Community Outreach

Community Outreach

Community Outreach, the Law and other Social Sciences

As social institutions, libraries respond to the needs, pressures, and impacts of society. Community outreach is the development and promotion of services offered by information settings. Such services extend beyond physical collections and involve the development and provision of customized events in response to or in anticipation of community needs. Library outreach has its historical roots in the late nineteenth century public library movement that coincided with the Progressive Era, when library services were conveyed directly to community members' homes and places of employment. Contemporary expressions of community outreach include engagement of faculty and students with communities of need, academic preparation of new professionals to serve communities of need, crisis informatics, and digital equity. Efforts are challenged by sustainability, impacts or returns on investments, personal and professional motivations, and the emergence of expected and unexpected community needs.[1]

Resources

Notes and References

  1. Loriene Roy, Antonia Frydman, “Community Outreach” (Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, 4th Edition, Information Resources Management Association, 2018)

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