From: Susanne Clement <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Tue, 8 May 2018 23:14:07 +0000

*Please excuse cross postings*



*Collection Management* will be publishing a special issue of the journal
dedicated to “Imagining the Future Academic Library Collection” together
with guest editor Michael Levine-Clark, Dean of Libraries, University of
Denver.



For most of our history, academic librarians have built collections. We’ve
acquired the resources that we felt would serve our students and faculty,
and by so doing, we’ve created collections meant to last. That terminology
– “collection building” – implies permanence, and perhaps inflexibility.
But the way we think about collections is changing: we often rely on access
rather than ownership, we are deaccessioning large portions of our legacy
print collections to make way for service points and study spaces, and we
recognize that we must develop far more inclusive collections than we did
in the past.



Almost twenty years into the twenty-first century, the bulk of most
materials budgets is dedicated to electronic resources, and through
negotiation of big deals and use of models such as demand-driven
acquisition, most of us have access to far more content than was ever
possible at the end of the last century. Most of us have come to rely on
consortial partners when we negotiate with vendors, and we work
collaboratively through partnerships like the Western Regional Storage
Trust (WEST) or the Eastern Academic Scholars Trust (EAST) to plan for the
future of our print collections. We have resources and strategies available
to us that allow us to think differently, but our collection development
models are not radically different than they were in the past.



Thinking about the future of academic libraries, what will our collections
look like? Will academic libraries continue to build collections, or will
we simply provide access to content? Will collections reside within the
library or will they be retrieved from some other location? Will collection
management be replaced by metadata management? In a world with greater
homogeneity of collections (because we all have access to so much more),
what is the role of special collections? Will open access change the way we
manage library collections and library budgets? How do we work together to
ensure the broadest range of material is preserved into the future while
also making sure we have the best collections possible at our local
institutions? How do we collect the ephemera of the digital age – digital
objects, websites, emails, etc? If we continue to emphasize collecting
published scholarly resources, how do we add things such as data sets,
streaming media, and as-yet unimagined new resources? And how do we make
sure that we don’t perpetuate the mistakes of the past by mainly collecting
dominant voices?



Based on existing developments in librarianship, higher education, or
elsewhere, what do you see as key trends in the future of academic library
collections? What do you think will happen? What do you hope will happen?
We are soliciting peer-reviewed articles, commentaries and case studies for
a special issue of * Collection Management *to be published in 2019 on
“Imagining the Future Academic Library Collection.”



Please submit an abstract (200-500 words) by *May 21, 2018* to
[log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask]  that describes your vision for the
future and outlines how you will approach the topic. Indicate whether you
are interested in writing a commentary, peer-reviewed article or a case
study.



Susanne Clement and Judy Nixon

Co-editors, *Collection Management*



Susanne Clement

Associate Professor and Director of Collections

University of New Mexico Libraries

Albuquerque, NM 87131

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505-277-5176