Book Cover
E-book
Author Durrani, Shiraz.

Title Progressive Librarianship : Perspectives from Kenya and Britain, 1979-2010
Published Oxford : Vita Books, 2014

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Description 1 online resource (447 pages)
Series Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents Cover; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; List of illustrations; Preface; Foreword; 1: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o: Never be silent, never about the library; 2: David Percival; 3: Catherine Lusted; Acknowledgment; Introduction; Concerns and concepts; Politics of information; If not "progressive", what?; Progressive librarianship in context; A personal perspective; The Kenyan experience; The Library Cell; Progressive performative works; Never be silent; Key issues; The British experience; Hackney Public Library; Merton Library & Heritage Service; Key issues; National and international initiatives
No change at the Library Association (CILIP)Parliamentary Committee submissions; Information for Social Change; Open to all?; The PALIAct initiative; Diversity Council; Quality Leaders Project -- Youth (QLP-Y); Library skills for a globalised world; Library Skills pilot implementation (Phase 2); Teaching and learning progressive librarianship; London Metropolitan University; No conclusion, the struggle continues; Afterword: Study & Reflection; A. Developing an alternative approach: some themes; B. Intertextual reflections: Alice Corble; References; Index; About the author; Back cover
Summary Public spending is under threat and public libraries are suffering. At a time when libraries can play a critical role in supporting people facing difficult economic and social situations, the dominant conservative model of librarianship has nothing meaningful to say about the role and relevance of libraries. It offers more of the same, but no qualitative change so necessary today. . It continues to maintain the myth that there is no alternative to its own policies and practices. There is thus an urgent need for alternative ideas and practices to address people's needs. The progressive librarianship movement - in USA, Europe and other places - is taking up this challenge. P It has also been active in in Kenya and Britain but its work is not widely known. The Kenyan movement differed from the others in that it grew within the underground political movement in the 1980s - the December Twelve Movement. It was its Library Cell that set out its ideas on what a relevant library service should be and put many of its ideas into practice. This experience later reached Britain. Using original documents, this book records this hidden history. In the process, it examines key concepts such as the role of libraries and the relevance of service. Linking library work with the wider social and political concerns, the book explores issues such as politics of information and the role of activism and "neutrality" in library work. Deriving ideas from practice, it offers an alternative approach to librarianship, to the training of librarians and to organisational change to make libraries more relevant to people's lives. The book will be of interest to library staff and professionals, students and teachers of librarianship as well as to political activists and historians
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 415-427) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Library science -- Great Britain
Library science -- Kenya
Public libraries -- Great Britain
Libraries -- Social aspects -- Kenya
Libraries -- Social aspects -- Great Britain
Libraries and society -- Kenya
Libraries and society -- Great Britain
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Library & Information Science -- General.
Libraries -- Social aspects
Library science
Public libraries
Great Britain
Kenya
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2014455065
ISBN 1869886216
9781869886219