Anti-Racist Action in Libraries - Call for papers.

The events of 2020 demonstrated the convergence of interrelated crises-the 
crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and disparate outcomes in the criminal justice 
system for communities of color. These events have highlighted what 
marginalized groups have long understood about racial disparities exposed by 
the coronavirus: that minoritized populations are disproportionately and 
negatively impacted by inequities that are imbedded in every system that we 
have in the United States.  These inequities are the root cause of barriers to 
access to life, liberty, and happiness for so many in the United States.  

Across the country - individuals, institutions and organizations are responding 
to the legacy of slavery and systemic racism.

We have been following news about academic libraries that are centering 
inclusiveness, diversity, equity, and accessibility with great interest. 
Evidence affirms that libraries are well suited to offer exemplary practices in 
anti-racist actions. This special issue of Reference Services Review (RSR) will 
explore the question: "How can anti-racist action in libraries begin to 
dismantle existing power structures and lead to equitable access to 
participation and opportunities in libraries for marginalized groups?"

RSR seeks articles for Volume 50 Issue 1 – a special issue on organizational 
practices and actions that may serve as models for dismantling racism. We are 
interested in a broad range of anti-racism initiatives and seek specially to 
feature marginalized non-white voices to hold up the promise of a suitably 
diverse and vibrant profession.

We welcome different types of papers, including the following:

Autoethnographies
Autoethnographies by racially and ethnically diverse librarians, including 
professional experiences, perspectives, and values
Autoethnographies by current and past recipients of diversity recruitment 
programs, such as the ALA Spectrum Scholarship Program or other diversity 
fellowships, including professional experiences, perspectives, and values

Research
Empirical studies, quantitative studies, qualitative studies
Broad studies of multiple programs/initiatives that have proven successful or 
unsuccessful and why

Longitudinal studies
Studies that explore the design, implementation, and impact of outreach, 
information literacy instruction, and/or information, reference, and research 
services to Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) library users

Viewpoint or conceptual paper
Reflections on key terms and core concepts, i.e., the public discourse on 
anti-racism and its impact on, and intersection with, academic libraries
Reflections on the transition from diversity training to anti-racist action 
training
Reflections on disrupting whiteness in libraries and librarianship

Case study
Studies that explore the transition from diversity training to anti-racist 
action training
Studies that focus on practices toward dismantling white power structures in 
library hierarchies, management, and staffing in public-facing services, 
programs, and areas
Studies that focus on advancing diversity, equity, inclusion, and anti-racism 
through curation and collection
Studies that focus on the work that library/archive associations and/or library 
consortia are doing in this space
Studies that focus on mission in motion, and specifically on the work library 
staff are doing in support of greater racial equity in Jesuit colleges and 
universities and other mission-driven institutions

Literature review
Annotation and/or critique of the literature on practices for diversity, 
equity, inclusion, and anti-racism in discovery systems
Annotation and/or critique of the literature on collections-focused actions in 
promotion of diversity, equity, inclusion, and anti-racism including 
deaccessioning, contextualizing, or transforming divisive and archaic 
collections and collection descriptions
Annotation and/or critique of racial equity tools – library-hosted Web-based 
"kits" that offer tools, research, tips, curricula, and ideas for patrons who 
want to increase their own understanding and to help those working toward 
justice at every level – in systems, organizations, communities, and the 
culture at large
Overview or examination of ongoing anti-racism practices within professional 
development opportunities
Overview and critique of selected anti-racism resource guides
 

Abstracts and Topic Proposals

Along with your topic proposal, please indicate how your background is 
contributing to a diversity of perspectives on this topic. If your paper 
authors are not able to demonstrate diversity, we suggest including writing 
partners who will bring a diverse perspective to your contribution.

Topic proposals should be submitted via the web form at 
https://forms.gle/ZJaBLB9cJm82Vw287

 

Previous Special Issues

Examples of previous special issues can be found in RSR issues:

Academic Libraries and the Costs of Higher Education (48/3, 2020)
Academic Libraries and the 45th President (48/1, 2020)
Library Services to People with Disabilities (46/3, 2018)
Emergent Literacies in Academic Libraries (46/2, 2018)
Transfer Students and Students in Transition (45/2 and 45/3, 2017)
Health Information Literacy (44/2, 2016)
Entrepreneurship (43/3, 2015)
 

Anticipated Publication Schedule

The issue will be published online in January 2022 and in paper February 2022 
(50.1). The anticipated publication schedule for Volume 50, Issue 1 is:

April 18: Abstract due.
May 2: Abstract acceptance notification.
July 1: Manuscript due.
August 18: Manuscript revisions notification.
September 9: Revision 1 due.
September 23: Revisions notification.
October 7: Revision 2 due.
October 28: Final revisions (copy-editing) due.
February 3: Online publication.
 

To view the author guidelines for this journal, please visit the journal's 
page. 


Co-Guest Editors

Reference Services Review is pleased to introduce two colleagues - Jim Hahn and 
Mark A. Puente as Co-Guest Editors for this special issue. While their career 
trajectories, areas of specialization, and scholarship are very different, they 
share interest in leading this new special issue of the journal. Jim is a 
long-standing member of the Editorial Advisory Board, and currently a member of 
the Editorial Team, and Mark operates at the forefront of our profession in 
this space.  Jim and Mark will play a vital role in curating high-quality 
contributions on the topics described above and driving the editorial review 
process for special issue publications. As Co-Guest Editors, they are uniquely 
positioned to help to advance the state of knowledge with a special collection 
of articles.

Jim Hahn
Head of Metadata Research
Penn Libraries
University of Pennsylvania
[email protected]
 

Mark A. Puente
Associate Dean for Organizational Development, Inclusion, and Diversity
Purdue University Libraries and School of Information Studies
[email protected]

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