I know it’s cliche to note how we live in a global society. Still, it never hurts to revisit from time to time. Lately I’ve been working on putting more and more collections online. It can be a lot of work, and there is no small amount of faith in the belief that our small library collection will have some relevance for other individuals. That’s why, from time to time, I try to revisit the ways I’ve seen libraries contribute globally.
Collections
This one is the easiest to recognize. We digitize some material, slap on some metadata and put it online. We know it’s being used because we see the hits, but how it is being used is more of a mystery.
So in addition, to my librarian-ness, I also play the banjo. As such, I spend plenty of time geeking out with my fellow fringe musicians at http://www.banjohangout.org/. The style of banjo I play is called clawhammer. And clawhammer banjoists mostly play a style of music called Old Time which has seen a recent revival from the film O Brother Where Art Thou. So being a tradition steeped in old music, there is a small obsession with field recordings and old masters.
Enter the Digital Library of Appalachia. This is an incredible digital collection that contains photos, music, essays and other tidbits from Appalachia. This collection is so important to members of this community, that when it was offline for only one day it caused a slight panic.
However, that’s not even my favorite anecdote about the digital library. I’ve been working on a song recently called Put Your Hand on The Plow. I found out about the song from a Japanese banjo player who heard the recording of a fiddle player from, that’s right the Digital Library of Appalachia. As far as I can tell, there are no other recorded versions of this song anywhere. So here’s a breakdown:
- A song is recorded deep in Appalachia
- Years later it is put online in a digital library
- A Japanese man hears it. Loves it. Makes a banjo version
- A guy in Wisconsin listens to it (along with almost 600 other people) and learns it himself.
That’s not a bad life for a song that might have disappeared forever.
Reference
We tend to not think of reference on a large scale. Often we think of reference as a service for our most immediate patron base whether that’s the town, the campus, or the department. Still it’s growing as an international institution. There is not a week that goes by where I do not answer at least one water related request at the Department of Limnology from someone in South America or Africa or Europe. Still, my favorite interaction is with a man from Germany.
I received a question via chat from a man in Germany. He was researching the roots of his family and found a reference via Google Books to their Turkish village in an obscure census that somehow ended up in our library. I was able to find the census book and send him the little bits of information I could find. If I recall, it was something along the lines of this: Population 123 women and 136 men. Taxes XXX. Location in state Y. However, even this little information thrilled the man.
We tend to think of services as local and and resources as global. After all, resources only involve passive interaction with patrons; we put it online, they look at it. Services require active assistance; we interact directly with patrons. But that’s going to change as information about our collections goes online even if the actual collections do not.
Publications
Librarians are, hopefully, fierce defenders of open access. And we try to convince faculty to sign on, but it’s hard. Most are busy enough and don’t have any extra time to spend submitting papers to yet another repository. Still, we need to communicate the importance not just to the readers of the articles, but also the ways Open Access can benefit the authors.
I’m constantly showing this image to members of the CFL:
This image was published in Science February 2009. Here’s the full citation: Science 20 February 2009:Vol. 323. no. 5917, p. 1025 DOI: 10.1126/science.1154562
What it shows is the increase in citations for Open Access articles in the poorest countries. Note how in South America, the Middle East, the former Soviet countries all use OA articles much more. And not just use them, they cite them. So by making publications Open Access, scholars themselves benefit. Their articles will be read by more individuals, will be used in more decisions, will be cited more in further research. Their publications will have impact. And in a place where monetary gains are few, it’s nice to have some positive feedback.
Share
So tell me, what are some of your stories of libraries with a global impact. Share below.
: photo credits:
banjo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/usonian/18067964/sizes/m/
village: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lapidim/43503396/sizes/m/


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