Developing Community-Led Public Libraries

Developing Community-Led Public Libraries
Author: Mr John Pateman
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Total Pages: 403
Release: 2013-03-28
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 147240274X

This important book examines the potential for a new community led service model in public libraries. Using theoretical approaches to working with socially excluded community members, with a direct application of those approaches in Canadian public libraries, the authors offer a powerful and persuasive case for adopting the community led approach in libraries worldwide. The book showcases good practice and outlines the challenges to community development work. With public libraries facing budget cuts, this book offers an alternative way forward based on a community led approach to developing needs based library services. This book makes a unique contribution to public library thinking and policy, synthesising the outcomes of research and best practice at the cutting edge of library service delivery, and will be essential reading for all those researching and working in the public library sector.

Library Literature

Library Literature
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 688
Release: 1927
Genre: Bibliographical literature
ISBN:

"An index to library and information science".

All the Libraries Toronto

All the Libraries Toronto
Author: Daniel Rotsztain
Publisher: Dundurn
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2015-11-24
Genre: Games & Activities
ISBN: 9781459735095

All one hundred branches (plus two bookmobiles!) of the Toronto Public Library appear in this whimsical colouring book. Within these pages you will find a love letter to the Toronto Public Library, created by urban geographer Daniel Rotsztain. Rotsztain’s quest to illustrate all the branches of North America’s most used library system took him up river valleys, through city parks, over highways, and along the lakeshore. In this book, Rotsztain invites you along to explore the city’s unique neighbourhoods and architecture through its temples to books, from the vast to the humble, with nothing but your own coloured pencils and pens.

The Best Gift

The Best Gift
Author: Margaret Beckman
Publisher: Dundurn
Total Pages: 193
Release: 1984-01-01
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1770700501

This book is a vivid reminder of the early days of library development in Ontario. The beautiful buildings which still grace Ontario towns and villages, as illustrated, are a part of our provincial heritage. By the turn of the century, a public library was perceived as an important element in the civic fabric of almost every Ontario community. However, the introduction of the Carnegie grants for library buildings gave impetus to the Ontario government programme for library development, and provided a focus for increased support of library services. Rivalry among neighbouring communities to secure a Carngie library heightened this awareness, as did the publicity – in some instances even controversy – which surrounded each step of the grant seeking, site selection and plan approval process. As well, the hitherto unexplored story of Carnegie grant process in each community has been examined, and the role of one man, James Bertram, secretary to Andrew Carnegie, is revealed in absorbing detail. Library plans and design elements are also discussed, and the influence of a few architects on the building designs is revealed; the fascinating involvement of Frank Lloyd Wright in the Pembroke Carnegie library building is one such example.

Ontario Library Review

Ontario Library Review
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 354
Release: 1928
Genre: Best books
ISBN:

"Book selection guide" included in each number.