Leveraging Library Resources in a World of Fiscal Restraint and Institutional Change

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academic library innovation under austerity
academic library management
Book Clubs
budget optimisation strategies
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Challenging Economic Times
Classroom Style Trainings
collaborative learning spaces
consortial partnerships
Delivering Information Literacy Instruction
Digital Asset Management Software
Digital Scholarship Projects
Distance Learning Department
Embedded Librarian
entrepreneurial funding models
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Fish Camp
Georgia Tech Library
IL Instruction
IL Program
IL Service
information literacy instruction
Ithaka Report
Krannert School
Leveraging Library Resources
Library Anxiety
Library Anxiety Scale
library collaboration and partnerships
library cooperation
library entrepreneurship
library financial crises
library innovation
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Professional Development
Smart Phones
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USC Shoah Foundation
Web Survey Tool

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415538756
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Aug 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Given the continuing cataclysmic shift in the economic landscape in the last few years, librarians have been forced to reevaluate not only the traditional services that they offer but also their continued existence and relevance to their academic institutions. Given the ‘new normal’ of tighter constraint on personnel and materials budgets, librarians now are compelled to find new ways of offering services and forging new relationships with departments and programs outside the traditional library setting.

This volume highlights a number of projects being implemented in academic libraries including: rethinking the entire concept of a library, redefining physical space for new collaborative uses, adapting entrepreneurial techniques to acquire funding, creating new research tools and improving services, forging new consortial partnerships, allying more closely the mission of the library with that of the institution, and adapting public library programs to academic libraries. By re-examining the purpose of an academic library under continuing financial duress, librarians can ensure that their libraries will continue to have relevance to higher education.

This book was published as a special issue of College & Undergraduate Libraries.

Kevin B. Gunn is Coordinator of Religious Studies and Humanities Services at The Catholic University of America Libraries in Washington, DC. Elizabeth Dankert Hammond is Dean of University Libraries, Mercer University. A graduate of the University of Illinois, Ms. Hammond joined Mercer in 1978. Her professional activities include service with ACRL and on the Boards of SOLINET and LYRASIS.