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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Slone, Debra J.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ791498
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author Slone, Debra J.
author_facet Slone, Debra J.
Slone, Debra J.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents After Oil Slone, Debra J. Information Sources Internet Fuels Voting Public Libraries Librarians United States History Library Role Library Services Access to Information Public libraries were indispensable resources for newcomers during the height of European immigration to the United States. They were havens for the poor and jobless during the Great Depression and bridges between rural and urban communities during times of major demographic change. An increase in the Spanish-speaking population has inspired increased availability of materials in Spanish. Public libraries assist children with homework and adults with literacy, distribute voter registration forms, and provide Internet access. A library in Alaska has so many travelers by water that books are often due when the patron's ship--literally--comes in. A library in Florida is the designated information center for the surrounding community in the event of a hurricane. In other words, a major crisis represents both a challenge and an opportunity to librarians in the workplace. The approaching period of rapidly declining access to oil, which James Howard Kunstler referred to as "the long emergency" in his important "Rolling Stone" article in 2005, will impact their entire culture. There are massive potential effects of this new crisis on libraries and the role of librarians.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ791498
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle After Oil
Slone, Debra J.
Information Sources
Internet
Fuels
Voting
Public Libraries
Librarians
United States History
Library Role
Library Services
Access to Information
After Oil Slone, Debra J. Information Sources Internet Fuels Voting Public Libraries Librarians United States History Library Role Library Services Access to Information Public libraries were indispensable resources for newcomers during the height of European immigration to the United States. They were havens for the poor and jobless during the Great Depression and bridges between rural and urban communities during times of major demographic change. An increase in the Spanish-speaking population has inspired increased availability of materials in Spanish. Public libraries assist children with homework and adults with literacy, distribute voter registration forms, and provide Internet access. A library in Alaska has so many travelers by water that books are often due when the patron's ship--literally--comes in. A library in Florida is the designated information center for the surrounding community in the event of a hurricane. In other words, a major crisis represents both a challenge and an opportunity to librarians in the workplace. The approaching period of rapidly declining access to oil, which James Howard Kunstler referred to as "the long emergency" in his important "Rolling Stone" article in 2005, will impact their entire culture. There are massive potential effects of this new crisis on libraries and the role of librarians.
title After Oil
topic Information Sources
Internet
Fuels
Voting
Public Libraries
Librarians
United States History
Library Role
Library Services
Access to Information
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ791498