What Shapes Libraries’ Ability to Shape Development: IFLA Releases Trend Report Update 2023
From the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA):
IFLA’s first Trend Report in 2013 offered a new and powerful tool for libraries and library and information workers to think about the future, and how to secure their place – and positive contribution – in this.
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The key theme of this edition, which brings together the insights shared by leader at our 2023 World Library and Information Congress, is what affects libraries’ ability to contribute to the achievement of sustainable development.
This is an active question for our field. We know that we have a very strong scope to help more people access the knowledge, develop the skills, and build the connections they need to realise their rights and potential. The starting point for the report is that we are not yet achieving all that we could, and to think about why that might be.
The Report therefore sets out twelve suggested trends that could be holding us back. These range from ways in which libraries are perceived, the way we value information and knowledge in general, and broader social, economic, political and environmental trends.
Crucially, while the trends themselves are challenges, under each, there are proposals for how we can overcome barriers, and become ever more powerful as partners for development.
12 Trends
- Libraries are increasingly seen as irrelevant in a changing world
- The world is going down a path that discounts the value of community-driven infrastructures, and of information for development
- In many countries, public spending – and so scope for investment – is tightening
- More diverse societies make delivering universal services and achieving equity more complicated
- Regulation of digital spaces is accelerating, but without consideration of impacts on how libraries support development
- An increasingly uncertain world intensifies challenges and complicates service-delivery
- There are persistent and growing barriers to building partnerships for development
- Persistent geographical inequalities are reinforced by unequal investment in public services
- Library and information workers are seen as auxiliaries, rather than development actors in their own right
- Globalisation continues, opening up new expectations for information access
- Even as connectivity improves, the digital divide is persistent and getting more serious
- We are too busy dealing with crises to think strategically
Learn More, Read the Complete IFLA Post
Direct to Full Text Report (34 pages; PDF)
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About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.