Liberatory Librarianship
Liberatory Librarianship
Stories of Community, Connection, and Justice
Keith, Brian W.; Taylor, Laurie; Renwick, Shamin
American Library Association
03/2024
192
Mole
Inglês
9780838936610
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction
Part I: Liberatory Librarians Chapter 1: Dr. Alma Jordan
Shamin Renwick
Chapter 2: Lillian Marrero: Sanctuary and Solidarity through Libraries
Tania MarIa RIos Marrero
Chapter 3: Rosa Quintero Mesa: The University of Florida's Liberatory Librarianship Defied Global Politics
Richard Phillips
Chapter 4: Judith Rogers: Visionary and Organic Leader
Laurie Taylor
Part II: Programs That Support Liberation
Chapter 5: Liberatory Librarianship in a Public Library
Brian Boies
Chapter 6: The KNOW Systemic Racism Project at Stanford University
Felicia A. Smith
Part III: The Personal as Professional
Chapter 7: My Brother's Keeper
Tiffany Grant, LaWanda Singleton, and Clementine Adeyemi
Chapter 8: Disabled in the Library
JJ Pionke
Part IV: Histories of Liberation
Chapter 9: Elevating Diverse Voices in Service of Liberatory Librarianship
Willa Liburd Tavernier, Ursula Romero, and Christina Jones
Chapter 10: Unsiloed, Cross-Jurisdictional DEI
Tiffany J. Grant, Mikaila Corday, Michelle McKinney, Margaux Patel, Eira Tansey, and June Taylor-Slaughter
Chapter 11: Hidden Histories and Radical Reading Lists: Restorative Justice at SOAS Library
Farzana Qureshi and Ludi Price
Part V: Liberatory Instruction and Training
Chapter 12: "We Are . . . Library Users!": Developing a Liberatory Library Instruction Program for College Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Bernadette A. Lear
Chapter 13: Critical Reflections on the University of Kentucky's Basic Archives Workshop: Status Quo or Transformation?
Sarah Dorpinghaus and Ruth E. Bryan
Part VI: Imaging and Enacting Liberation Together
Chapter 14: Empathy as Resistance? The Concept of Empathy in Liberatory Librarianship
Sabine Jean Dantus
Appendix: Acronyms
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
Part I: Liberatory Librarians Chapter 1: Dr. Alma Jordan
Shamin Renwick
Chapter 2: Lillian Marrero: Sanctuary and Solidarity through Libraries
Tania MarIa RIos Marrero
Chapter 3: Rosa Quintero Mesa: The University of Florida's Liberatory Librarianship Defied Global Politics
Richard Phillips
Chapter 4: Judith Rogers: Visionary and Organic Leader
Laurie Taylor
Part II: Programs That Support Liberation
Chapter 5: Liberatory Librarianship in a Public Library
Brian Boies
Chapter 6: The KNOW Systemic Racism Project at Stanford University
Felicia A. Smith
Part III: The Personal as Professional
Chapter 7: My Brother's Keeper
Tiffany Grant, LaWanda Singleton, and Clementine Adeyemi
Chapter 8: Disabled in the Library
JJ Pionke
Part IV: Histories of Liberation
Chapter 9: Elevating Diverse Voices in Service of Liberatory Librarianship
Willa Liburd Tavernier, Ursula Romero, and Christina Jones
Chapter 10: Unsiloed, Cross-Jurisdictional DEI
Tiffany J. Grant, Mikaila Corday, Michelle McKinney, Margaux Patel, Eira Tansey, and June Taylor-Slaughter
Chapter 11: Hidden Histories and Radical Reading Lists: Restorative Justice at SOAS Library
Farzana Qureshi and Ludi Price
Part V: Liberatory Instruction and Training
Chapter 12: "We Are . . . Library Users!": Developing a Liberatory Library Instruction Program for College Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Bernadette A. Lear
Chapter 13: Critical Reflections on the University of Kentucky's Basic Archives Workshop: Status Quo or Transformation?
Sarah Dorpinghaus and Ruth E. Bryan
Part VI: Imaging and Enacting Liberation Together
Chapter 14: Empathy as Resistance? The Concept of Empathy in Liberatory Librarianship
Sabine Jean Dantus
Appendix: Acronyms
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
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Librarianship
Introduction
Part I: Liberatory Librarians Chapter 1: Dr. Alma Jordan
Shamin Renwick
Chapter 2: Lillian Marrero: Sanctuary and Solidarity through Libraries
Tania MarIa RIos Marrero
Chapter 3: Rosa Quintero Mesa: The University of Florida's Liberatory Librarianship Defied Global Politics
Richard Phillips
Chapter 4: Judith Rogers: Visionary and Organic Leader
Laurie Taylor
Part II: Programs That Support Liberation
Chapter 5: Liberatory Librarianship in a Public Library
Brian Boies
Chapter 6: The KNOW Systemic Racism Project at Stanford University
Felicia A. Smith
Part III: The Personal as Professional
Chapter 7: My Brother's Keeper
Tiffany Grant, LaWanda Singleton, and Clementine Adeyemi
Chapter 8: Disabled in the Library
JJ Pionke
Part IV: Histories of Liberation
Chapter 9: Elevating Diverse Voices in Service of Liberatory Librarianship
Willa Liburd Tavernier, Ursula Romero, and Christina Jones
Chapter 10: Unsiloed, Cross-Jurisdictional DEI
Tiffany J. Grant, Mikaila Corday, Michelle McKinney, Margaux Patel, Eira Tansey, and June Taylor-Slaughter
Chapter 11: Hidden Histories and Radical Reading Lists: Restorative Justice at SOAS Library
Farzana Qureshi and Ludi Price
Part V: Liberatory Instruction and Training
Chapter 12: "We Are . . . Library Users!": Developing a Liberatory Library Instruction Program for College Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Bernadette A. Lear
Chapter 13: Critical Reflections on the University of Kentucky's Basic Archives Workshop: Status Quo or Transformation?
Sarah Dorpinghaus and Ruth E. Bryan
Part VI: Imaging and Enacting Liberation Together
Chapter 14: Empathy as Resistance? The Concept of Empathy in Liberatory Librarianship
Sabine Jean Dantus
Appendix: Acronyms
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
Part I: Liberatory Librarians Chapter 1: Dr. Alma Jordan
Shamin Renwick
Chapter 2: Lillian Marrero: Sanctuary and Solidarity through Libraries
Tania MarIa RIos Marrero
Chapter 3: Rosa Quintero Mesa: The University of Florida's Liberatory Librarianship Defied Global Politics
Richard Phillips
Chapter 4: Judith Rogers: Visionary and Organic Leader
Laurie Taylor
Part II: Programs That Support Liberation
Chapter 5: Liberatory Librarianship in a Public Library
Brian Boies
Chapter 6: The KNOW Systemic Racism Project at Stanford University
Felicia A. Smith
Part III: The Personal as Professional
Chapter 7: My Brother's Keeper
Tiffany Grant, LaWanda Singleton, and Clementine Adeyemi
Chapter 8: Disabled in the Library
JJ Pionke
Part IV: Histories of Liberation
Chapter 9: Elevating Diverse Voices in Service of Liberatory Librarianship
Willa Liburd Tavernier, Ursula Romero, and Christina Jones
Chapter 10: Unsiloed, Cross-Jurisdictional DEI
Tiffany J. Grant, Mikaila Corday, Michelle McKinney, Margaux Patel, Eira Tansey, and June Taylor-Slaughter
Chapter 11: Hidden Histories and Radical Reading Lists: Restorative Justice at SOAS Library
Farzana Qureshi and Ludi Price
Part V: Liberatory Instruction and Training
Chapter 12: "We Are . . . Library Users!": Developing a Liberatory Library Instruction Program for College Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Bernadette A. Lear
Chapter 13: Critical Reflections on the University of Kentucky's Basic Archives Workshop: Status Quo or Transformation?
Sarah Dorpinghaus and Ruth E. Bryan
Part VI: Imaging and Enacting Liberation Together
Chapter 14: Empathy as Resistance? The Concept of Empathy in Liberatory Librarianship
Sabine Jean Dantus
Appendix: Acronyms
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
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