Conversations with Leading Academic and Research Library Directors: International Perspectives on Library Management presents a series of conversations with the directors of major academic and research libraries. The book offers insight, analysis, and personal anecdote from leaders in the library field, giving a unique perspective on how the modern library operates. Readers will learn about the most up-to-date trends and practices in the LIS profession from the directors of 24 internationally acclaimed academic and research libraries in Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Singapore, and the UK and USA.
This is the first book focusing on leaders and managers of library institutions to offer a global outlook. Facing the need to respond to the expectations of changing populations that librarians strive to serve, this book aims to develop a new understanding of the core values of academic and research libraries, and asks how librarians can innovate, adapt, and flourish in a rapidly shifting professional landscape.
Conversations with Leading Academic and Research Library Directors: International Perspectives on Library Management presents a series of conversations with the directors of major academic and research libraries. The book offers insight, analysis, and personal anecdote from leaders in the library field, giving a unique perspective on how the modern library operates. Readers will learn about the most up-to-date trends and practices in the LIS profession from the directors of 24 internationally acclaimed academic and research libraries in Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Singapore, and the UK and USA.
This is the first book focusing on leaders and managers of library institutions to offer a global outlook. Facing the need to respond to the expectations of changing populations that librarians strive to serve, this book aims to develop a new understanding of the core values of academic and research libraries, and asks how librarians can innovate, adapt, and flourish in a rapidly shifting professional landscape.
1. Dr. Sarah Thomas, Vice President for the Harvard Library and
University Librarian; Roy E. Larsen Librarian for the Faculty of
Arts and Sciences
2. Dr. Susan Gibbons, University Librarian, Deputy Provost,
Collections & Scholarly Communication, Yale University
3. Dr. Gregory Eow, Associate Director for Collections, MIT
Libraries, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
4. Virginia Steel, University Librarian, University of California,
Los Angeles
5. Dr. Deborah Jakubs, University Librarian & Vice Provost for
Library Affairs, Duke University
6. Dr. James Hilton, Vice Provost for Academic Innovation,
University Librarian and Dean of Libraries, University Library,
University of Michigan
7. Dr Winston Tabb, Sheridan Dean of University Libraries and
Museums at Johns Hopkins University
8. Michael Gorman, University Librarian Emeritus, Henry Madden
Library, California State University, Fresno
9. Richard Ovenden, Bodley’s Librarian, University of Oxford
10. Mark Purcell, Deputy Director, Research Collections, Cambridge
University Library
11. Jirka Kende, Director, Free University Berlin Library
12. Prof. Dr. Andreas Degkwitz, Director, Library of the Humboldt
University of Berlin
13. Dr. Rafael Ball, Director of Library, Swiss Federal Institute
of Technology Zurich (ETH)
14. Wilma van Wezenbeek, Director, TU Delft Library (Delft,
Netherlands)
15. Helen Shenton, University Librarian, Trinity College Dublin
16. Diane Bruxvoort, University Librarian & Director, University of
Aberdeen
17. Wilhelm Widmark, Library Director, Stockholm University
Library
18. Philip Gregory Kent, University Librarian at the University of
Melbourne
19. Howard Amos, University Librarian, University of Otago
(Dunedin, New Zealand)
20. Qiang Zhu, Director, Peking University Library
21. Peter Sidorko, University Librarian, University of Hong
Kong
22. Louise Jones, University Librarian, Chinese University of Hong
Kong
23. Gulcin Cribb, University Librarian, Singapore Management
University
24. Dr. Buhle Mbambo-Thata, former Executive Director, Library
Services, University of South Africa
25. Christopher D. Barth, Librarian and Associate Dean, United
States Military Academy
26. Daniel De Simone, Eric Weinmann Librarian, Folger Shakespeare
Library
27. Dr. Linda Harris Mehr, Director, Margaret Herrick Library,
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences
28. Dr. Dietrich Nelle, Director, German National Library of
Medicine
29. Elena Ivanova, Head, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research
Scientific Library (Moscow)
30. Professor Nikolay Kalenov, Director, Library for Natural
Sciences of Russian Academy of Sciences (LNS RAS)
Conclusion
Patrick Lo is currently serving as Associate Professor at the Faculty of Library, Information & Media Science, the University of Tsukuba in Japan. He earned his Doctor of Education from the University of Bristol (U.K.), and has a Master of Arts in Design Management from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, a Master of Library & Information Science from McGill University (Canada), and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Mount Allison University (Canada). He also took part in a one-year academic exchange at the University of Tübingen in Germany from 1990-91. He is efficient in Chinese (both Cantonese and Putonghua), English and German. Dr. Patrick Lo has presented about 100 research papers and project reports focusing on librarianship, humanities, and education at different local and international workgroup meetings, seminars, conferences, etc., including: Mainland China, Hong Kong, Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Turkey, United States, and Sweden, and at institutions including the Library of Congress (U.S.), Austrian National Library (Vienna), University of Vienna, National Library of France (Paris), National Institute of Informatics (Japan), Konrad-Zuse-Center for Information Technology (Berlin), etc. His research interests and areas of specialty include: comparative studies in library and information science (LIS); art and design librarianship and information literacy. Dickson Chiu currently teaches at the University of Hong Kong. He holds a PhD, and MSc in Computer Science from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST). Chiu started his own computer company while studying part-time. He has published numerous papers in international journals and proceedings, edited over 15 books and proceedings, and is the founding Editor-in-chief of the International Journal on Systems and Service-Oriented Engineering. His research interests include librarianship and cross-disciplinary approaches in information management involving workflows, software engineering, information technologies, management, security, and databases. Allan Cho is an academic librarian at the University of British Columbia, Canada, in the Humanities and Social Sciences division. His subject liaison areas include Digital Humanities, Asian Studies, English, and Library and Information Science. His work also supports the community engagement initiatives and cultural programming at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. He is also an instructor in the Department of Library and Information Technology at the University of Fraser Valley in British Columbia, Canada. Cho holds MLIS, MA and M.Ed. degrees from the University of British Columbia. His research focuses on digital media, digital humanities, and emerging technologies in libraries. Bradley Allard is currently a Reference and Outreach Librarian at the Clark County Public Library (Winchester, Kentucky). He received an MLIS from the University of Kentucky, an MA in Japanese Language and Literature from Washington University in St. Louis, and a BA in English Literature from the University of Kentucky. He has also spent time studying in Japan as an exchange student particularly at the International Christian University and the University of Tsukuba. His research interests focus on services to disadvantaged groups in public libraries, services to international students, and the internationalization of academic libraries.
"This book appeals to library leaders and those who aspire to
library leadership, but it also provides useful insights into the
future of libraries for any library professional or library
student. The book is neatly structured, with each chapter dedicated
to one library director and taking an easy-to-read
question-and-answer format." --Hong Kong Library Association
News
"The role, function, place and design of libraries has changed and
continues to evolve as definitions of and conceptions about
knowledge, information, and texts shift. In the midst of this
shifting universe, this timely volume offers a unique opportunity
to learn from a veritable who’s who in library management from some
of the best universities and institutions of higher education in
the world. Each author in this collection speaks with insight and
authority, bringing rich experiences and deep understanding from
multiple perspectives and nations to bear on ever-complex questions
of what it means to learn and know in the 21stcentury." --Prof A.
Lin Goodwin, Dean, Faculty of Education, The University of Hong
Kong
"In an era of information acceleration that the world has never
seen, this book provides fascinating insights from the front line
professionals about how they navigated the transformation and
mastered the management of university collections and research
libraries. By reading each case across so many countries, one can
begin to see the global story of how a profession has sustained and
improved the essential service to students, scholars, and
scientists amidst challenges never imagined in the pre-cyber age.
The authors and contributors should be congratulated for this
collection of personal experience based on years of leadership and
professional practice." --Prof Gerald A. Postiglione, Chair
Professor of Studies in Higher Education
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