Thursday, November 14, 2024

CFP: IASSIST at 50! Bridging oceans, harbouring data & anchoring the future - Bristol, United Kingdom - June 2025

IASSIST at 50! Bridging oceans, harbouring data & anchoring the future


IASSIST 2025 (https://iassistdata.org/conferences/iassist2025/) invites you to join us in Bristol, United Kingdom, for its golden anniversary conference (yes, that is 50 years!!) from June 3 - June 6, 2025 to engage in the past, present, and future of data services, including data management and technologies. IASSIST https://iassistdata.org/ (the International Association for Social Science Information Services and Technology) is an international organization of professionals working with information technology and data services to support research and teaching.

Visit lively, yet laid-back, Bristol and find a city full of character, centuries-old heritage, and an irrepressible creative zeal. Enveloped in the hills of South West England, Bristol is a city full of unique experiences, from year-round festivals, award-winning cycle tracks, and gastronomy of every flavour, to first-class arts venues, and awe-inspiring street art.

The conference will be held in-person, centering around networking opportunities and interactions. We welcome submissions for papers, presentations, posters, demonstrations, workshops, and lightning talks that embrace our conference theme, “Bridging oceans, harbouring data & anchoring the future”. We are seeking out information on: the connections created by data and data services professionals and enthusiasts; the wealth of knowledge in the community; the context of our profession today; and good data practice in the future. Possible topics include (but are not limited to):


  *   Environmental impact and sustainability
  *   Artificial Intelligence
  *   Reproducibility
  *   Partnerships and collaboration
  *   Data literacy
  *   Data consultation and librarianship
  *   Data management and archiving
  *   Data provenance, CARE / FAIR data principles
  *   Data discovery and access
  *   Data documentation and metadata
  *   Data governance and ethics
  *   Data gaps and biases


Have you ever considered submitting a poster? Do you have a new idea you would like feedback on? Would you like to showcase a new service or resource? We will be holding a “Poster Reception” to encourage conversations, sharing of ideas, and community building, while engaging with these visually dynamic posters.

The deadline for submissions is Friday December 13, 2024.
We request that submitters limit themselves to one proposal per format type.

Decisions regarding submissions will be sent out by email mid-February 2025.

The Call for proposals and workshops, with a link to the submission form, is available at:
https://www.openconf.org/iassist2025/openconf.php
Or from the IASSIST 2025 Homepage at:
https://iassistdata.org/conferences/iassist2025/

Questions about presentation submissions may be sent to the Program Co-Chairs (Michael Beckstrand, Jane Fry, and Oliver Watteler) at programme.lists@iassistdata.org.

Support for Attending Conference
IASSIST Fellows Program supports data professionals from countries with emerging economies and underrepresented regions who are developing information infrastructures regarding the use and preservation of public and private data, implementing information policy decisions, and providing data services at their home institutions.

IASSIST Early Professional Fellows Program supports early career data professionals from under-resourced institutions. It recognizes the value of new and innovative ideas from graduates and professionals new to data in the social sciences, who may not otherwise have the funding to travel.
Applications can be made at https://forms.gle/1xLyY3Y6W96GreKYA and will close on Friday December 13, 2024.
Please address your questions about the Fellows Program to Fellows Committee Co-Chairs Florio Arguillas (foa2@cornell.edu) and Sarah Young (sarahy@andrew.cmu.edu)

For information about traveling to Bristol, check out (https://iassistdata.org/conferences/iassist2025/) the conference website (https://iassistdata.org/conferences/iassist2025/).

Monday, November 11, 2024

Call for ATG Reporters - Charleston Conference 2024

Are you attending the Charleston Conference next week? Against the Grain (ATG) is seeking brief reports for the “And They Were There” column. The column will be published in ATG beginning in early 2025.

OPTION A - Individual session report(s)
A short report (100-200 words) on an individual session or sessions. Highlight what resonated, met the reporter’s expectations (or didn’t), and any take-away memorable points.

OPTION B - "Top 3” reports
In 200-300 words per report, spotlight a themed conference experience (pick one or more): 

  • The top three things I learned at the 2024 Charleston Conference 
  • Three/ things I learned at 2024 Charleston Conference keynote or Neapolitan sessions
  • My three favorite concurrent sessions/presentations from the 2024 Charleston Conference (and why)
  • What I learned after viewing the 2024 Charleston Conference posters
  • What I learned after visiting the 2024 Charleston Conference vendor showcase 


PRIOR TO THE CONFERENCE: Sign up for the sessions you wish to report on, and indicate Option A or B.  Please specify whether you will be an on-site or a virtual week attendee reporter.

AFTER THE CONFERENCE: Report submission deadline is January 10, 2025. Completed reports can be emailed to Caroline Goldsmith or uploaded here.

Contact Caroline Goldsmith with any questions at caroline@charlestonlibraryconference.com


Friday, November 08, 2024

Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations

Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations


Editors: Anna Chen, Rebecca Fenning Marschall, Molly McGuire, Nina Schneider, and Emily D. Spunaugle

Loss is inevitable in heritage preservation, and a nuanced understanding of the fundamental role of loss is essential to collections preservation, permanence, and sustainability. Cultural memory and heritage workers, too, face many other kinds of loss within the workplace that impacts their labor, including loss of resources, safety nets, and colleagues. 


The conference organizers of the 2023 online conference, “Item Not Found: Accounting for Loss in Libraries, Archives and Other Heritage and Memory Organizations, co-hosted by the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library and Oakland University Libraries, seek proposals for additional chapters for an edited collection based on the conference theme. This collection will consider the ongoing reassessment of memory and heritage work and heritage ownership, as it is understood by libraries, archives and related organizations, through an examination of the multiple meanings, complexities, and resonances of loss.

Featuring the voices of practitioners and scholars of libraries, museums, and archives, this volume will grapple with questions including, What is heritage and cultural property, and to whom do they belong? Who owns the past, and what does such ownership mean? How can a sustained interrogation of collection and heritage loss be productively leveraged to reckon with other kinds of loss in the cultural memory and heritage workspace? 


We invite proposals from diverse perspectives on a range of topics including, but not limited to, the following:

  • Theft, repatriation, virtual reunification, shared print/collection development
  • Endangered archives, postcustodial archival practice
  • Approaches to loss in preservation and conservation
  • Other related aspects of practice and research


We are especially interested in receiving proposals in the following areas:

  • Deaccessioning, redirections, removals
  • Human and resource loss, including loss of institutional knowledge, in and beyond the workplace
  • Loss and conservation of collections


We welcome proposals of chapters that will thoughtfully engage with experiences derived from the practice of scholar-practitioners, including librarians, archivists, curators, conservators, scholars, museum professionals, students, and other stakeholders at any point in their careers, from institutions and organizations of all sizes, and including independent researchers.


Timeline for Accepted Proposals:

  • April 2025: Completed first drafts of no more than 6,500 words (references included) due to editors

  • May/June 2025: Editors review chapters

  • June 2025: Editors return feedback to authors

  • September 2025: Authors submit final draft to editors

  • October 2025: Typescript due to publisher.

Please submit proposals (400-word maximum) using the following form: https://forms.gle/ek3vmf8sCqDjPb4F8


Please submit proposals by December 6. Presenters will be notified by January 6.

Friday, October 25, 2024

CFP: Biographies Area of the 2025 Popular Culture Association Conference (PCA) Conference

CFP: Biographies Area of the 2025 Popular Culture Association Conference (PCA) Conference

The Biographies Area of the Popular Culture Association (PCA)  is soliciting papers for the 2025 conference that examine the connections between biography and popular culture. Papers and full panel presentations regarding any aspect of popular culture and biography are encouraged. Potential topics might include:

  • Biography and entertainment, art, music, theater
  • Biography and film
  • Biography and criminal justice
  • Television programs about biography
  • Biography and urban legends
  • Biography and folklore
  • Biography and literature
  • Scholarly Biography
  • Controversial Biography
  • Psychoanalysis and Biography
  • Historical Biography
  • Political Biography
  • Autobiography

The conference will be held April 16-19, 2025 at the New Orleans Marriott, 555 Canal Street. Sessions are scheduled in 1½ hour slots, typically with four papers or speakers per standard session.  Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes. 

Below are some recent titles of presentations in the Biographies Area panels:

  • Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-Roll: Celebrity Biography through the Lens of Autopsy
  • Will Rogers: American Folk Hero or Elitist Fraud
  • Manufacturing “Soupy Sales:” Biographical Insights in the Emergence of a Comic Entertainer

Please see this link for details and guidelines on submitting to the conference:
https://pcaaca.org/general/custom.asp?page=submissionguidelines

If interested in submitting for the conference, please provide the title and abstract of your presentation.  

Deadline for Paper Proposals: November 30, 2024.

If you have questions, please feel free to contact Biographies Chair:
Susie Skarl
Associate Professor/Urban Affairs Librarian
susie.skarl@unlv.edu
72-895-2141

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Call for Nominations: ALLEN ELLIS DIGITAL RESEARCH AWARD IN POPULAR CULTURE

Call for Nominations: ALLEN ELLIS DIGITAL RESEARCH AWARD IN POPULAR CULTURE


Please consider nominating a resource for the ALLEN ELLIS DIGITAL RESEARCH AWARD IN POPULAR CULTURE. This award recognizes the outstanding contribution of an academic database to the study of Popular Culture and American Culture developed within the past three years.  Criteria will include 

  • Use of hypertext/networking.

  • Use of supplementary/secondary materials.

  • Breadth of archived material.

  • Ease of searching, and

  • Updatability. 

For more information, please contact the Committee Chair, Casey Hoeve, ellis.award@pcaaca.org,  or visit the website: https://pcaaca.org/awards/literary-film-electronic-awards

Please send nominations by December 02, 2024, to ellis.award@pcaaca.org or use the preferred submission form.


CFP: 20th International Open Repositories Conference (OR2025) - June 15-18th, 2025 - Chicago

The 20th International Open Repositories Conference (OR2025) will be held from June 15-18th 2025 in Chicago, Illinois, USA.

The theme for the conference is: Twenty Years of Progress, a Future of Possibilities

OR2025 is the 20th anniversary of the Open Repositories conference. We are marking this milestone with a conference theme that reflects the progress and contributions that the repository community has made toward equitable access to digital resources and research outputs. In addition, we are also exploring the future possibilities of what repositories can do to tackle the many global challenges that currently exist.

We particularly welcome proposals aligned to the overall theme, but also on other administrative, organizational, or practical topics related to open digital repositories. We are interested in the following sub-themes:

  • Community: How can repositories continue to serve a global community with diverse uses and needs? What can we as a repository community do to create connections through integrations, foster trust in the material held in repositories and promote local and indigenous knowledge?
  • Sustainability and Preservation: How can we ensure that repositories and their digital content last beyond the next 20 years in a financially and environmentally sustainable way?
  • Inspiration: Have you been inspired by attending an Open Repositories conference to develop, implement, change practices or start a project? We would love to hear how this is going!
  • Blue-sky thinking: What might the future of equitable access to digital resources and research outputs look like? How can we go beyond the status quo and AI as the answer to everything?

Submission categories include posters, workshops, lightning talks, papers, the repository showdown and panels.

Please visit the Call for Proposals page to learn more about the sub-themes and submission categories of the conference, including a full list of submission templates and key dates for submission deadlines and approvals.

The deadline for submissions is December 18, 2024.

We look forward to the vibrant conversations and learning opportunities of the conference.

Submitters should note that presentations are in person and there is no remote/pre-recorded presentation option.

Please see the registration fees on the Registration page (registration will open in February 2025).

Programme Co-Chairs:

Adrian Ho, University of Chicago

Ellen Catz Ramsey, University of Virginia

Dr Leigh Stork, University of Strathclyde

Contact: or25-program-chairs@googlegroups.com

For the Open Repositories Steering Committee:

Torsten Reimer and Liz Krznarich

Website: https://or2025.openrepositories.org/

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Registration Open - ACRL/NY 2024 Symposium: Values in Context: Praxis in the Everyday (New York City - December 6th, 2024)

Registration is Now Open for the ACRL/NY 2024 Symposium!


ACRL/NY 2024 Symposium: Values in Context: Praxis in the Everyday

When: December 6, 2024, 8:30 AM-3:45 PM


In the midst of the recent national and global upheavals, the ACRL/NY 2024 Symposium will explore the core values of library workers and libraries, and examine how those values manifest in the day-to-day work that supports our library communities.  ACRL’s strategic plan and ALA’s Core Values of access, equity, intellectual freedom and privacy, public good, and sustainability can inform this conversation. 
In 2000, the first edition of Michael Gorman’s Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century was published.  Later, in 2015, Gorman published a subsequent edition titled Our Enduring Values Revisited: Librarianship in an Ever-Changing World.  Across the two editions, Gorman identifies stewardship, service, intellectual freedom, rationalism, literacy & learning, equity of access to recorded knowledge & information, privacy, and democracy as foundational to library work.

We have a great lineup of presenters, lightning talks, a panel, and posters lined up for you.  We will be posting the details on our website soon. Hope to see you there!

We also want to extend a ‘Thank You!’ to our host Fordham University Libraries


ACRL/NY 2024 Symposium Planning Committee

Questions about the Symposium? acrlnysymposiumchair@gmail.com
Questions about Registration? Markaaron.polger87@login.cuny.edu 

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

CFP: Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit (ESiLS) - Virtual March 26, 2025

Call for Proposals: Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit

We are pleased to announce the upcoming Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit (ESiLS)<https://www.esils.org>, a forum dedicated to showcasing and discussing the latest research and findings happening in and about libraries. (Summit date: Weds., March 26, 2025; Format: Zoom, with some asynchronous options.)

This summit aims to bring together scholars, practitioners, and students who are engaged in empirical studies that advance our understanding of library practices, user behaviors, the impact of libraries on their communities, and more!

We invite proposals for presentations, workshops, and panel discussions that address, but are not limited to, the following topics:
  • Innovative methodologies in library research
  • User experience and satisfaction studies
  • Data-driven decision-making in library services
  • Impact assessment of library programs and services
  • Information-seeking and user behavior studies
  • Collaboration between libraries and community organizations
  • The role of libraries in promoting digital or information literacy
  • Case studies highlighting successful empirical research in libraries

Proposal Guidelines:

  1. Submission Format: Proposals should be submitted by December 20th, 2024. Proposals should include: Title, Authors, Abstract and Format.
  2. Review Process: All submissions will undergo a blind peer review process by the organizers of the conference. Proposals will be evaluated based on their originality, relevance to the summit theme, methodological rigor, and potential impact on the library community. Session proposals that do not include empirical data collection will not be accepted. Session proposals that are not accepted may be asked to convert their session to an asynchronous poster.
  3. Notification of Acceptance: Authors will be notified of the acceptance of their proposals by January 20, 2025.

We encourage researchers as well as practitioners in academic, public, special, and all other libraries to submit proposals. Doctoral students are especially encouraged to apply. To further our commitment to inclusivity, proposers will have the option to disclose whether or not they are members of marginalized communities during the submission process. We aim to amplify the voices of those from these communities and strongly encourage their participation in submitting proposals.

Questions about the Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit may be sent to the organizers at info@esils.org. Additional information is available on our website at https://www.esils.org

Monday, September 30, 2024

CFP: Academic BRASS Fall 2024 Issue (Submission Deadline is November 17, 2024)

The Business Reference in Academic Libraries Committee of BRASS is seeking articles for the next issue of its online publication Academic BRASS.

Academic BRASS is a newsletter--not a journal--that publishes issue-based articles and information for the general and educational interest of BRASS members and academic business librarians.

Topics of interest to the editors are those dealing with business librarianship, such as resources, liaison and outreach activities, strategies, and instruction. Reviews of books, databases, and web sites are welcome as well. Maybe you have another cool idea - that's fine too - get those submissions in!

*Deadline for submissions for the upcoming issue is November 17, 2024.*

You may want to see previous editions. For access to the full text articles of past issues of Academic BRASS, see http://www.ala.org/rusa/sections/brass/publications/academicbrass

The typical length of an Academic BRASS article is 500-800 words, but past articles have been as long as 1,000 words or more. Authors should be guided by what they have to say rather than an arbitrary word length. All articles are subject to editing for length, style, and content, and there is a template on the "About Academic BRASS" page (https://www.ala.org/rusa/sections/brass/publications/academicbrass/about)
that provides formatting guidance. The newsletter follows the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 7th edition for all matters of style and citation. Authors whose articles include references to print or Internet resources are urged to observe the conventions set forth in that publication and on the APA website (http://www.apastyle.org/).

Please send article proposals or submissions to all of the editors Tim Tully (ttully@sdsu.edu), Judy Opdahl (jopdahl@csusm.edu), and Henry Huang (henry.huang@nyu.edu)

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Call for Global Postcards Column: International Information & Library Review

INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION & LIBRARY REVIEW:  The International Information & Library Review | Taylor & Francis Online (tandfonline.com) is inviting submissions of 3000 words or longer for its Global Postcards column.

The “Global Postcards” column features news and reports from around the world. Contributions do not need to be lengthy but should be informative. The strength of the column is its broad, international focus, and contributors are encouraged to explore issues and share news relevant to their geographical region, as well as the larger, global audience.


Topics may include (but are not limited to):

  • Reports from on-the-ground projects
  • Recaps of conferences and meetings around the world
  • Accounts of professional development experiences
  • Summaries of research projects
  • Grants and other funding opportunities


Submission Instructions

Interested authors are invited to submit proposals and articles to Stephen Bales at sbales@tamu.edu.  Manuscripts may be submitted year-round. Articles should be written in Word.

 

Some titles of recently published Global Postcards include:

  • Historical View of University Libraries in Azerbaijan: ADA University Library Case Study
  • Enhancing Business Competencies in Library and Information Science Program: A Case Study of Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
  • I am Ukraine, We are Strong: Thoughts of a Librarian after a Year of War
  • The Libraries at Koç University: Building a World-Class Library in Thirty Years

Call for Participation: Libraries Advancing Community Learning to Reduce Substance Use

 Subject: Call for Participation: Libraries Advancing Community Learning to Reduce Substance Use

 

 

Do you feel that your library could do more to help people in recovery from substance abuse? Do you believe in the healing power of reading? Is your library an innovator in these domains? If you answered yes to any of these questions, we want to hear from you! 

 

We invite applications from public library workers and administrators who are interested in participating in an IMLS-funded national forum (Grant #RE-256563-OLS-24), Libraries Advancing Community Learning to Reduce Substance Use (LACL), which will be held both online and on-site at the Kansas City Public Library on May 15 and 16, 2025. Experts in the library and substance abuse recovery fields will engage participants to envision and create support for people experiencing alcohol use disorder (AUD) and/or substance use disorder (SUD) through reading, bibliotherapy, and peer-to-peer learning circles. 

 

Guided breakout discussion sessions will provide opportunities for participants to share knowledge and develop resources to:

  • facilitate social connections
  • develop working relationships and partnerships with professionals in the recovery field
  • recommend therapeutic uses of literature and provide support for reading groups focusing on AUD and/or SUD
  • support library staff suffering from AUD and/or SUD and secondary trauma
  • apply effective marketing and outreach tactics that reach people who will benefit from these efforts.

 

The forum will provide the basis for an openly available online toolkit that can be used in public libraries.

 

Selected participants will be able to participate on-site. All on-site participants will expected to actively participate in discussions and contribute to the toolkit. They will be provided with travel, two nights’ accommodation at a hotel near the event space, and a stipend for meals not included at the conference. Any library staff member who wishes to learn and contribute to the event can attend the online sessions for free and will be invited to provide feedback on the preliminary materials.

 

Apply:

On-site event, Kansas City

Online-only event

 

Applications for the on-site event are due October 31, 2024. 

 

The project team will review applications and select 50 participants for the on-site forum. We aim to include adult-services public library workers who represent a diverse cross-section of the U.S. (i.e., urban, rural, diverse socio-cultural demographic characteristics, etc.) and from different sizes of libraries. Priority will be given to applicants who have experience with substance abuse recovery programs, facilitating reading and learning groups, outreach, social services, and/or those who represent underserved communities. 

 

Notifications of acceptance will be issued by November 30, and selected participants must confirm their participation by December 15. 

 

Jenny S. Bossaller

Associate Professor

School of Information Science & Learning Technologies

University of Missouri

Thursday, September 05, 2024

CFP: Figuring It Out: The Search for Meaningful Metrics - Advances in Library Administration and Organization

Call for Proposals
Advances in Library Administration and Organization
Volume 45: Figuring It Out: The Search for Meaningful Metrics

Series Editor/Volume Co-Editor: David Ketchum, University of Oregon
Volume Co-Editor: Katy Miller, University of Central Florida

Telling the story of one’s library through assessment has always been an essential aspect of library administration and management, but doing this work effectively can be challenging. Even for experienced library leaders, sustaining awareness of varying audiences and changing priorities, as well as keeping up with best practices for assessment and reporting, require ongoing consideration and adaptation. This is particularly true if the goal is to enhance perception and build support among stakeholders while securing essential funding and resources.

ALAO seeks chapter submissions for a volume entitled Figuring It Out: The Search for Meaningful Metrics. This volume will examine the concepts, challenges, and successes of assessment and storytelling in libraries.Proposals that emphasize research-based and methodologically strong projects will be prioritized and proposals in the following areas would be of particular interest:

  • Knowing your audience and what to assess
  • Using data to tell effective stories
  • Learning from approaches that proved less effective
  • Approaches that demonstrate impact rather than just outcomes
  • Challenges and issues
  • Deciding to use qualitative vs. quantitative metrics
  • Success stories

ALAO (https://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/issn/0732-0671) publishes long-form research and content, theoretical and philosophical discussions, and in-depth accounts of practice related to library administration and organization. The series helps answer the questions, “How have libraries been managed and how could they be managed better?” Through this series, readers explore library-related challenges and solutions and glean new approaches to library administration and organization.

How to Submit
We are currently seeking proposals for the 2026 volume, Figuring It Out: The Search for Meaningful Metrics. If you are interested in contributing to this volume, please complete this form - including a brief author bio and chapter proposal - no later than September 30, 2024, https://forms.gle/eYExtzc8V3n8EEpa8

Chapters with multiple authors are welcome! Contact David Ketchum at  dketchum@uoregon.edu  if you have any questions.

Deadlines
  • Submission deadline for chapter proposals: September 30, 2024
  • Notification of acceptance: October 31, 2024
  • Submission deadline for full chapters: January 31, 2025
  • Comments returned to authors: March 31, 2025
  • Submission deadline for chapter revisions: May 15, 2025


Monday, September 02, 2024

Propose a Topic for the ITAL "From the Field" Column

Information Technology and Libraries (ITAL), the quarterly open-access journal published by ALA’s Core: Leadership, Infrastructure, Futures division, is looking for contributions to its newly-established ”From the Field” column for the December 2024, March 2025, and June 2025 issues. This column will highlight a technology-based project, practice, or innovation from any library in the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) community. Proposals are due by September 20, 2024.


Topics could include:

  • Community engagement through technology
  • Virtual programming, education, and learning
  • Technology that expands diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility
  • Open source software
  • Digital libraries
  • Digital archiving and preservation
  • Web usability and UX, design thinking, design systems
  • Innovations in materials checkout or handling 
  • Privacy and cyber-security
  • Virtual and augmented reality
  • Artificial intelligence, NLP, LLMs
  • Data science and analytics 
  • Geographic information systems and mapping
  • Self-service technology
  • Anything else related to GLAM institutions and innovations in technology

 

Columns are in the 1,000-1,500 word range and may include illustrations. These will not be research articles but are meant to share practical experience with technology development or uses within the library.

Since this is a non-peer-reviewed column, there is also an opportunity to engage in new ways or different formats, so creative submissions will also be considered. (Examples: comics, zines, videos, autoethnography, case studies, white papers, policy documents, interviews, reports, or other pieces commonly referred to as "grey literature.") If you would like your column to be in a format that differs from a standard editorial essay, please explain in your proposal.

Those who are interested in being an author for this column should submit a brief proposal / abstract that outlines the topic to be covered. Proposals should be no more than 250 words. Please submit your proposals via this form no later than September 20, 2024.

 

Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by September 27, 2024 with the submission deadline for our quarterly issues on the first of December, March, and June quarterly issues. Completed column submissions should be roughly 1500-2000 words. 

 

Please contact Cindi Blyberg, Guest Editor, at cindi.blyberg@uky.edu with any questions. Please forward to any colleagues who may be interested. Thank you!

Monday, August 05, 2024

CFP: ai4Libraries Conference - October 23, 2024 (Virtual Conference)

ai4Libraries is now accepting proposals for the second-year conference. The conference is a free, virtual event that is scheduled to take place on October 23, 2024 (time to be determined). Please note that the registration limited to 500 attendees this year. 

We are accepting proposals for the following session types: 

  • Lightning Talk (10 minutes, includes Q&A)
  • Presentation or Library Project Demo (20 Minutes, includes Q&A)

 

We are particularly interested in learning more about your AI projects with:

  • Technical Services, including cataloging
  • Electronic resource workflow
  • Collection development and assessment
  • Licensing workflows
  • Archives projects

Submit your proposal here: bit.ly/4caBLax

Important Dates

  • Submission deadline: Friday, September 2, 2024
  • Acceptance notifications: September 16, 2024
  • Registration opens: Monday, September 30, 2024

 

Sincerely,

ai4Libraries Conference Planning Team