Post on 08-Feb-2017
Library Ethics in the 21st Century
Sarah Houghton - @TheLiBLibrarianInBlack.netDirector, San Rafael Public Library
• Lack of confidentiality
• Lack of basic human respect
• Information blockades
• Exclusivity
What went wrong?
LIANZA ethics
LIANZA Statement on Access to Information
LIANZA Statement on Intellectual Freedom
LIANZA Code of Practice: Code of Professional Conduct
LIANZA Statement on Confidentiality of Library Records
Any information about identified clients and their individual interests obtained by librarians in the course of their professional duties is privileged and should not be used for any purpose other than that for which it was obtained without the express permission of those clients or unless required by law. This obligation continues after the relationship ceases.
(Code of Practice: Code of Professional Conduct)
[M]embers of our society have a right to privacy and to protection from misuse and exploitation of information.
(Statement on Access to Information)
All library records relating to individuals shall be confidential and shall not be revealed to any person except in accordance with the above; or in accordance with the provisions of the Official Information Act 1982 where the library holding that information is subject to that Act; or in any other case where the information is required pursuant to a subpoena or other order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
(Statement on Confidentiality of Library Records)
http://figshare.com/articles/Results_of_2015_Amnesty_International_Yougov_poll_on_government_mass_surveillance/1339031
http://figshare.com/articles/Results_of_2015_Amnesty_International_Yougov_poll_on_government_mass_surveillance/1339031
A basic right of citizens in a democratic society is access to information on matters which affect their lives.
(Statement on Access to Information)
Librarians without first disclosing their interest should not profit from their positions save by normal remuneration nor should they have any financial interest in goods or services recommended or supplied without first disclosing that interest.
(Code of Practice: Code of Professional Conduct)
Librarians have a primary duty to their clients and to society:(a) to assist in the collection, preservation
and availability of recorded and transmitted knowledge and ideas.(b) to facilitate the flow of information and
ideas.
(Code of Practice: Code of Professional Conduct)
Most library vendors lease digital content.
Few sell digital content outright.
KNOW THE DIFFERENCE!
Licensing vs. Owning
Overdrive’s marketing materials & sales staff use words like buy, purchase, and sale.
Overdrive’s contracts use words like license and subscribe.
Kansas says $%*&
The Overdrive Case
Does your library get access to the entire catalog of materials?
Do certain publishers limit terms of access?
Can content be removed?
What publishers and authors are not included?
Collection Access
Doctorow’s First LawAny time someone puts a lock on something that belongs to you, and won’t give you a key, they’re not doing it for your benefit.
In the service of clients or in the selection of materials, librarians should not discriminate on any grounds whatsoever.
(Code of Practice: Code of Professional Conduct)
No information resources should be excluded from libraries because of the opinions they express; nor because of who the author is; nor on the grounds of the political, social, moral or other views of their author.
No library materials should be censored, restricted, removed from libraries, or have access denied to them because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval or pressure. This includes access to web-based information resources.
(Statement on Intellectual Freedom)
Librarians should resist all attempts at censorship, except where that censorship is required by law. Librarians are free to request, and to lobby for, the repeal of laws, which compromise the principles set out in this statement.
(Statement on Intellectual Freedom)
Information providers should demonstrate a commitment to responsibilities under the Treaty of Waitangi. Staff providing information should be familiar with basic protocol and tikanga and have some understanding of te reo Māori.
(Statement on Access to Information)
Government agencies – national and local, Parliament, State Departments, public corporations, and other authorities – have a duty to make reports and other documents widely available for consideration by all citizens free of charge.
(Statement on Access to Information)
Funders of information providers should provide adequate financial support to ensure that the special needs of disabled people, when accessing information, are met.
(Statement on Access to Information)
Some vendors have not made their digital content, or the platforms that you use to access them, truly accessible.
That’s a violation of disability access laws for most schools and libraries.
Accessibility
1. Read and re-negotiate all of your
digital licensing contracts.
California Digital Library Model Licenses