For consideration, please submit an abstract proposal no more than 150 words (1-2 paragraphs) and a brief professional bio to APAlibrarianship@gmail.com by June 15, 2016. The book is scheduled to come out in 2017. We are seeking abstract proposals that address the topics below.
To start this discussion, this edited volume explores ways that libraries and librarians support APA communities through services and resources.
- Who are the APA communities that these libraries serve?
- What do these APA communities need from their libraries?
- How do libraries serve these communities?
In this volume, APA is defined broadly: heritage from East, Southeast, and South Asia, and Pacific Islands including Hawaiians. The book will aim to cover and provide resources to support different APA communities: from Hmong, Laotian, Burmese to Chinese, Japanese, Nepalese, Bengali communities, etc., and in the contexts of language, religious, cultural and social diversities. We will also include experiences about APA librarians with mixed heritages and adoption experiences.
The following is a list of sections that will be included:
Section 1: Who is the APA community and what do these communities need from their libraries? Several chapters covering case studies of the diversity of communities we serve, layered by different types of library settings (academic, public, school, special).
Academic
- Information literacy
- International students
- Campus engagement
- Staffing and Retention
- Celebration of APA heritage and other cultural programming
- Collections Building
- language resources, community center, ESL resources, children's programming, etc.
- Outreach and advocacy.
- Staffing and Retention.
- Collections Building
- Celebration of APA heritage, other cultural programming (Lunar New Year events, etc.)
- Children's programming
- Staffing
- Collections Building
- Celebration of APA heritage and other cultural programming
- Health/Medical resources and services
- Government and Legal resources and services
- Museum/NGO Digital Collections
- Underserved or emerging sectors: adoptees, elderly, at-risk youths and new immigrants
- Celebration of APA heritage
- Archives of culture and history (oral histories, digital archives, curation of history and heritage, etc.
- Recruitment/retention/mentorship (best practices, systemic problems, library school student perspective-recent grad).
- Sustained structural integration of diversity in collections, resources, services, programming.
- Ongoing assessment of communities' needs/agility to meet evolving needs.
- Cultivating APA library leaders (on social justice, diversity, inclusion, impacting the profession).
- Strengthening professional networks with strategic partnerships (ethnic caucuses, other partners in ALA--SRRT, IRRT, IFLA, JCLC, LBGTRT, etc.).
If you have any questions or would like further information, please email us at APAlibrarianship@gmail.com