National Commission on Libraries and Information Science

Summary

The National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) was an agency in the United States government between 1970 and 2008. The activities of the Commission were consolidated into the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Records of NCLIS are held at the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration and the University of Michigan Library, Special Collections as part of the Power Collection for the Study of Scholarly Communication and Information Transfer.[1]

U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) logo
Donald L. Robinson sworn in as a member of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, 2001

Origins edit

President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed a National Advisory Commission on Libraries in 1966 to appraise the role and adequacy of the nation's libraries and recommend ways of improving them.[2] Members of the Commission appointed: Dr. Douglas Knight, president, Duke University, as Commission chairman; Verner W. Clapp, president, Council on Library and Information Resources; Carl Overhage, director of Project INTREX, M.I.T.;[3] Herman H. Fussler, director of libraries, University of Chicago; Theodore Waller, president, Grolier Educational Corporation; Wilbur Schramm, director, Institute for Communication Research, Stanford University; Launor Carter, System Development Corporation; William N. Hubbard, Jr., chairman, Educause (then EDUCOM); Caryl P. Haskins, Carnegie Institution for Science; Alvin C. Eurich, president, Aspen Institute; Stephen J. Wright, former president of Fisk University; Harry Ransom, University of Texas at Austin; Carl Elliott, former Congressman from Alabama; and Estelle Brodman, National Library of Medicine.[4]

The National Advisory Commission was appointed to "make a comprehensive study and appraisal of the role of libraries as resources for scholarly pursuits, as centers for the dissemination of knowledge, and as components of the evolving national information systems."[5] The Commission report, Libraries at Large: Tradition, Innovation, and the National Interest; the Resource Book Based on the Materials of the National Advisory Commission on Libraries, provided documentation for legislation.

Other responsibilities included the appraisal of public agency programs and library funding. The Commission also had the task of making recommendations for government and private agencies to "ensure an effective and efficient library system for the Nation." After Hearings before the United States House Committee on Education and Labor, Select Subcommittee on Education [6] The Advisory Commission ultimately recommended "the establishment of a National Commission on Library and Information Science as a continuing Federal Planning agency." The recommendations of the National Advisory Commission were incorporated into legislation (PL 91-345) that established the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) as a permanent, independent agency of the Federal government of the United States in 1970.

Purpose edit

  1. Advise the President and the Congress on the implementation of policy.
  2. Conduct surveys and studies relative to library and information needs.
  3. Develop plans to meet national library and information needs.
  4. Advise federal, state, local, and private agencies regarding library and information sciences.

Activities edit

Government information edit

Studies making recommendations on the dissemination of federal government information, including:

  • 1978–2001 Study of the role of government documents in a national program of library and information services.
  • "Principles of Public Information", adopted by NCLIS on June 29, 1990.
  • "Comprehensive Assessment of Public Information Dissemination", issued in 2001 (http://ufdc.ufl.edu/AA00038081/00040/allvolumes).

White House Conferences edit

In 1979, President Jimmy Carter opened the first White House Conference on Library and Information Services stating that "libraries must be strengthened and the public made more aware of their potential: Libraries can be community resources for the consumer and small business on matters such as energy and marketing and technological innovation."[7]

The National Commission on Libraries and Information Science sponsored two White House Conferences in 1979 and 1991.[8] The 1979 conference focused on "Elements of a Comprehensive National Library and Information Services Program"; "Legislative and Administrative Initiatives"; and a proposed National Library and Information Services Act.[9] [10] Sixty-four resolutions were passed in five areas: services for personal needs, lifelong learning, organizations and the professions, social government, and international cooperation and understanding. "The resolutions asked that libraries serve people in better ways, that local control of these services be maintained, and that institutions providing the services be accountable." Attendance was 3,600.[11]

The 1991 Conference held July 9–13, 1991, brought more than 900 delegates representing all fifty states, the District of Columbia, and six U.S. territories. Resolutions included Access, Governance, Marketing, Networking, National Information Policy, Preservation, Services to Diverse Populations, Technology, Training of End Users, and Personnel.[12] Hearings were held on recommendations.[13]

The records of the state-level White House pre-conferences are held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Archives.[14] Some states, like Alabama and North Carolina, published state proceedings;[15][16] Other states, like Arkansas and Massachusetts, included coverage in state association journals.[17][18]

Other activities edit

  • Between 1973 and 2000, NCLIS published at least ten reports dealing with public libraries. These reports dealt with funding, providing Internet access to the public, and establishing community information and referral services.[19]
  • Other activities also included statistics,[20] the sister libraries program.[21] and a conference on information literacy held in Prague in 2003.[22]
  • In 2002 NCLIS produced Trust and Terror: New Demands for Crisis Information Dissemination and Management, a proposal to expand the role of U.S. libraries in crisis information dissemination and management with Walter Cronkite narrating.[23]

Strategic Goals edit

In 2004, the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) announced three strategic goals to guide its work in the immediate future.

  • Appraising and assessing library and information services provided for the American people,
  • Strengthening the relevance of libraries and information science in the lives of the American people,
  • Promoting research and development for extending and improving library and information services for the American people.

NCLIS executive directors edit

Name Tenure References
Charles H. Stevens 1971–1974 [24]
Alphonse F. Trezza 1974–1980 [24][25]
Toni Carbo Bearman 1980–1986 [24]
Vivian J. Arterbery 1986–1988 [24]
Vivian J. Arterbery 1986–1988 [24]
Susan K. Martin 1988–1990 [24]
Peter R. Young 1990–1997 [24]
Robert S. Willard 1998–2004 [24]
Trudi Bellardo Hahn 2004–2008 [24]

NCLIS chairs edit

Brief biographies and photographs of NCLIS chairs are provided in Meeting the Information Needs of the American People: Past Actions and Future Initiatives Appendix B.

NCLIS publications edit

The Commission issued a comprehensive list of publications in Appendix F of its final (March 2008) report, Meeting the Information Needs of the American People: Past Actions and Future Initiatives. The report documents the history and accomplishments of the Commission and provides a compelling future agenda for information policy research and development. Among its notable publications was Pathways to Excellence: A Report on Improving Library and Information Services for Native American Peoples [27]

Closing edit

In Fiscal Year 2007–2008 appropriations, the Commission received limited funding and instructions to terminate its operations. Activities were consolidated under the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the Commission office closed on March 30, 2008.[28]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ National Commission on Libraries and Information Science Records (1966-1995, bulk 1979-1989) University of Michigan Library, Special Collections.
  2. ^ Knight, Douglas N. and Nourse, E. Shepley; Libraries At Large: Tradition, Innovation, and the National Interest, New York, R. R. Bowker, 1969.
  3. ^ Hahn, Trudi Bellardo., and Michael Keeble Buckland. Historical Studies in Information Science. Medford, NJ: Information Today, 1998.
  4. ^ Krettek, G., and E. D. Cooke. 1966. “President Names Library Commission.” Wilson Library Bulletin 41 (October): 235.
  5. ^ "Helen F. Schmierer, and Howard Pasternack. “The National Advisory Commission on Libraries.” The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy 1970: 436–447.
  6. ^ To Establish a National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. Hearings before the United States House Committee on Education and Labor, Select Subcommittee on Education, Ninety-First Congress, First Session, Apr. 15, 17, 1969. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1969.
  7. ^ “White House Conference on Library and Information Services.” Journal of Reading 24, no. 8 (1981): 719–21.
  8. ^ Mathews Virginia H. 2004. Libraries Citizens & Advocacy: The Lasting Effects of Two White House Conferences on Library and Information Services. Washington D.C.: White House Conference on Libraries and Information Services Taskforce.
  9. ^ The White House Conference on Library and Information Services, 1979: Summary.” Washington: National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, 1980.
  10. ^ White House Conference on Library and Information Services. Information for the 1980s: Final Report of the White House Conference on Library and Information Services,1979. (Washington, D.C.: National Commission on Libraries and Information Science,1980).
  11. ^ “White House Conference on Library and Information Services.” Journal of Reading 24, no. 8 (1981): 719–21.
  12. ^ Pelzman, F, and M.J. Godwin. “THE WHITE-HOUSE CONFERENCE ON LIBRARIES AND INFORMATION-SERVICES - AGENDA FOR THE NINETIES.” Wilson Library Bulletin 66.2 (1991): 46–49.
  13. ^ United States. 1992. U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. Open Forum on Recommendations of the White House Conference on Library and Information Services. Washington D.C: Commission.
  14. ^ White House Conference on Libraries and Information Science, Record Group 85, Subgroup 5, American Library Association Archives at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  15. ^ Crowley, Bill, ed. (1980). Proceedings: Alabama Governor's Conference on Library and Information Services January 7‑9, 1979. Montgomery: Alabama Public Library Service
  16. ^ North Carolina Governor's Conference on Library and Information Services: conference report October 1978 Papers from North Carolina Governor's Conferences on Library and Information Services 1990-1991.
  17. ^ Arkansas Libraries, Conference/Directory Issue, Volume 35 Number 4, December 1978; Arkansas Libraries, Volume 47 Number 4, December 1990.
  18. ^ An Interview with White House Conference Chair Channing Bete, Jr." Mediawrite, Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners.(March, 1979).
  19. ^ McCook, Kathleen de la Peña, and Paula Geist. 1994. Toward a just and productive society: an analysis of the recommendations of the White House Conference on Library and Information Services. [Washington, D.C.]: The Commission. ERIC: ED 375 861.
  20. ^ “An NCLIS Library Statistical Sampler.” 1985. Library Journal 110 (17): 35–38.
  21. ^ Rogers, Michael, and Norman Oder. 1999. "NCLIS Names 51 'Sister Libraries'". Library Journal 124 (12): 24
  22. ^ INFORMATION LITERACY MEETING OF EXPERTS, Prague, the Czech Republic September 20–23, 2003. Report of a meeting sponsored by the US National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) and the National Forum on Information Literacy (NFIL) with the support of the United Nations Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
  23. ^ Trust and terror: new demands for crisis information dissemination and management by the United States, Walter Cronkite. Interactive Multimedia. U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. 2002.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i National Commission on Libraries and Information Science Records (1966-1995, bulk 1979-1989) University of Michigan Library, Special Collections.
  25. ^ Sullivan, Peggy. 2009. “A Tribute to Al Trezza.” American Libraries 40 (3): 36–37.
  26. ^ A Tribute to the Honorable Charles E. Reid Chairman – U.S National Commission on Libraries and Information Science in 1991. American Library Association. Institutional Repository. 1991.
  27. ^ U.S. National Commission on Library and Information Science Pathways to Excellence: A Report on Improving Library and Information Services for Native American Peoples 1992. Available in the ERIC Document Reproduction Service as ED3588582
  28. ^ Blumenstein, Lynn. 2008. “Closing NCLIS Looks Back and Forward.” Library Journal 133 (9): 20–21.

References edit

  • Drake, Miriam A. (February 2003). "National Commission on Libraries and Information Science: Why Not?". Searcher. 11 (2): 32–37.
  • "New Goals for NCLIS". Public Libraries. 43 (6): 329. November–December 2004.

External links edit

  • Jeanne Hurley Simon Papers at Southern Illinois University Carbondale
  • Meeting the Information Needs of the American People: Past Actions and Future Initiatives (ERIC)
  • National Commission on Libraries and Information Science Records. (1966–1995). University of Michigan.