![]() ![]() |
||
|
Statement of PurposeProgressive Librarians Guild was formed in New York City on January 1990 by a group of librarians concerned with our profession's rapid drift into dubious alliances with business and the information industry, and into complacent acceptance of service to an unquestioned political, economic and cultural status quo.
PLG reaffirmed, significantly, that the development of public libraries was initially spurred by popular sentiment
which for one reason or another held that real democracy requires an enlightened citizenry, and that society should
provide all people with the means for free intellectual development. Current trends in librarianship, however, assert
that the library is merely a neutral institutional mediator in the information marketplace and a facilitator of a
value-neutral information society of atomized information consumers.
A progressive librarianship demands the recognition of the idea that libraries for the people has been one of the
principal anchors of an extended free public sphere which makes an independent democratic civil society possible,
something which must be defended and extended. This is partisanship, not neutrality.
Members of PLG do not accept the sterile notion of the neutrality of librarianship, and we strongly oppose the
commodification of information which turns the 'information commons' into privatized, commercialized zones. We will
help to dissect the implications of these powerful trends, and fight their anti-democratic tendencies.
PLG recognizes that librarians are situated as information workers, communications workers, and education workers,
as well as technical workers. Like workers in every sector, our work brings us up against both economic and
political issues. Cataloging, indexing, acquisitions policy and collection development, the character of reference
services, library automation, library management, and virtually every other library issue embody political value
choices. PLG members aim to make these choices explicit, and to draw their political conclusions.
PLG's CommitmentProgressive Librarians Guild is committed to:
Retrieved from PLG statement page on March 14, 2007.
|
HEADLINESTwelve Students Honored with Grants GSLIS Students Named Diversity Scholars Guide Highlights Best Gift Books for Youth For Improving Early Literacy, Reading Comics is No Child's Play UPCOMING EVENTSBrownbag discussion about community archiving (Dec 3) Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Fair 2009 (Dec 9) Faculty Meeting (Dec 9) Ian Brooks: Designing a Culturally Sensitive Interface for an Endemic Disease Cyberenvironment (Dec 16) 2009 Downs Intellectual Freedom Award Reception (Jan 16) iConference 2010 (Feb 3 - Feb 6) Faculty Meeting (Feb 10) Faculty Meeting (Mar 3) |