American Library Association issued the following announcement on June 22.
Climate change is the single greatest threat to global health and this generation’s grandest challenge, but many library leaders feel overwhelmed, even paralyzed about where to start. “Sustainability in Libraries: A Call to Action,” a new briefing from the ALA Council Committee on Sustainability, is here to focus attention on how the library community can accelerate their understanding and action, in the areas of climate change mitigation and adaptation.
Readers will learn:
Why ALA has adopted the “triple bottom line” definition of sustainability as a core value of the profession;
How libraries can take the lead on climate adaptation;
Why climate justice work is equity, diversity, and inclusion work;
How many in our field are already answering the call for leadership on the topic of sustainability;
How ALA, as an association, is living its values out loud on this topic; and
Simple, practical steps anyone can take to get started.
ALA President Patty Wong focused on sustainability during her presidential year, noting in her kickoff American Libraries column about this topic, “This is the time to stand together in solidarity…to meet the enormous challenges of the climate crisis and summon the effort to deal with its impact. Climate change is a unifying issue for libraries across the globe, and we must commit to doing all we can to prepare our communities for its effects.”
The authors of the briefing, members of the new ALA Council Committee on Sustainability, represent public, school and academic libraries and have strong ties to the ALA Special Task Force on Sustainability, the Sustainability Round Table, the Sustainable Libraries Initiative and the Executive Board of ALA.
This briefing is free to download through the new LibGuide on Sustainability, curated by ALA Librarian & Archivist, Colleen Barbus.
Original source can be found here.