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Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries
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Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

May 26, 2015

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Education

Sarah Wilkie

Presentation given at seminars organised by MLA and CILIP to promote understanding and use of the "Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries"
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Page 1: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Guidance on the management of

controversial material in public libraries

Page 2: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Agenda for today

• Introduction to the MLA Guidelines

• Coffee and tea break

• Introduction to workshop activities

• Scenario-based workshops

• Feedback from workshops

• Action planning

• Summary and close

Page 3: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Background

Prime Minister’s statement to Parliament, 14th November 2007:

“The Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport isworking with the Museums, Libraries and ArchivesCouncil to agree a common approach to deal with the inflammatory and extremist material thatsome seek to distribute through public libraries, whilealso of course protecting freedom of speech.”

Page 4: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Guidance has …

• Been agreed by ~ MLA~ CILIP~ SCL~ DCMS~ Home Office

• Been published on the MLA website

Page 5: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Library providers in a multi-cultural society

Each individual in our global society has the right to a full range of library and information services. In addressing cultural and linguistic diversity, libraries should:•serve all members of the community without discrimination based on cultural and linguistic heritage•provide information in appropriate languages and scripts•give access to a broad range of materials and services reflecting all communities and needs

IFLA

Page 6: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

First principles of the guidance

• Library authorities :~ Have a statutory duty to provide a “comprehensive

and efficient” service~ Are accountable to local communities~ Should respond comprehensively and non-

judgementally to need~ Are founded on democratic principles of free access ~ Are required to operate within the law

Page 7: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Format of guidance

• Guidance on management of controversial material

• Outline of current legislation

• Case studies illustrating best practice in dealing with controversial material

• Examples of stock development policies

Page 8: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Guidance looks at:

• Collection Development Policies

• Stock selection• Controversial subjects• Involving others • Access to library

material

• Presentation and promotion of stock

• Donations• The Internet (in brief)• Legislation • Monitoring and review

of guidance

Page 9: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Collection development policies

• Should be:~ up to date ~ publicly available~ responsive to local demography and needs of

communities~ reflective of library’s role to promote information,

ideas and the cultural experience

• Should recognise:~ personal and academic freedoms~ the rights of individual citizens to access published

material~ the neutrality and responsibilities of the librarian

Page 10: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Stock selection• Should be:

~ selected according to Collection Development Policy~ chosen for its literary, cultural and recreational relevance or for

its information and learning value ~ not determined by the personal views of library staff, suppliers or

other partners~ managed with reference to balance and demand

• Librarians should aim for a library stock that :~ reflects the demography of the area~ supports the policy priorities agreed for the library service ~ provides a diversity of information, opinion and literature

• Staff need to be trained in and alert to professional ethics and established codes of conduct

Page 11: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Controversial subjects

“In the interest of intellectual freedom, material should not be rejected solely because it is considered controversial.

A good library should encompass controversial issues and different perspectives in the interests of democracy and discovery.”

Page 12: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Involving others

• Benefits:~ insight in to community

cultures~ information about

demand~ access to language

and cultural expertise~ fulfilment of duty to

involve

• Potential partners include:~ local residents and

community groups~ stock suppliers~ regional, national or

specialist consortia

Page 13: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Access to library material

• All should be catalogued and information made available

• Role of inter-lending facilities and library network:~ “liaison between library sectors is essential to

promote a common understanding of stock policies and systems”

• British Library’s policy on lending and public access in line with this guidance

Page 14: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Presentation and promotion of stock

• Promotion can:~ raise awareness~ encourage understanding, bring communities

together and encourage debate~ improve accessibility~ increase library usage

• Should not:~ promote a particular belief~ ignore wider sensitivities~ knowingly incite a person to undertake an illegal

activity

Page 15: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Donations

• Acceptance of donations should be subject to the same principles, and decisions on their acceptance remain with the responsible staff

• Collection Development Policy should be the benchmark for all decisions

• Donors should be advised of the criteria

Page 16: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

The internet: general principles

• Integral and essential to the purpose of libraries• Many of the same principles apply, HOWEVER the

internet is global and essentially self-regulating • Library provider’s responsibility is to enable access:

responsibility for the interpretation and use of information rests with the user

“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

IFLA/UNESCO

Page 17: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Internet accessLibraries should:

~ provide internet access in accordance with principles of freedom of thought and expression

~ respect the privacy of users

~ enable users to make the most of the internet through assistance and training

~ provide an Acceptable Internet Use Policy

~ provide a published policy on use by children and young people

~ be pro-active in drawing users’ attention to these policies and educating them about acceptable internet use

Page 18: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Relevant legislation

• Summarises the key relevant legislation• Not a substitute for tailored legal advice• Intended to help identify key areas of risk• Looks at:

~ Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964

~ Terrorism Acts 2000 & 2006

~ Race relations and “religious hatred” legislation

~ Human Rights Act 1998

~ Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007

Page 19: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Appendices

• Stock Selection & Collection Development Policies:~ Examples of good practice

• Case studies:~ Selection and management of materials~ Handling complaints~ Stock promotion~ Donated materials~ Stocking of religious texts

Page 20: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Any questions?

Page 21: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

Over to you

Workshops:

• Scenarios based on real-life situations

• Use as basis for examining your own authorities’ stock policies

• Focus in particular on where changes and improvements might be made to those policies

Page 22: Guidance on the management of controversial material in public libraries

• Review and update

• Share and discuss

• Understand and manage risks proactively

Some final thoughts