Activism in Library Development: Women's Studies at Rutgers University, 1970-1995

Reference Type Journal Article
Year of Publication
2002
Author
Author: Hur-Li Lee
Journal
Libraries & Culture
Volume
37
Issue
4
Pagination
339-62
Language
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Region
Library Type
Demographics
Chronological Period
Abstract

Women's studies librarians' view that women should be represented at the center of library collections and services generates conflict in the U.S. academic library, a system based on male-centered, disciplinary principles. An examination of the development of a women's studies research library in the Rutgers University Libraries System between 1970 and the mid-1990s reveals the bibliographic and political dimensions of the controversy. The persistent tension between bibliographic considerations and political activism warrants further scholarly discourse aimed at creating a balanced model for collection development and information organization in academic libraries.