First Folio and York Minster Library was threatened with closure, both in 2003; the Rare Books Group joined the successful protests against the latter measure. CERL, under the chairmanship of Ann Matheson (formerly of the National Library of Scotland), was active in rare books librarianship 2001–05, with British libraries active in the wider European context. In addition to the Hand Press Book
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database mentioned above, it collaborated with the Bibliographical Society to develop Ronald B. McKerrow’s Printers’ and publishers’ devices in England & Scotland 1485–1640 as an online resource, including the creation of links between images and text and of indexes to enable linking to the CERL thesaurus. This thesaurus contained personal, corporate and imprint names, imprint places and sources, and was commissioned in 2000, developed in Göttingen and comprising over 617,000 entries by March 2005.41 Under a working party led by Lotte Hellinga, formerly of the British Library, CERL had begun discussions in 2000 into the desirability and feasibility of an online database of manuscripts. Pilot demonstrations were developed in 2003, tested in 2004 and continued to be refined, with the aim of creating an integrated research resource for the European memory covering books and manuscripts.42 Its website was developed to contribute to the overall aim, for example with provenance information, a combination of descriptions of printed sources and access to electronic ones.43 In addition, CERL held annual conferences on collaborative European themes ranging from bibliography to digitization to provenance (the latter held at the National Library of Scotland) and published the proceedings from its London office, under the editorship firstly of Lotte Hellinga and then of her successor as Secretary, David Shaw.44 Associations and societies Within Britain, the CILIP Rare Books Group (approximately 1,200 members) guided general issues. Its annual conferences dealt with libraries and their buildings (‘Books in place’, York, 2001), preservation (Oxford, 2003), curating collections in the twenty-first century (Brighton, 2004) and two themes of increasing interest, children’s books (Edinburgh, 2002) and book ownership and provenance (Cambridge, 2005).45 Security and sales were a running concern. In April 2003 its document ‘Sale of rare books and manuscripts’, providing guidance on the sale and disposal of such items, became approved CILIP policy.46 The Group cooperated with the Council for Prevention of Art Theft to produce similar Guidelines for the Prevention of Theft for Dealers and Auctioneers.47 Some of the Rare Books Group’s energy turned towards cataloguing issues. In 2001, on the demise of the British UKMARC format, Brian Hillyard successfully urged the introduction of its 563 field into MARC 21 in order to record copyspecific binding information.48 Brian Hillyard also represented UK rare book cataloguers as an invited delegate at a DCRB revision conference held at Yale in March 2003. In November 2003 the Rare Books Group collaborated with the Children’s Book History Society to discuss the cataloguing of early children’s books.49 Most significantly, in 2005 the Group inaugurated a sub-committee, the UK Bibliographic Standards Committee (BSC) of the CILIP Rare Books Group, to address cataloguing issues. The Group agreed upon its tasks as being to act as a review panel for proposals to revise the international cataloguing codes for rare books; to provide input into matters concerning rare books for the general AngloAmerican code, Resource description and access (RDA); to revise the RBG
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Guidelines for cataloguing rare books; to provide information via the RBG website; to coordinate British submissions for new thesaurus terms; to liaise with the Book Industry Communications (BIC) Bibliographic Standards Group over desired changes relevant for rare books in MARC format; and to provide advice and training.50 Its main activity in 2005 was to coordinate and provide comments on Descriptive cataloging of rare materials (books), DCRM(B); many of its suggestions were adopted.51 The BSC was not the sole response to a perceived need for training, a need which arose at least partly from the fact that by the end of 2005 only two library schools in the United Kingdom taught historical bibliography: University College London and the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, the latter only as a longdistance module. On 14 September Rare Books in Scotland (RBiS), facilitated by the National Library of Scotland, came into being for staff in Scottish libraries and other organizations with responsibility for rare books. This group built on a small, informal group which first met on 3 September 2003. In November 2004 it became affiliated with the Scottish Confederation of University and Research Libraries (SCURL), whose aims it shared: improving services for users and maximising resources through collaborative action (e.g., sharing skills through workshops; working together in cataloguing); helping to build a cooperative library infrastructure in Scotland (e.g., by collaborative collection development); lobbying funding and planning bodies on matters of shared interest (e.g., preservation; library schools’ curricula) and providing mutual support for members, e.g., by facilitating the development of contacts on an individual and/or institutional level. The Forum held workshops on acquisitions, provenance, conservation and preservation, historical bibliography and cataloguing.52 Rare Books in Scotland was instituted to meet a practical professional need. On an academic level, 2001 saw the foundation of the Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies, hosted by the Institute of English Studies at the University of London on behalf of three libraries (the British Library, the St Bride Printing Library and the University of London Research Library Services) and the English departments of three universities (Birmingham, Reading, Open), with the Shakespeare Institute and the Centre for Textual Studies at De Montfort University subsequently joining the partnership. The Centre was formed by merging the School of Advanced Study’s Centre for Palaeography and the Research Centre in the History of the Book. Its activities were the provision of seminars, workshops, lectures and conferences and the coordination of research projects. Its areas of interest included all areas of manuscript studies; manuscript and print relations; the history of printing, publishing, the book trade, reading, libraries and collecting; bibliography; ephemera; and textual criticism.53 The Bibliographical Society and the regional bibliographical societies (e.g., Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, York) continued their usual lecture series and, in the cases of the Bibliographical Society and Oxford Bibliographical Society, published substantial works.54 In 2004 the Bibliographical Society commissioned the electronic cataloguing of its library of nearly 4,000 titles;55 the following year it
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made its quarterly journal, The library, available online. The three main annual series of bibliographical lectures – the Sandars Lectures at Cambridge, the Lyell Lectures at Oxford and the Panizzi Lectures at the British Library – covered topics extending in time from the world of books in Byzantium (Nigel Wilson’s 2002/3 Lyell Lectures) to T. S. Eliot’s revisions after publication and literary life in the Third Reich (Christopher Ricks’s 2002 Panizzi Lectures and Reinhard Wittmann’s 2004/5 Lyell Lectures respectively). Subjects were as diverse as paper in the sixteenth-century Italian paper industry (Conor Fahy) and Sir Sydney Cockerell (Christopher De Hamel; 2001/2 and 2003/4 Sandars Lectures respectively).56 Monographs based on the David McKitterick’s and Mirjam Foot’s Sandars Lectures (2000/1 and 2002/3 respectively) and on Antony Griffiths’s and Maria Luisa López-Vidriero’s Panizzi Lectures (2003 and 2004 respectively) were published and are mentioned below. Manuscripts Manuscript studies constitute a large area deserving of its own chapter. Two of the manuscript publications in Britain between 2001 and 2005 commemorate major exhibitions. An exhibition on the Lindisfarne Gospels at the British Library in 2003, masterminded by Michelle Brown, was joined by her monograph, a companion to the facsimile of the Gospels.57 From July to December 2005, Cambridge University Library and the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge held a split-site exhibition, ‘Cambridge Illuminations’, featuring manuscripts from these two institutions – most spectacularly, the newly acquired Macclesfield Psalter – and from several Cambridge colleges in what was justly described in The book collector as ‘the largest exhibition of its kind to be staged since Cockerell’s Burlington Fine Arts Club exhibition in 1908’;58 Cambridge illuminations, edited by Paul Binski and Stella Panayotova, presents ten scholarly essays as well as the exhibition catalogue.59 Substantial catalogues of medieval manuscripts appeared, some under the aegis of the Corpus of British medieval library catalogues, covering manuscripts of the University and College libraries of Cambridge; Peterborough Abbey; St John’s College, Oxford; dated and datable manuscripts in London libraries, ca. 800–1600; and Worcester Cathedral Library.60 The indexes and addenda appeared to Ker’s Medieval manuscripts in British libraries.61 Catalogue and illustration combined in Kathleen L. Scott’s Dated and datable English manuscript borders, c. 1395–1499 and Fascicle II of An index of images in English manuscripts from the time of Chaucer to Henry VIII c. 1380–c. 1509,62 while catalogue or inventory formed part of a wider study in Cristina Dondi’s Liturgy of the Canons Regular of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem and Colin Tite’s edition of lists pertaining to Sir Robert Cotton’s library.63 Volumes 10–12 of English manuscript studies, 1100–1700 were published.64 Studies of specific manuscripts covered the Trinity Apocalypse, the Bury Bible and the Hours of Louis XII;65 editions of manuscripts were of the St Alban’s Chronicle and of Henry of Kirkestede’s fifteenth-century catalogue of Latin authors and a
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CD-ROM of the Sherborne Missal.66 Toshiyuki Takamiya’s extensive festschrift contained wide-ranging essays by many leading British manuscript scholars,67 while other studies covered illustration,68 book production,69 ownership70 and palaeography.71 Notable publications A landmark in general book studies was the appearance in 2002 of Volume IV of The Cambridge history of the book in Britain, covering the period from the incorporation of the Stationers’ Company in 1557 to the lapsing of the Licensing Act in 1695, with essays by major scholars on publishing, ownership, literary canons, printing, the book trade, binding and provincial activity.72 Another general work covering a wide range of historical bibliographical topics was Nicolas Barker’s Form and meaning in the history of the book, a compilation of essays originally published in various sources between 1966 and 1998.73 John Carter’s classic ABC for book collectors reached its eighth edition.74 Several subject catalogues or bibliographies either by British authors or published in Great Britain appeared 2001–05, perhaps most notably the final two volumes of Early printed books 1478–1840: a catalogue of the British Architectural Library Early Imprints Collection, by Paul Nash and others, dealing with books on architecture, building and such related fields as ornament, interior decoration and garden design published between 1478 and 1840.75 Peter Thomas’s Medicine and science at Exeter Cathedral Library contained over 2,700 entries, featuring particularly the eighteenth century, of books published 1483–1900, with indexes of owners and subjects.76 Smaller catalogues of specific collections listed early German books in the British Museum (693 items published 1481–1900, featuring especially the sixteenth century (nos. 19–409)), and 321 books and pamphlets on slavery in Canterbury Cathedral Library, a revision and augmentation of a typescript catalogue published in 1988.77 On the union catalogue front, Ralph Cleminson and others compiled Cyrillic books printed before 1701 in British and Irish collections, covering 262 copies of 171 editions.78 An outstanding bibliography was David Griffiths’s Bibliography of the Book of Common Prayer, 1549–1999, its significance marked by the writing of review articles in addition to briefer reviews.79 Also noteworthy were the second volume (L–Z) of A bibliography of French emblem books, by Alison Adams, Stephen Rawles, and Alison Saunders, and Lawrence Darton’s The Dartons: an annotated check-list of children’s books issued by two publishing houses, 1787–1876, comprising 2,702 entries with editorial matter and several indices, representing decades of work.80 Related to catalogues and bibliographies is Anthony James West’s The Shakespeare First Folio. The first two volumes (of an expected four), dealing with sales and prices 1623–2000 and providing a census of 228 copies (90 more than Lee had found a century earlier) came out in 2001 and 2003 respectively.81 The single major catalogue to appear during the first five years of the twentyfirst century was indubitably the five-volume catalogue of incunabula at the Bodleian Library, the outcome of a project with roots going back nearly half a
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century to cards drawn up by L. A. Sheppard. This catalogue of some 5,600 editions of incunabula combined ‘information about the individual copies in the collections of the Bodleian Library (their bindings, their provenance, manuscript notes, and other signs of use) with a detailed analysis of the contents of each edition, locating all texts in each edition, identifying their authors, and giving reference to modern editions of each text where they exist’.82 Other incunabula studies to appear in Britain were Incunabula and their readers, an essay collection based on a conference held at the British Library in 2000, the English translation of Stephan Füssel’s Gutenberg and the impact of printing (originally published in German in 1999), and Takako Kato’s brief (102-page) Caxton’s Morte d’Arthur, examining Caxton’s workshop and printing techniques in order to restore what Malory intended to write.83 James Moran’s Wynkyn de Worde, father of Fleet Street entered its third edition in 2003, in which Lotte Hellinga and Mary Erler provided an introductory review of Wynkyn de Worde studies since 1976 and a 13page chronological bibliography of works on Wynkyn de Worde published from the nineteenth century to 2003.84 Provenance studies Provenance studies continued the impetus given to them in the last decade of the twentieth century. The proceedings of two conferences on the subject held within a month of each other in late 2004 were published towards the end of 2005, the CERL conference hosted by the National Library of Scotland in November on books and their owners, focusing on the recording of provenance and what is to be learned from it, and the annual book trade conference held in London in the following month entitled ‘Owners, annotators the signs of reading’.85 A provenance exhibition, ‘The private lives of books’, accompanied the CERL conference.86 Several catalogues of the libraries of individuals or institutions appeared: Hendrik Dijkgraaf’s catalogue of the 1002-item strong library of a Jesuit community at Holbeck in 1679 and Robert Matteson’s annotated catalogue of the collection of Archbishop William King (1650–1729), numbering over 7,000 volumes, in the ‘Libri pertinentes’ series, and Nicolas Kiessling’s catalogue of the library of Anthony Wood published by the Oxford Bibliographical Society.87 C. S. Knighton’s census of printed books in Samuel Pepys’s library at Magdalene College, Cambridge constituted a revision of N. A. Smith’s catalogue of Pepys’s library of 1978, listed in shelfmark order as opposed to Smith’s arrangement by author.88 Studies of collectors were represented by James P. Carley’s Books of King Henry VIII and his wives and The pleasures of bibliophily, the latter primarily a reprint of 26 essays about book collectors by well-known scholars originally published in The book collector between 1956 and 1997.89 Essays on collectors appeared not only with increasing frequency in the standard bibliographical journals but also in such unexpected sources as Medical history.90 Two reference works on bookplates further contributed to provenance studies, John Blatchly’s Some Suffolk and Norfolk ex-libris, reproducing bookplates and labels relating to East Anglian owners, artists and printers, with biographical information and – a
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book whose Britishness is confined to the publisher and the location of the bookplates – Ilse O’Dell’s Deutsche und österreichische Exlibris 1500–1599 im Department of Prints and Manuscripts im Britischen Museum, a study covering 566 items in the Franks and Rosenheim Collections.91 David Pearson mounted an update of provenance indexes available in libraries in the United Kingdom on the CERL website in September 2005.92 Bindings Mirjam Foot and David Pearson were largely responsible for work on bindings flourishing. David Pearson produced the invaluable handbook English bookbinding styles, 1450–1800, explaining how to date English bindings of the handpress era.93 Mirjam Foot edited Eloquent witnesses: bookbindings and their history, a Bibliographical Society publication comprising ten essays devoted to types of bindings, binding structures, binders and a collector of bindings.94 She also published The decorated bindings in Marsh’s library, Dublin, highlighting fine bindings from particular countries and periods in Trinity College, Dublin, and Bookbinders at work, the outcome of her Sandars Lectures for 2003, drawing heavily upon contemporary sources to describe contemporary binding practices.95 Firmly within the modern period were Edmund King’s Victorian decorated trade bindings 1830–1880: a descriptive bibliography and, of smaller scale in the catalogue line, Anthony Dowd’s The Anthony Dowd collection of modern bindings, a description of 100 bindings, all illustrated, with their provenances.96 Illustration Generally, studies of illustration focused on the Victorian period, outside the remit of this study.97 Earlier periods, however, were not neglected. Publications, all from the British Library, were varied, from Martha Driver’s The image in print: book illustration in late medieval England and its sources, examining woodcuts in incunabula and early sixteenth-century books, to the outcome of two sets of Panizzi lectures, Antony Griffiths’s Prints for books: book illustration in France, 1760–1800, discussing the market and social and economic contexts of book illustration in the period, and Michael Twyman’s Breaking the mould: the first hundred years of lithography.98 Ray Desmond’s Great natural history books and their creators looked at the printing and publishing of (chiefly botanical) natural history books, surveyed the literature and discussed specific titles; the nature of the books automatically led to a focus on illustration.99 Nigel Tattersfield contributed John Bewick: engraver on wood, 1760–1795.100 The private presses Interest in private presses burgeoned. Monographs on the Eragny, Vale, Doves and Golden Cockerel Presses each provided the history of the press in question and lists of the books published.101 Roderick Cave supplied an overview of private presses, discussing the private press movement generally and including 21 chapters on eighteen specific presses, in Fine printing and private presses, which added
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four new papers to reprints of previously published articles. Finally, the Private Libraries Association brought out five volumes covering the bibliography of modern private press books published between 1992 and 2001.103 Each volume is arranged by press and gives the address of the press and details of title, author, illustrations, dimensions, type, paper, binding and numbers of copies printed. Coverage is international, and includes small presses not necessarily associated with fine printing (e.g., the Plough Press in Nottingham). Printing Two brief essays on sextos in The library provided a significant contribution to printing studies by demonstrating that books were printed in sixes, not a format included in the standard manuals.104 British books on printing ranged from mathematical basis of the types used by Aldus Manutius105 and the punches of Philippe Grandjean106 to comments on the layout of selected pages of text published between 1470 and 1946107 and to regional printing in Warwickshire.108 The second edition of Elizabeth Eisenstein’s The printing revolution in early modern Europe, appearing 22 years after the first, added a 46-page review essay, ‘Revisiting the printing revolution’, discussing issues raised, and noting works published since The printing press as an agent of change.109 Janine Barchas and James McLaverty examined the interaction of print and meaning in the eighteenth century: McLaverty in Pope, print and meaning examined how Alexander Pope used typography, type ornaments and layout to control the reception of his work, while Barchas did much the same, including discussion of punctuation and an engraved musical score, for novels of the same period, notably Richardson’s Clarissa and Sarah Fielding’s David Simple.110 Interest in printing processes was evinced by Richard Gabriel Rummonds’s two-volume Nineteenth-century printing practices and the iron handpress, an anthology of instructions and advice in English-language nineteenth-century printers’ manuals.111 The book trade Publishing and the book trade were the subject of a large number of studies. Several of these were conference proceedings: of the annual London conferences on book trade history organized by Robin Myers, Michael Harris and Giles Mandelbrote on book auctions since the seventeenth century, biography and the book trade, the London book trade, and on crime, sharp practice and the control of print;112 of the conferences on the history of the British book trade in Birmingham on continuity and change in the book trade and the locations of book production and distribution since 1500;113 and of a British Library conference, supplemented by five additional essays, Foreign-language printing in London, 1500–1900.114 Histories of particular organizations were those of the Stationers’ Company, 1800– 2000 and the third and final volume of David McKitterick’s history of Cambridge University Press, New worlds for learning, 1873–1972 (also the subject of his Sandars Lectures at Cambridge in 2001); this covered publishing, printing, typography and trade for the set period.115 Other specific topics included English
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newspapers to 1899 and the general failure to register copies of music examined certain forms of publishing.116 A single-author study was Andrew Murphy’s Shakespeare in print, describing the history of Shakespeare publishing from the Renaissance to the present day, from the twin perspectives of editing and publishing history.117 A further area of exploration was the trade between Great Britain and other countries: the role of the low countries in the book trade (based on a seminar at the British Library; a significant number of the essays concern Britain); the export of books to Spanish America; the professional contacts between London booksellers and the United States, the Charleston Literary Society, 1748–1811, in one instance and four American presidents in another.118 More discursively, several books were published on book history and culture, including the interaction of books and readers.119 The most outstanding work concerning the book trade was D. F. McKenzie and Maureen Bell’s three-volume reference work, A chronology and calendar of documents relating to the London book trade 1641– 1700.120 This culmination of a project begun by McKenzie in 1975 comprises chronological references to the book trade, abstracts and edited abstracts occurring in the State papers (Domestic series), Journal of the House of Commons, Journals of the House of Lords, reports of the Historical Manuscripts Commission to NS 78, Stationers’ Company Court books, and McKenzie’s records of seventeenth-century pamphlet material. Records related to production, distribution, ownership and readership of printed texts throughout Britain and in relation to continental Europe. Conclusion The years 2001–05 were a vigorous time for rare book librarianship and historical bibliography, with a great deal of collaborative activity in addition to the labours of single libraries and dedicated individuals. Access to books and collections via cataloguing and digitization increased markedly; bibliographical databases were created or expanded to supplement a wide range of printed books as reference sources; teaching and training developed; a new library opened and a significant illuminated manuscript acquired. Printed catalogues, monographs and collections of essays covered all areas of historical bibliography, and included in the catalogue of Oxford incunabula and the chronology and calendar of the seventeenth-century English book trade two landmark reference works which had required years of collaborative preparation. Plans set afoot by early 2006 promised further forthcoming growth in the field: for example, a national database of chapbooks; awareness of a large number of our pre-1701 imprints through the ‘Britain in Print’ project; a new list of seventeenth-century English book owners;121 the fruits of British input into the cataloguing codes RDA and ISBD(A); and more teaching and training, including an annual Rare Books School to be administered by the Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies in London. May the flourishing book continue to flourish!
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Notes 1 2 3
4
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6
7
8
9 10
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Cambridge University Library, Rare Books information, at: (accessed 1/4/06). For drafts of DCRM(B) see: ‘RBMS bibliographical standards’, (accessed 1/4/06). For a general description of the RSLP projects see Ronald Milne, ‘RSLP: Research Support Libraries Programme: charting and navigating a nation’s collections’, Rare books newsletter 65, 2000–1, 37–51, and the RSLP website: ‘RSLP projects and studies’: (accessed 1/4/06). The latter includes links to project-specific websites. See Marie-Pierre Détraz, ‘RSLP-funded projects, 4: CURL-led 19th-century pamphlets project’, Rare books newsletter 66, 2001, 60–1; ‘RSLP 19th century pamphlets’: and ‘CURL Consortium of Research Libraries in the British Isles, Projects and services’: (both accessed 1/4/06). See Sarah Mahurter, ‘RSLP-funded projects, 1: BOOKHAD: support for nationwide research activities in the fields of book history & book design’, Rare books newsletter 65, 2000–1, 52–5; ‘BOOKHAD: support for nationwide research in access and book design’: (accessed 1/4/06). See Katie Sambrook, ‘RSLP-funded projects, 2: HOST: history of science & technology 1801–1914: a collaborative retrospective conversion and conservation programme’, Rare books newsletter 65, 2000–1, 55–7; ‘HOST 1801–1914’: (accessed 1/4/06). See Christine Gascoigne, ‘RSLP-funded projects, 5: pamphlet and polemic: pamphlets as a guide to the controversies of the 17th to 19th centuries’, Rare books newsletter 66, 2001, 62–3; ‘Pamphlet and polemic: pamphlets as a guide to the controversies of the 17th–19th centuries’: (accessed 1/4/06). See Marie-Pierre Détraz, ‘Revelation Plus: a CURL-led project in 19th and 20th century church history and Christian Theology, October 2003–March 2004: final report’, April 2004, available at: (accessed 1/4/06), and, for briefer information about the project, ‘CURL (Consortium of Research Libraries) in the British Isles: projects and services’: (accessed 1/4/06). See ‘Britain in Print’: (accessed 1/4/06); (accessed 24/4/06). ‘The Linnaeus Link project’, Rare books newsletter 73, 2004, 15; ‘Linnaeus Link progress’, Rare books newsletter 74, 2005, 26; ‘Linnaeus Link’: (accessed 24/4/06). K. E. Attar, ‘Durning-Lawrence online: benefits of a retrospective catalogue conversion project’, Libri 53, 2003, 142–8; Owen Massey, ‘Tracts and pamphlets in the Royal College of Surgeons of England’, Rare books newsletter 74, 2005, 32–4; Paul W. Nash, ‘Cataloguing rare books at the Royal Institute of British Architects’, Refer 19 (2), 2003, 7–11. Email from Sarah Wheale, 22 Feb. 2006. ‘Guardbook catalogue now searchable on Newton’, Cambridge University Library readers’ newsletter 31, Oct. 2005, 3. Also available electronically at: (accessed 21/3/06). The figures
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17
18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 specifically for 2001–05 and information concerning the Bible Society are from an email from Jill Whitelock, Head of Rare Books, Cambridge University Library, 20 Feb. 2006. The project at St John’s College is mentioned within Stewart Tiley, ‘Developing the special collections web-pages at St John’s College, Cambridge University’, Rare books newsletter 74, 2005, 34–8, at p. 36. For the information about Trinity and Corpus Christi Colleges, I am indebted to emails from Joanna Ball, Sub-Librarian, Trinity College Library, 22 Feb. 2006, and William Hale, Parker Taylor Bibliographer, Corpus Christi College, 20 Feb. 2006. Email from Eoin Shalloo, Curator, Rare book collections, National Library of Scotland, 21 Feb. 2006. Emails from Lindsay Levy, 13 March 2006; Julie Wands, 21 Feb. 2006; Gabriell Sewell, Lambeth Palace Library, 21 Feb. 2006; Katie Sambrook, Special Collections Librarian, King’s College London, 21 Feb. 2006; Caroline Moss-Gibbons, Head of Heritage Collections, Royal College of Physicians, 20 Feb. 2006; Nicholas J. Wyatt, Collections Services Librarian, Science Museum Library, 21 Feb. 2006; Steven Dearden, Team Leader, Stock Control, Liverpool Central Libraries, 21 Feb. 2006. Ann Matheson, ‘The Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL): the European printed archive’, Alexandria 17 (1), 2005, 1–11, at p. 3; ‘News’, Rare books newsletter 65, 2000–1, 23. Consortium of European Research Libraries newsletter 11, June 2005. Available electronically at: (accessed 17/3/06). Email from Henry Snyder, ESTC, 10 March 2006. Michael Perkin (ed.), A Directory of the parochial libraries of the Church of England and the Church in Wales. Rev. ed. London: Bibliographical Society, 2004. B. C. Bloomfield, Directory of rare book and special collections in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. London: Library Association, 1997. MASC25: mapping access to special collections in the London region: (accessed 10/4/06). David Pearson, ‘Rare book librarianship and historical bibliography’ in British librarianship and information work 1991–2000. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005, pp. 168– 82. Information available at Eighteenth Century Collections Online: (accessed 17/2/06). JISC: (accessed 17/2/06). See Making of the modern economy: (accessed 1/4/06). Reg Carr, ‘Oxford-Google digitisation agreement’, 29 Sept. 2005: (accessed 22/2/06); see also ‘Protests slow Google library’, Library + information update 4 (10), 2005, 3. Four major American research libraries were also engaged in the project. ‘In brief’, Library and information gazette, 21 Oct. 2005, 11. British Library, Online gallery, Turning the pages: (accessed 10/3/06); ‘British Library’s Turning the pages now available on the web’, Advanced technology libraries 33 (6), 2004, 6– 7.
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Wellcome Library, Turning the pages: (accessed 10/3/06). British Library, Database of bookbindings: (accessed 14/3/06). For an early description of the database, see P. J. M. Marks and David Grinyer, ‘The trials of going online: the image database of British Library bookbindings’, New library world 103, 1180, 2002, 328–35. Book history online: (accessed 10/3/06). British Book Trade Index: , last modified 24 Oct. 2005 (accessed 14/3/06). For a partial result of the research projects carried out, see John Hinks and Maureen Bell, ‘The book trade in English provincial towns, 1700–1849: an evaluation of evidence from the British Book Trade Index’, Publishing history 57, 2004, 53–111. The English novel, 1770–1828: a bibliographical survey of prose fiction published in the British Isles, ed. Peter Garside, James Raven and Rainer Schöwerling. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Peter Garside, Jacqueline Belanger and Sharon Ragaz, British fiction 1800–1829: a database of production, circulation and reception, 2004: (accessed 15/3/06). For the interest in books and readers, see also the Reading Experience Database (RED), an ongoing project discussed in: Mary Hammond, ‘The Reading Experience Database 1450–1945 (RED)’, in Owners, annotators and the signs of reading, ed. Robin Myers, Michael Harris, Giles Mandelbrote. London: British Library, 2005, pp. 175–87. ‘A new look at National Trust libraries’, 2006: (accessed 20/2/06). For an overview of work concerning the National Trust libraries, see Mark Purcell, ‘The National Trust and its libraries’, Art libraries journal 23 (2), 2003, 18–21. The first two articles about National Trust libraries in the Book collector were Mark Purcell, Caroline Shenton, ‘National Trust libraries: introduction and select bibliography’, Book collector 54, 2005, 53–9 and Mark Purcell, ‘The library at Lanhydrock’, Book collector 54, 2005, 195–230. An exhibition was commemorated in Giles Mandelbrote, Yvonne Lewis, Learning to collect: the library of Sir Richard Ellys (1682–1742) at Blickling Hall. London: National Trust, 2004. ‘News and comment’, Book collector 54, 2005, 107–23, at p. 109. Chawton House Library and Study Centre: (accessed 15/3/06); Helen Scott, ‘Jane Austen’s text in context’, Library + information update 3 (3), 2004, 28–31. ‘Outstanding library and archive collections receive national recognition’, Rare books newsletter 76, 2005, 59–63. Several designated collections contained a mixture of archival material and printed books. Ronald B. McKerrow, Printers’ and publishers’ devices in England & Scotland 1485–1640: (accessed 19/4/06). See Matheson, ‘Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL)’; Consortium of European Research Libraries newsletter 11, June 2005. Marian Lefferts and David Shaw, Provenance information, last updated 9 March 2006: (accessed 10/3/06).
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 Lotte Hellinga (ed.), The scholar & the database. London: CERL, 2001 (CERL papers; 3); David J. Shaw (ed.), Books beyond frontiers: the need for international collaboration in national retrospective bibliography. London: CERL, 2003 (CERL papers; 3); David J. Shaw (ed.), European cultural heritage in the digital age: creation, access and preservation. London: CERL, 2004 (CERL papers; 4); David J. Shaw (ed.), Books and their owners: provenance information and the European cultural heritage. London: CERL, 2005 (CERL papers; 5). A full list of contents of each of these volumes is available on the CERL website at: (accessed 10/3/06). For summaries of the papers given at these conferences, see Rare books newsletter 66, 2001, 24–42 (2001 conference); 68, 2002–3, 23–38 (2002 conference); 70, 2003, 14– 48; 71, 2004, 29–61 (both 2003 conference); 73, 2004, 22–43 (2004 conference); 76, 2005, 23–45 (2005 conference) ‘Sale of rare books and manuscripts’, Rare books newsletter 69, 2003, 14–16. Annual report of the Rare Books Group for 2001, Rare books newsletter 67, 2002, 28–30, at p. 29. For discussion of this field, see Brian Hillyard, ‘MARC 21 563: binding information’, Rare books newsletter 68, 2002–3, 39–40. See K. E. Attar, ‘Cataloguing early children’s books: requirements, provision and a seminar’, Catalogue & index 151, 2004, 8–12. K. Attar, B. Hillyard, ‘UK Bibliographic Standards Committee of the CILIP Rare Books Group’, Rare books newsletter 75, 2005, 7–8. ‘DCRM(B) zeta 20060108: List of changes from epsilon draft’, available electronically at: (accessed 19/4/06). Rare Books in Scotland: (accessed 14/3/06). Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies, Institute of English Studies, University of London: (accessed 6/3/06). Perkin, Directory of parochial libraries; Kathleen L. Scott, Dated and datable English manuscript borders, c. 1395–1499. London: Bibliographical Society and British Library, 2002; Mirjam M. Foot (ed.), Eloquent witnesses: bookbindings and their history. London: Bibliographical Society and British Library, 2004; Neil R. Ker, Fragments of medieval manuscripts used as pastedowns in Oxford bindings, with a survey of Oxford binding, c. 1515–1620. Oxford: Oxford Bibliographical Society, 2004 (Oxford Bibliographical Society publications, 3rd ser.; v. 4). Reprint of 1954 ed., with corrigenda and addenda; Nicolas K. Kiessling, The library of Anthony Wood. Oxford: Oxford Bibliographical Society, 2002. For information about the Library and its OPAC, see Bibliographical Society Library: (accessed 19/4/06). The catalogue is available at: (accessed 19/4/06) For a full list of Sandars, Lyell and Panizzi Lectures, see: HoBo Sandars, Lyell, Panizzi & McKenzie: (accessed 19/4/06). Michelle P. Brown, The Lindisfarne Gospels: society, spirituality and the scribe. London: British Library, 2003.
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Book collector 54, 2005, 452. Paul Binski, Stella Panayotova (eds.), The Cambridge illuminations: ten centuries of book production in the medieval west. London: Harvey Miller, 2005. Peter D. Clarke (ed.), The university and college libraries of Cambridge. London: British Library in association with the British Academy, 2002 (Corpus of British medieval library catalogues, 10); Emilie Savage-Smith, A descriptive catalogue of oriental manuscripts at St. John’s College, Oxford. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005; Karsten Friis-Jensen and James M. W. Willoughby (eds.), Peterborough Abbey. London: British Library in association with the British Academy, 2001 (Corpus of British medieval library catalogues; 8); Ralph Hanna, Jeremy Griffiths, A descriptive catalogue of the western medieval manuscripts of St John’s College, Oxford. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002; P. R. Robinson, Catalogue of dated and datable manuscripts c. 800–1600 in London libraries. London: British Library, 2003; R. M. Thomson, Michael Gullick (eds.), A descriptive catalogue of medieval manuscripts in the Worcester Cathedral Library. Cambridge: Brewer, 2001. N. R. Ker, Medieval manuscripts in British Libraries. Vol. 5, Indexes and addenda, ed. I. C. Cunningham, A. G. Watson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. Scott, Dated and datable English manuscript borders; Lynda Dennison et al., An index of images in English manuscripts from the time of Chaucer to Henry VIII c. 1380–c. 1509. Fascicle II: MSS Dodsworth-Marshall. Turnhout: Harvey Miller, 2001. On a smaller scale, Peter Kidd’s Medieval manuscripts from the collection of T. R. Buchanan in the Bodleian Library, Oxford (Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2001) describes 24 manuscripts given to the Bodleian Library in 1939 and 1941, with an introduction which traces the collection’s history and contributes to provenance studies. Cristina Dondi, The liturgy of the Canons Regular of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem: a study and a catalogue of the manuscript sources. Turnhout: Brepols, 2004 (Biblioteca Victorna, 16); Colin G. C. Tite, The early records of Sir Robert Cotton’s Library: formation, cataloguing, use. London: British Library, 2003. A. S. G. Edwards (ed.), Decoration and illustration in English medieval manuscripts. London: British Library, 2002 (English manuscript studies 1100–1700; 10); Peter Beal, Grace Ioppolo (eds.), Manuscripts and their makers in the English Renaissance. London: British Library, 2002 (English manuscript studies 1100–1700; 11); Peter Beal, A. S. G. Edwards (eds.), Scribes and transmission in English manuscripts 1400– 1700. London: British Library, 2005 (English manuscript studies, 1100–1700; 12). David McKitterick (ed.), The Trinity Apocalypse: (Trinity College Cambridge, MS R.16.2). London: British Library, 2005; R. M. Thomson, The Bury Bible. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2001; Thomas Kren, Mark Evans (eds.), A masterpiece reconstructed: the Hours of Louis XII. Los Angeles: Getty; London: British Library, 2005. John Taylor, Wendy R. Childs (eds.), The St Alban’s Chronicle: the Chronica Maiora of Thomas Walsingham. 1: 1376–1394, trans. Leslie Watkiss. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2003 (Oxford medieval texts); Richard H. Rouse, Mary A. Rouse (eds.), Henry of Kirkestede, Catalogus de libris autenticis et apocrifs. London: British Library in association with the British Academy, 2004 (Corpus of British medieval library catalogues; 11); The Sherborne Missal. London: British Library, 2002.
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 Takami Matsuda, Richard A. Linenthal, John Scahill (eds.), The medieval book and a modern collector: essays in honour of Toshiyuki Takamiya. Woodbridge: Brewer, 2004. Another essay collection was Lynda Dennison (ed.), The legacy of M. R. James: papers from the 1995 Cambridge Symposium. Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2001. Christopher De Hamel, The British Library guide to manuscript illumination: history and techniques. London: British Library, 2001; John Williams, The illustrated Beatus: a corpus of the illustrations of the commentary on the Apocalypse. Vol. 2: The ninth and tenth centuries. London: Harvey Miller, 2003; Vol. 4: The eleventh and twelfth centuries. London: Harvey Miller, 2002; David H. Wright, The Roman Vergil and the origins of medieval book design. London: British Library, 2001. Alison I. Beach, Women as scribes: book production and monastic reform in twelfthcentury Bavaria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Christopher De Hamel, The Rothschilds and their collections of illuminated manuscripts. London: British Library, 2005. For handbooks, see Albert Derolez, The palaeography of Gothic manuscript books from the twelfth to the early sixteenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003 (Cambridge studies in palaeography and codicology; 9); Jane Roberts, Guide to scripts used in English writings up to 1500. London: British Library 2005; for an essay collection, see John Haines, Randall Rosenfeld (eds.), Music and medieval manuscripts: paleography and performance: essays dedicated to Andrew Hughes. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004. The Cambridge history of the book in Britain. Vol. 4: 1557–1695, ed. John Barnard, D. F. McKenzie, with the assistance of Maureen Bell. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Nicolas Barker, Form and meaning in the history of the book: selected essays. London: British Library, 2003. John Carter, Nicolas Barker, ABC for book collectors, 8th ed. London: British Library, 2004. Paul W. Nash et al., Early printed books 1478–1840: a catalogue of the British Architectural Library Early Imprints Collection. Vol. 4: S–Z. Munich: Saur, 2001; Vol. 5: Indices, supplement, appendices, addenda and corrigenda. Munich: Saur, 2003. Peter W. Thomas, Medicine and science at Exeter Cathedral Library: a short-title catalogue of printed books, 1483–1900, with a list of 10th- to 19th-century manuscripts. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2003. David Paisey, Catalogue of German printed books to 1900. London: British Museum Press, 2002; Clare Gathercole (ed.), The slave trade: books and pamphlets on slavery and its abolition printed before 1900 in Canterbury Cathedral Library, rev. David Shaw. Canterbury: Canterbury Cathedral, 2001. Ralph Cleminson et al. (eds.), Cyrillic books printed before 1701 in British and Irish collections: a union catalogue. London: British Library, 2000. David N. Griffiths, The bibliography of the Book of Common Prayer, 1549–1999. London: British Library, 2002. For review articles, see B. J. McMullin, ‘The Book of Common Prayer and the bibliographer’, The library ser. 7 6, 2005, 425–54; ‘The Book of Common Prayer’, The book collector 53, 2004, 167–80. Alison Adams, Stephen Rawles, Alison Saunders, A bibliography of French emblem books of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Vol. 2: L–Z. Geneva: Droz, 2002;
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Lawrence Darton, The Dartons: an annotated check-list of children’s books issued by two publishing houses, 1787–1876. London: British Library, 2004. Anthony James West, The Shakespeare first folio: the history of the book. Vol. 1: An account of the first folio based on its sales and prices, 1623–2000. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001; Vol. 2: A new worldwide census of first folios. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003. Alan Coates et al., Catalogue of books published in the fifteenth century now in the Bodleian Library. 5 v. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005, lxxix. Kristian Jensen (ed.), Incunabula and their readers: printing, selling and using books in the fifteenth century. London: British Library, 2003; Stephan Füssel, Gutenberg and the impact of printing. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005; Takako Kato, Caxton’s Morte d’Arthur: the printing process and the authenticity of the text. Oxford: Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature, 2002 (Medium aevum monographs; 22). James Moran, Wynkyn de Worde, father of Fleet Street, 3rd ed., rev. Lotte Hellinga, Mary Erler. London: British Library, 2003. David Shaw (ed.), Books and their owners: provenance information and the European cultural heritage. London: CERL, 2005 (CERL papers; 5); Robin Myers, Michael Harris, Giles Mandelbrote (eds.), Owners, annotators and the signs of reading. London: British Library, 2005. ‘The private lives of books: investigating books and their owners’: (accessed 1/4/06). Robert S. Matteson, A large private park; the collection of Archbishop William King, 1650–1729. 2 v. Cambridge: LP Publications, 2003 (Libri pertinentes; 7); Hendrik Dijkgraaf, The library of a Jesuit community at Holbeck, Nottinghamshire (1679). Cambridge: LP Publications, 2003 (Libri pertinentes; 8); Kiessling, Library of Anthony Wood. C. S. Knighton (ed.), Catalogue of the Pepys library at Magdalene College Cambridge. Supplementary series. Vol. 1: Census of printed books. Cambridge: Brewer, 2004. James P. Carley, The books of King Henry VIII and his wives. London: British Library, 2004; The pleasures of bibliophily: fifty years of the Book collector: an anthology. London: British Library, 2003. David Pearson, ‘Joseph Fenton and his books’, Medical history 47, 2003, 239–48. John Blatchly, Some Suffolk and Norfolk ex-libris: bookplates and labels relating to East Anglian owners, artists and printers. London: Bookplate Society, 2000; Ilse O’Dell, Deutsche und österreichische Exlibris 1500–1599 im Department of Prints and Manuscripts im Britischen Museum. London: British Museum Press, 2003. David Pearson, ‘Provenance indexes available in UK libraries: a selective update, September 2005’: (accessed 1/4/06); hard copy available in the Rare books newsletter 76, 2005, 45–58. David Pearson, English bookbinding styles, 1450–1800: a handbook. London: British Library, 2005. Foot (ed.), Eloquent witnesses. Mirjam M. Foot, The decorated bindings in Marsh’s library, Dublin. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004; Bookbinders at work: their roles and methods. London: British Library, 2006.
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 Edmund M. B. King, Victorian decorated trade bindings 1830–1880: a descriptive bibliography. London: British Library, 2003; Anthony Dowd, The Anthony Dowd collection of modern bindings. Manchester: John Rylands University Library of Manchester, 2002. John Buchanan-Brown, Early Victorian illustrated books: Britain, France and Germany 1820–1860; Paul Goldman, Beyond decoration: the illustrations of John Everett Millais; Gregory R. Suriano, The British pre-Raphaelite illustrators. Rev. ed. All published: London: British Library, 2005. Martha W. Driver, The image in print: book illustration in late medieval England and its sources. London: British Library, 2004; Antony Griffiths, Prints for books: book illustration in France, 1760–1800. London: British Library, 2004; Michael Twyman, Breaking the mould: the first hundred years of lithography. London: British Library, 2001. Ray Desmond, Great natural history books and their creators. London: British Library, 2003. Nigel Tattersfield, John Bewick: engraver on wood, 1760–1795: an appreciation of his life, together with an annotated catalogue of his illustrations and designs. London: British Library, 2001. Roderick Cave and Sarah Manson, A history of the Golden Cockerel Press, 1920– 1960. London: British Library, 2002; Marcella D. Genz, A history of the Eragny Press, 1894–1914. London, British Library, 2004; Marianne Tidcombe, The Doves Press. London: British Library, 2002; Maureen Watry, The Vale Press: Charles Ricketts, a publisher in earnest. London: British Library, 2004. Roderick Cave, Fine printing and private presses: selected papers. London: British Library, 2001. David Chambers (ed.), Private press books 1992–1993; Paul W. Nash, Margaret Lock, Arthur Goldsmith, Private press books 1994–1998. Both: Pinner: Private Libraries Association, 2002; Paul W. Nash, Margaret Lock, Asa Peavy, Private press books 1999; Private press books 2000; Private press books 2001. All: Pinner: Private Libraries Association, 2004. B. J. McMullin, ‘A Scottish sexto in fours and twos’, The library ser. 7 2, 2001, 286– 9; Stephen Rawles, ‘More sextos: two editions of Zincgref’s Emblematum ethicopoliticorum centuria, The Library ser. 7 3, 2002, 317–19. Peter Burnhill, Type spaces: in-house norms in the typography of Aldus Manutius. London: Hyphen Press, 2003. The Hyphen Press also reprinted Harry Carter, A view of early typography up to about 1600, originally published: Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969. James Mosley et al. (eds.), Le romain du roi: la typographie au service de l’État, 1702–2002. Lyon: Musée de l’imprimerie, 2002. Alan Bartram, Five hundred years of book design. London: British Library, 2001. Paul Morgan, Printing and publishing in Warwickshire: miscellaneous notes. Birmingham: British Book Trade Index, 2004. Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, The printing revolution in early modern Europe. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. James McLaverty, Pope, print and meaning. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001; Janine Barchas, Graphic design, print culture, and the eighteenth-century novel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
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Richard Gabriel Rummonds, Nineteenth-century printing practices and the iron handpress, with selected readings, 2 v. London: British Library, 2004. Robin Myers, Michael Harris, Giles Mandelbrote (eds.), Under the hammer: book auctions since the seventeenth century; Lives in print: biography and the book trade from the Middle Ages to the 21st century. Both: London: British Library, 2002; The London book trade: topographies of print in the metropolis from the sixteenth century. London: British Library, 2003; Against the law: crime, sharp practice and the control of print. London: British Library, 2004. The proceedings of the 2005 conference, on fairs, markets and the itinerant book trade, were due for publication at the end of 2006. Peter Isaac, Barry McKay (ed.), The moving market: continuity and change in the book trade. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll, 2001; Barry McKay, John Hinds, Maureen Bell (ed.), Light on the book trade: essays in honour of Peter Isaac. London: British Library, 2004. Barry Taylor (ed.), Foreign-language printing in London, 1500–1900. Boston Spa: British Library, 2002. Robin Myers (ed.), The Stationers’ Company: a history of the later years, 1800–2000. Chichester: Phillimore, 2001; David McKitterick, A history of Cambridge University Press. Vol. 3: New worlds for learning, 1873–1972. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Bob Clarke, From Grub Street to Fleet Street: an illustrated history of English newspapers to 1899; Michael Kassler, Music entries at Stationers’ Hall, 1710–1818: from lists prepared for William Hawes, D. W. Krummel and Alan Tyson and from other sources. Both: Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004. Andrew Murphy, Shakespeare in print: a history and chronology of Shakespeare publishing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Lotte Hellinga et al. (ed.), The bookshop of the world: the role of the low countries in the book-trade, 1473–1941. ’t Goy-Houten: HES and De Graaf, 2001; Eugenia Roldán Vera, The British book trade and Spanish American independence: education and knowledge transmission in transcontinental perspective. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003; James Raven, London booksellers and American customers: transatlantic literary community and the Charleston Library Society, 1748–1811. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2002; Eric Stockdale, ’Tis treason, my good man! Four revolutionary presidents and a Piccadilly bookshop. London: British Library, 2005. On the opposite end of the scale from dissemination was Cyndia Susan Clegg, Press censorship in Jacobean England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. E.g., Douglas A. Brooks (ed.), Printing and parenting in early modern England. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005; Julia Crick, Alexandra Walsham (eds.), The uses of script and print, 1300–1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004; Mary C. Erler, Women, reading and piety in late medieval England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002; Heidi Brayman Hackel, Reading material in early modern England: print, gender and literacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005; Zachary Lesser, Renaissance drama and the politics of publication: readings in the English book trade. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004; Maria Luisa López-Vidriero, The polished cornerstone of the temple: queenly libraries of the Enlightenment. London: British Library, 2005; Kate Peters, Print culture and the
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British librarianship and information work 2001–2005 early Quakers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005; Isabel Rivers (ed.), Books and their readers in eighteenth-century England: new essays. London: Leicester University Press, 2001. Reprinted: London: Continuum, 2003; William St Clair, The reading nation in the Romantic period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. D. F. McKenzie, Maureen Bell, A chronology and calendar of documents relating to the London book trade 1641–1700. 3 v. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. For an example of use to be derived from this work, see Maureen Bell, ‘Offensive behaviour in the English book trade 1641–1700’, in Myers et al. (eds.), Against the law, pp. 61–79. David Pearson, ‘English book owners in the seventeenth century: a work in progress listing’: (accessed 14/3/06).
12
Art libraries Erica Foden-Lenahan
Introduction This chapter aims to highlight some of the concerns that affected the working life of art librarians during 2001–05 and some of the initiatives designed to aid the profession. It will touch on the progress of the Art Libraries Society, whose mission and place continued to be at the heart of art librarianship in the United Kingdom and Ireland. However, it will also look at the political and legislative developments that affected how art librarians work and to which ARLIS’s activities responded. There is considerable overlap with other sectors, both of librarianship and with museums and archives. It will come as no surprise that this chapter will include discussion of copyright and digitization, and it is hoped that it will shed some light on the effects of both on art libraries. Similarly, academic librarians will be familiar with mergers and restructuring, public librarians with closures and collection dispersal; here these issues are placed an art library context. Art Libraries Society or ARLIS/UK & Ireland (ARLIS)1 ARLIS was founded in 1969 to support the work of those involved in the documentation of all aspects of the visual arts. Its committees continued to develop training programmes and visits, advise on policy, and produce publications on topics of particular interest to anyone working in art libraries. The Art libraries journal (ALJ) continued to be one of the most important sources of information dedicated to art librarianship. Evidence of its position can be found by doing a literature search on the subject and discovering that it is one of the few publications in this area in the UK. The News-sheet, a bi-monthly publication, acted as a vehicle for current awareness for the membership. The society had an international vision, collaborating with colleagues abroad on study tours and sharing of good practice. ARLIS attempted to ‘act as a conduit, by keeping abreast of developments in the wider information world and ensuring that relevant initiatives are drawn to the attention of art librarians and that we are able to input to those initiatives when it is appropriate to do so’.2 During 2001–05 ARLIS continued to respond to the pressing issues in the profession, including the Designation Scheme for museums, libraries and archives;3 and copyright, where its position was channelled through its member-
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ship of the Library and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA). It also hosted a number of training days about digitization, ephemera, preservation and conservation of library and archival material, and artists’ books, among others. The annual conferences featured cross-sectoral working, serving the creative industries, technological changes and new standards of description, lifelong learning, and staff development. Perhaps because ARLIS celebrated its 35th anniversary in 2004 and the latter years saw many of its founders and early members retire, succession planning dominated ARLIS governance in the 21st century. In 2000 a working group was formed to attract students and graduate trainees who might be interested in art librarianship. This went on to become a committee of the society, whose chair was a member of ARLIS Council. Its annual events continued to draw a core of delegates wanting to specialize and find art-specific advice on librarian and information training. It was a networking opportunity for those early in their careers and was also an introduction into wider involvement in professional activities, with the hope that they would stay active in ARLIS as their careers progressed. In 2003 ARLIS Council set up a working party to examine the strategic aims of the Society as the profession evolved. The recommended revisions to the aims were presented to the membership at the 2004 annual general meeting. Following a consultation period with the membership, the amended aims were published later that year. The revisions, although not drastically different, acknowledged the changes in work practices, technology, and social inclusion. The Strategic Aims Working Party and Council recognized that the Society, whose activities for so many years had relied on the enthusiasm of its members, the goodwill of members’ employers, and the often full-time contribution of the parttime administrator, could not continue to develop in that way.4 Following the retirement of Sonia French, ARLIS’s first, and long-serving, administrator, at the 2004 AGM, Anna Mellows was appointed as the Society’s first full-time administrator later that year. In December 2004 the Society’s chairperson stood down before the end of her four-year term. An interim chairperson agreed to stand in as the ARLIS chair until the election in autumn 2005. Council then began to look at how other professional organizations managed succession. It is difficult for a chair of the society to make a four-year commitment to ARLIS at a time in their careers when they are likely to have heavy employment responsibilities. At a special general meeting held at the 2005 annual conference, the membership agreed that Council could adopt a model of one year as either chair-elect or past chair, and two years as chair. Further details about the Society and its governance can be found in its annual reports and on its website.5 Other organizations Within the area of the visual arts, there were other organizations to represent sectors of the profession – Architecture Librarians (ARCLIB), the Association of
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Curators of Art and Design Images (ACADI), the Scottish Visual Arts Group (SVAG), and the Association for the Visual Arts in Ireland (AVAIL). ARCLIB provided a forum for those working in libraries in architecture schools. It provided current awareness and an annual conference, as well as lobbying for the role of libraries within the professional and commercial architecture environment. Its main means of information dissemination was through its discussion list ARCLIB-MEMBERS. ACADI was an active group that promoted ‘the status of visual resources curators and to highlight the importance of image collections within education’.6 Image curators might be located within a library structure or within a faculty, or operate independently of either. This led to a feeling of isolation among staff because there were issues peculiar to the provision of images, either slides or digital images, that were not given priority by the parent organization. ACADI provided image curators with a support network for sharing best practice and awareness of training opportunities. AVAIL went through a quiet period in the first part of the 21st century. The organization provided a network for art information in Ireland and it was involved in projects toward the end of the 1990s. Contacts remained close with ARLIS/UK & Ireland, and it was announced in the ARLIS News-sheet May/June 2005 that AVAIL had held their first meeting after a long break the previous November.7 They discussed a mailing list and possible website. At the time of writing there had been no further announcements. SVAG promoted art information and supported the profession in art libraries in Scotland. SVAG members’ holdings were available on the Union Catalogue of Art Books in Libraries in Scotland (UCABLIS), which could be searched through the Co-operative Information Retrieval Network for Scotland (CAIRNS). SVAG was also involved in the Scottish Collections Network (SCONE), which provided collection description, visitor and contact information, and links to the websites of museums and galleries in Scotland. It allowed collections to be located through a variety of search mechanisms, including by subject headings, collection strengths, region and language. Political Resource, the Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries, replaced the Museums & Galleries Commission and the Library & Information Commission in April 2000. It was a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport, and its initial remit was to encourage cross-sectoral working. In 2004 it became the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA). MLA became the strategic agency for the three sectors and worked with partners in nine regions throughout England. Through policy and planning, MLA aimed to increase participation and to place museums, libraries, and archives ‘at the heart of national, regional and local life’.8 Its five-year plan was underpinned by Renaissance for the regions (museums), Framework for the future (libraries), and the Archives Task Force. Some of the
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MLA’s programmes included the Museum Designation scheme, a standards project to identify unique collections of national and international significance; Disability Portfolio guides to good practice in meeting the needs of disabled users; and Inspiring Learning for All, enabling organizations to assess whether they were providing a learning environment for their users by describing the features of an accessible and inclusive museum, library or archive.9 MLA affected some art libraries more than others, particularly those in which there was overlap, such as a library and/or archive located within a museum or gallery. It provided the opportunity and the political impetus for cross-sectoral cooperation through limited funding and promotion of best practice. Within museums, the libraries and archives are often viewed only as service departments. With an emphasis on access, there was more pressure to open up these collections to further external use. This was likely to result in further digitization of collections, because virtual access is more convenient for the user. The impact of MLA strategy on art libraries would become more apparent in the following years. Copyright It is impossible to explain how copyright affects art libraries without mentioning some of the legislation and licences. Copyright covers a variety of reproduction means, such as photocopying, photography, scanning, and downloading, for text and images. There was more than one licensing agency, making navigation through the legislation, policy, and licences complicated. This section will discuss copyright as it relates to slides and images, as well as photocopying and scanning of images and other material in the art library. The library has a duty to assist its users to be aware of the copyright rights and restrictions. In 2000 the rights agency the Design and Artists Copyright Society (DACS) introduced its Slide Collection Licensing. It required all subscribing institutions to nominate a staff member to ensure that terms and conditions of the licence were met throughout their institution. This placed a resource-intensive responsibility upon those institutions that did not have their slide collections on an automated system. Two years later DACS became aware that their subscribers wanted digital images. Libraries and museums could not afford to digitize their slide collections, but the demand was growing for digital images to incorporate in teaching, lectures, and, increasingly, in virtual learning environments (VLEs).10 At the end of the period DACS was still looking at the possibility of creating a licence to enable the digitization of a slide collection. In August 2005 the Copyright Licensing Agency (CLA) started to pilot the Higher Education Trial Licence, to permit photocopying and scanning from books for use in teaching materials. It did not cover digitization of slides, but did include the use of scanned images in course packs. There were, however, rigid restraints on this, including:
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Scanned copies cannot be placed into general stock or accessed via a library's general catalogue. Nor may scanned copies be communicated to the general public e.g. on an open website. Scanned copies may not be distributed to students registered on a course of study, unless copyright has been cleared for each image.11
CLA also piloted the Trial Further Education Licence for the period from 1 August 2005 to 31 July 2006. This too covered the use of scanned images and documents for teaching and learning purposes. The main difference between the two licences was that the former was transactional, so CLA must be contacted about each ‘proposal to digitize’ and permission obtained.12 The latter was a blanket licence where one fee was paid to cover copying and scanning for the entire year. In the case of both trial licences, the source of the material must be attributed, and neither extended to ‘born digital’ material. Material originating from electronic sources was governed by the subscriber’s licensing agreements with the provider.13 Copyright was further complicated by the European Directive (Directive 2001/29/EC), designed to harmonize copyright legislation throughout member countries. The UK government adopted the directive.14 However, owing to the volume of responses to consultation in the UK, the agency responsible for the implementation of the directive postponed the December 2002 deadline for its adoption, so that it was not finally implemented until late 2003. Among the concerns about the European Copyright Directive for research libraries and archives was that commercial research was no longer covered under the auspices of fair dealing, and moreover that there was no definition of commercial research. Did it extend to work by academics, for which they received no remuneration but which was included in a published book or journal, which was then available for purchase? Or to research conducted by curators for an exhibition catalogue or, to take it to its extreme, for interpretation guides, because there was an admission charge to the exhibition? Answers to these questions were not clearly defined and put libraries in fear of becoming a ‘test case’. Art libraries deal with the visual. They are sympathetic to the creators of images that deserve to be paid for their artistic endeavours; this is particularly significant with living artists. The directive emphasizes the protection of the rights of the creator and rights holder, ‘but it fails to recognise the importance of ensuring widespread access to the Information Society by all sectors of society through a balanced exceptions regime which causes no damage to the economic interests of creators and rights holders’.15 And, as art libraries are usually found in educational and research establishments, access to images for teaching and learning is essential. But most museums and gallery libraries remained outside the framework of trial licences and they could rarely afford subscriptions to image banks. There was an ever-widening digital divide between educational establishments and research libraries that were not aligned to one. Yet their public programmes still required the use of a vast range of visual resources to be obtained on very small budgets.
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The digital divide was something which many professionals hoped the MLA would address in the future. Image collections and retrieval Libraries and art and art history departments had long held slide collections, many of which had grown in an organic fashion, rather than under the control of a welldefined collection development plan. Access was often dependent on staff’s and users’ intimate knowledge of the collection, with few collections included on automated systems. As technology changed, so too did the mode of delivery of lectures and teaching material. Digital images became more popular for teaching and learning, but many institutions continued to operate in a hybrid way because of issues about the quality of the image resolution, digital storage, and control of use. For many organizations the use of digital images had grown up in a haphazard way. Comprehensive digitization for every institution was neither desirable nor feasible, and, as Beth Houghton pointed out, ‘in art and in other areas of the humanities, at least, economics and copyright will see to that’.16 Others, therefore, had to step in to address the need for images. Early initiatives included the Scottish Cultural Resources Access Network (SCRAN), the Art Museum Image Consortium (AMICO, which was later absorbed by ARTStor), and the Visual Arts Data Service (VADS, which was re-branded the AHDS Visual Arts). The beginnings of all of these initiatives are described by Doug Dodds in the earlier survey in this series.17 The AHDS Visual Arts, hosted by the University College for the Creative Arts in Surrey, grew to 33 image collections, as well as providing advice for digitizing collections and best practice guides. The range of collections included textiles and fashion, the Design Council archive and slide collection, the African and Asian Visual Artists Archive, the Cordwainers’ Shoe Collection, the Spellman Collection of Victorian Music Covers, the Imperial War Museum’s Posters of Conflict collection, and the Public Monuments and Sculpture Association. AHDS was also committed to the on-going preservation of these digital resources. Rather than simply being a portal for image collections, the website ‘presents material through tailored interfaces for research, learning and teaching use. This eases the finding of resources for users and enables their wide and long-term dissemination for creators’.18 They were designed to encourage further collaborations and interdisciplinary uses. AHDS Visual Arts undertook the PICTIVA project to promote the use of digital images in teaching; POSSE to preserve student graduate shows; and in 2004 it initiated a project entitled the Digital Picture. It was funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), to ‘identify clear ways for the community, as a whole, to erase the problems with, and embrace the strengths of, images in the digital age’.19 There was a myriad of digital images available through the projects described above and art libraries, among others, were hard put to it to provide access and
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navigation to their communities. Some were available through subscription only, some were free, and some, like SCRAN, were based on a mixture of charging and free services. This took an increasing portion of budgets, but also required the imagination of staff to promote the collections and the use of electronic resources. The lasting value of these resources would be judged by future generations, but it was clear that an overarching infrastructure, such as provided by AHDS and, ultimately, JISC, was vital to impose an order on the projects, collections, and acronyms. If nothing else, it provided a starting-point for finding them. The problem arose when a lecturer wanted an image that was not included in these various services. Without a licence permitting reproduction from books, a library was in a difficult position. It would either breach copyright law or send the lecturer away dissatisfied, without the image they needed. It is important not to ignore some of the innovations that permitted the creation these digital resources. The technological advances are bewildering. So it is probably best to mention one to which librarians can relate – standards. In libraries cataloguing and classification of images had often been done according to AACR and MARC formats. However, specialized standards for description were also developed, such as the VRA Core (used by AHDS), Dublin Core and Resource Description Framework. These were designed to increase interoperability between various collection systems and catalogues. Digital projects made use of existing subject indexing and classification tools, such as the Art and Architecture Thesaurus (AAT), Library of Congress Thesaurus for Graphic Materials, and ICONCLASS.20 All of these assisted in the description and organization of images. Innovations and collaborations Art libraries continued to cooperate successfully with other similar organizations on a range of projects. This was aided by funding bodies such as JISC and the Research Support Libraries Programme (RSLP). JISC, in addition to funding digitization projects, was active in more traditional library provision through RSLP. There were also smaller-scale innovations, devised in-house or with two or three participating institutions. These were often made easier as technology has advanced. Although it may be difficult to view a retrospective conversion project as an innovation, the HOGARTH project falls into this category. HOGARTH (Helpful Online Gateway to ART History) ran from 2000 to 2002, converted the card catalogue records held in 13 partner institutions, and enabled the creation of new records where none existed to ‘make available online access to the partner libraries’ complete holdings of exhibition and sales catalogues’.21 Exhibition and sales catalogues are essential to trace an artist’s exhibition history and provenance of works, and on a wider scale, they indicate the collecting taste of an era. Making these research tools available through their institutions’ online catalogues and via COPAC (in cases where partners were also members of Consortium of University Research Libraries) meant a more complete view of exhibition catalogue holdings
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throughout the country. It also made it easier for librarians to refer students and researchers to relevant collections. The second aim of the HOGARTH project was to create an online directory of art history collections in the UK. Rather than attempt to achieve this aim independently, the project decided to make use of the work undertaken by ARLIS. The Society was in the process of updating a 1993 publication Art & design documentation in the UK and Ireland: a directory of resources compiled and edited by Gillian Varley. The result was the Directory of art, architecture and design resources, available on arlis.net and described in more detail below.22 BOOKHAD, another RSLP project, made available through a web interface collection-level description of six major collections in the UK that traced the history of the book and book design. It also provided searching capability on partner institutions’ catalogues to identify records in the subject area and more than 2,000 images from their collections.23 This helped to bring together, in one place, the main research collections in the field. Virtually all libraries had some electronic resources. There was an intermediate period in the late 1990s, where databases were available on CD-ROM. However, indexes such as Art bibliographies modern and Design and applied arts moved from hard copy and CD-ROM to availability on the world wide web via subscription. Wilson art abstracts and Wilson full text also greatly enhanced the online resources available to art students, librarians and researchers. There continued to be fewer electronic journals in the arts than in sciences and technology, largely because of copyright. The fact that copyright and reproduction rights permission would need to be obtained for each image in an article in the digitized copy was a strong deterrent for a commercial publisher to consider this undertaking. This hindered art libraries from making sources available to their users in an electronic format. The lack of convenient delivery could lead some users to develop an over-reliance on the internet (because it was at their desktop) and to overlook rich and, often, more reliable hard copy sources. Nevertheless, there were a small, but increasing, number of e-journals on the arts which were ‘born digital’. Some titles include Consciousness, literature and the arts, Muqarnas: an annual on Islamic art and architecture, Aesthetics on-line, Arts journal.com, Tout-fait: Marcel Duchamp studies online journal. It was vital for art librarians to keep their knowledge current about what was important within art communities from both print and electronic sources, especially for contemporary art, and this made the role of the subject specialist all the more important. However, the position of subject librarian was under threat in some institutions. In 2005 the library at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London attempted to make two subject specialists redundant, their head librarian claiming that ‘their role had diminished and could be done by more junior staff’.24 The librarians were later reinstated, but the situation revealed the attitude that specialism does not have value. At the University of Wales, Bangor, a consultation paper suggested that ‘the services provided by librarians have become less
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important with the development of technology that enables students and staff to conduct research with relatively little guidance’.25 The elimination or downgrading of subject librarian posts was seen as a sensible cost-cutting measure as they formed ‘a significant grouping of senior staff in most academic libraries’.26 However, as has been explained above, specialist knowledge is required, to inform current purchasing, to advise on retention of material (art materials have a longer shelf-life than books and journals in most other disciplines), and to assist faculty, students and researchers with the wealth of information contained both electronically, where the resources are under-utilized, and in hard copy in their institutions. The experience an art librarian gathers is a tremendous asset to their collection. However, this can be enhanced or diminished by bundling several subjects together and making one subject librarian responsible for them all. This works well when the subjects complement one another, such as art and art history, perhaps with film or cultural studies. Where it may be less successful is when the subjects are radically different, such as art history and medicine or engineering, because the ‘subject librarians cannot be experts in every aspect of the subject or subjects they look after’.27 Reference has already been made to the use of images in teaching and learning. This increasingly came to be delivered electronically through virtual learning environments (VLEs). However, libraries were not always included in the creation of these resources. The difficulties librarians had in collecting the content was a common experience, as Nicole Harris explains in her article on the subject: The simple process of collecting a set of reading lists, or lecture notes can cause problems due to differing attitudes towards data storage and quality assurance. The sheer effort involved in managing this content has meant that integration of the more open sources controlled by the library has been ignored or put aside.28
These difficulties were exacerbated when images were required from any of the various sources to which a library subscribed, as library staff tried to ensure copyright and licensing terms were adhered to by academic staff. The internet became an even more powerful tool, and it often required mediation to use. To aid research, the UK higher education community were involved in creating a series of hubs, providing links to websites in a variety of subject areas. In 2000 a study for the potential to create a hub for the arts was initiated by the Creative Arts and Industries Consultancy. This study resulted in Artifact, an ambitious hub project led by Manchester Metropolitan University, in partnership with the London Institute (later the University of the Arts London), South Cheshire College of Further Education and Manchester Computing. Artifact provided access to internet resources for higher and further education, selected by art information professionals. Academic quality and subject relevance were the criteria for inclusion. The records for each site also included a description of the web resource’s features. The Artifact site was catalogued using bibliographic
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standards and metadata and was compliant with the various standards for accessibility for disabled users.29 Artifact covered six main subject areas – architecture; communications, media and culture; design; fashion and beauty; music and the performing arts; and visual arts – which then encompassed an array of more specific subjects. The records of a previous web database for the arts, ADAM, were included where still available. It ensured that ADAM, which had proved a valuable resource for art librarians at the dawn of the move toward a mass digital environment, was not lost.30 In addition, there was an advice and guidance section for people involved in the arts and creative industries, including job listings, funding sources, and business advice. Other sections provide links to image banks, collections and exhibitions, and teaching, learning and research in the arts. The Resource Discovery Network (RDN) training suites and case studies were also available through the gateway. The funding, provided by JISC, was extended until 2005, after which Artifact and the other hubs constituting the RDN were evaluated. In 2006 there were plans to reorganize the eight subject gateways into larger and allied subject groups. The end result was that Artifact would be merged with Humbul (the humanities hub), and that the RDN would be renamed Intute.31 The Union list of art periodicals, latterly funded by RSLP and the British Library Co-operation and Partnership Programme and maintained by the National Art Library at the Victoria and Albert Museum, has been described by Doug Dodds.32 However, in a collaboration with ARLIS in 2002, the union catalogue was included on arlis.net. It provided the holdings and bibliographic details for thousands of art magazines and journals held in almost a hundred UK public, academic, national and special libraries. It was a valuable resource for researchers, but also for librarians in cataloguing serials. Arlis.net also hosted the Directory of art, architecture and design resources, described above in relation to the HOGARTH project. The directory included the name, address, contact and collection scope details of organizations holding art, design and architecture research resources. It could be searched by region, by organization, and by subject area. The Artists’ Papers Register was launched online at the end of 1999. In brief, the register consisted of an online listing of collections of original documents of artists, designers, and craftspeople in the UK. The project was initiated by the Association of Art Historians, and developed throughout the last decade. The final and major Greater London area was surveyed and added between 2002 and 2004.33 It became available through the National Archives website and was maintained by the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts. Not all innovations were technological. Creative Insight at Birmingham City Libraries was the intellectual property strand of the city’s public business information service. It combined a business advice service with copyright, design and patent information, most provided at no cost within the city. The Creative Pathway provided research and support tailored to artists, designers, and musicians to encourage and facilitate their business ideas. It ran free clinics with lawyers and
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other professionals, and devised templates and advice notes on a range of financial, legal, and intellectual property. This was a unique example of a public library pooling the expertise of librarians and other professionals to aid the art community. Refurbish, replace, reorganize and reduce No review of art librarianship would be complete without a section on organizational change. During 2001–05 there were several high profile library projects, addressing the long-standing space constraints and under-funding of capital projects in the sector. Some were refurbishments, while others were moves to new premises. There was also consolidation and closure. The Leeds Art Library, which lived in the City Art Gallery for 50 years, moved into space vacated by the Leeds Museum in the Central Library building, providing an improved environment and more space. The BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead opened in 2002. It had a library, as well as an archive collection of its exhibitions, available for research. The website provided information for remote access, to compensate for the limitations on space and opening hours. The Tate library and archive moved into the Hyman Kreitman Research Centre, located in Tate Britain, and opened in May 2002. The refurbishment of former picture stores provided up to twenty years of expansion space, as well as climatecontrolled environment, bringing together both collections and two reading rooms for researchers. Insight: Collection and Research Centre at the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television opened in 2001. In addition to viewing rooms for film footage, print and photography archives and an equipment archive, Insight also included a printed materials archive room, with ephemera and published books. The British Architectural Library at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) collaborated with the Victoria and Albert Museum to create a permanent architecture gallery and study and teaching rooms within the Museum. The initiative combined the RIBA’s and the V&A Word and Image collections of architectural drawings and archives.34 The gallery, which opened in 2004, hosted temporary exhibitions and there was an education programme attached to the teaching rooms. In autumn 2004 Chelsea College of Art and Design, previously spread over three sites in west London, relocated to the former Royal Army Medical College (RAMC) next to Tate Britain. The library opened in a series of purpose-designed spaces (including that originally housing the RAMC library), providing facilities for quiet and group study, appropriate housing for the college’s special collections, as well as improved staff accommodation. There were some significant mergers, as well as the extension of degreegranting powers to new higher education bodies. At the Victoria and Albert Museum, in late 2001, the National Art Library merged with the Museum’s Department of Prints, Drawings and Paintings, to form the Word and Image Department. The new department brought together the interpretation and scholarship expertise of librarians, archivists and curators.35
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The London Institute was granted university status in 2004 and was re-branded to become the University of the Arts London. The university, consisting of Camberwell College of Art, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, Chelsea College of Art and Design, London College of Communication and London College of Fashion, became the largest university of the arts and creative industries in Europe with 24,000 students.36 It was planned that in 2006 Wimbledon School of Art would become Wimbledon College of Art, and would become the sixth college of the university.37 In 2004 Wimbledon had pulled out of a planned merger with Kingston University, as it decided to ally itself more closely with the specialist college sector.38 The merger in August 2005 of the Surrey Institute of Art and Design University College and the Kent Institute of Art and Design established the University College for the Creative Arts. It had over 6,000 students, spread across five campuses in south-east England, with programmes ranging from undergraduate to doctoral level.39 Further restructuring and mergers were likely as the whole higher education sector continued to go through rationalization. This would, no doubt, have ramifications for the operations of the institutions’ libraries, with a greater dispersal of students across campuses, but there might also be moves to centralize some services, such as bibliographic sections. At the time of writing it was still too early to assess the impact of attaining university status. However, for the libraries it was likely to result in evaluation of the collections as part of the research assessment exercise (RAE). Art college libraries historically had tended not to focus on research, and the books and other resources comprised teaching collections. The status and funding of universities being dependent on good research performance in the RAE, the new universities would have to evaluate their present strengths and, perhaps, would need to invest to support a higher profile research agenda. Not all developments had such a high, or potentially positive, profile. A number of art collections in public libraries faced closure or dispersal. In October 2000 the illustrations collection at Finsbury Library, part of the Islington Council library service, closed. Owing to budget cuts, it could no longer provide the public with reference access to the image collection. The collection included more than 80,000 images, cut from withdrawn library stock, reference books, and periodicals such as National geographic and Picture post.40 It was available to the general public and was heavily used by designers and artists. Members of library staff attempted, unsuccessfully, to find alternative funding sources or an alternative host organization.41 Westminster Reference Art & Design Library in London reduced its opening hours; however, the library was awarded MLA Designation status as a collection of national and international significance to be shared with the nation, which could help to protect it against further service cuts and collection dispersal or disposal. It was reported in 2004 that Bristol Central Library had secured financing to pay consultancy costs to assess the value of the art collection within the public
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42
library context. This was in response to the public and professional outcry that resulted from an earlier announcement to disperse the collection among the local libraries in the network. ARLIS expressed concern in 2002 about this plan, suggesting it would pose a threat to ‘co-operative development of regional centres of excellence’ of art-related resources.43 The results of the consultancy could not be found during the research for this chapter. However, in February 2006, it was reported in Bristol City Council committee minutes that a 2005 plan to close the central library had been withdrawn.44 At the time of writing, the art reference collection remained in the central library. The value of art books and resources in public libraries is underestimated. Public libraries with art collections serve a broader body of users than research libraries. They help students in adult education, school students, and artists and designers, and the interested reader. This is a user group that requires more subjectspecific depth than many schools or further education college libraries can provide. But they remain outside the network of research libraries, especially those outside London. When art collections are dispersed they lose their context. Also, public libraries often have collections specific to their region, such as the St Ives artists represented in the Cornwall Public Library Service. They are able to collect locally in a way that is quite difficult for a national library and they represent the art scene in that particular area. Conclusions The 21st century began as one of evolution for art libraries and it seemed likely to continue that way. There were many initiatives that tried to give some order to the increasing volume of digital and non-digital material generated by artists, arts organizations, and academics. These initiatives would continue to change to meet the demands of a growing user base, encouraged by a strategic body that placed access at the core of all libraries’ missions. The years ahead for art libraries would be challenging, as they grappled with legislation, budgets and technology. However, there were many opportunities for art librarians to develop an array of skills to suit the digital and analogue environments, and there was a strong national and international network of support and development to assist them.
Notes 1 2 3
ARLIS/UK & Ireland: . Beth Houghton, ‘Bottom up: a UK approach to art library co-operation’, Art libraries journal 23 (4), 1998, 9–17. Margaret Young, ARLIS/UK & Ireland response to the Designation scheme for museums, archives and libraries, a draft document published by Re:source. Available at: (accessed 21/5/06).
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9 10 11
12 13 14
15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
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ARLIS Strategic Aims Working Party, ARLIS/UK & Ireland strategic aims. Available at: (accessed 20/5/06). Minutes of the ARLIS/UK & Ireland Special General Meeting, held 8 July 2005. Available at: (accessed 20/5/06). ACADI, What is ACADI?: (accessed 3/6/06). Olivia Fitzpatrick, ‘International news’, ARLIS news-sheet 175, May/June 2005, 8. MLA, MLA: what we do. Available at: (accessed 22/5/06). MLA, Inspiring learning for all: introduction. Available at: (accessed 22/5/06). Nikki Phillips, ‘Summary of the ARLIS/DACS meeting on 10 September 2002’, ARLIS news-sheet 160, Nov./Dec. 2002, 5–6. Goldsmiths College, A guide to digital images, copyright and college slide collections. Available at: (accessed 21/5/06). Alasdair Paterson, Copyright. Exeter University library pages. (accessed 21/5/06). CLA, Trial further education licence – FAQ. Available at: (accessed 21/5/06). Ian Brown and Nick Bohm, ‘Implementation of the directive’. Foundation for Information Policy Research website: (accessed 16/506). T. R. Padfield, Draft EU Directive on Copyright: letter from the Public Record Office’s Copyright Officer to the Patent Office. 8 July 1999. Archived at Wayback Engine: (accessed 16/5/06). Beth Houghton, ‘Viewpoint’, Art libraries journal 27 (1), 2002, 3–4. Douglas Dodds, ‘Art libraries’ in British librarianship and information work 1991– 2000, ed. J. H. Bowman. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006, pp. 183–96. AHDS Visual Arts, About us: (accessed 21/5/06). AHDS Visual Arts, The digital picture: a future for digital images in UK arts education. Available at: (accessed 21/5/06). Margaret Graham, ‘The cataloguing and indexing of images: time for a new paradigm?’, Art libraries journal 26 (1), 22–7. HOGARTH Project, HOGARTH – Helpful Online Gateway to ART History. (accessed 21/5/06). ARLIS/UK & Ireland, About the Directory of art, architecture and design resources: (accessed 23/5/06). Sarah Mahurter, BOOKHAD: support for nationwide research activities in the fields of book history and book design. Available at: (accessed 22/5/05). Donald MacLeod, ‘SOAS resumes talks over library cuts’, Guardian unlimited 6 Sept. 2005: (accessed 24/4/06).
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25 Tony Tysome, ‘Librarians under threat’, Times higher education supplement 15 Feb. 2005. Available at: (accessed 23/5/06). 26 Stephen Pinfield, ‘The changing role of subject librarians in academic libraries’, Journal of librarianship and information science 33 (1), 2001, 32–8. 27 Ibid. 28 Nicole Harris, ‘Managed learning’, Ariadne 30, Dec. 2001: (accessed 16/5/06). 29 Jane Holt, ‘Conference report on Artifact: progress and future aims’, ARLIS news-sheet 165, Sept./Oct. 2003, 13. 30 Louisa Coates, ‘Artifact: the Arts and Creative Industries hub of the RDN’, ARLIS newssheet 166, Nov./Dec. 2003, 4. 31 ARTIFACT, ‘RDN service changes during 2006’: (accessed 16/5/06). 32 Dodds, ‘Art libraries’. 33 Artists’ Papers Register, Artists’ Papers Register: background: (accessed 22/5/06). 34 Royal Institute of British Architects, ‘About the V&A + RIBA Architecture Partnership’: (accessed 22/5/06). 35 Susan Lambert, ‘The National Art Library repositioned’, Art libraries journal 27 (4), 2002, 5–11. 36 Brunswick Arts, ‘University of the Arts London to launch in May’. Press release: (accessed 22/5/06). 37 David Tilley, ‘Art school set to become a member of the creative elite’, Wimbledon guardian 6 Apr. 2006. Available at: (accessed 24/5/06). 38 Polly Curtis, ‘Wimbledon calls off arts merger’, Guardian unlimited 11 Oct. 2004: