Title: CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE: IMMIGRATION CONTROVERSY AND LIBRARY SERVICE
1CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE IMMIGRATION CONTROVERSY AND
LIBRARY SERVICE
PLA Annual Conference March 27, 2008 830 945
AM
Presenter Renée Reed Hennepin
County Library Minneapolis Central Library
rreed_at_hclib.org
2To provide resources, programs, services and
space for ALL.
Our Mission
- Library Bill of Rights
- Books and other library resources should be
provided for the interest, information, and
enlightenment of all people of the community the
library serves. Materials should not be excluded
because of the origin, background, or views of
those contributing to their creation. - A persons right to use a library should not be
denied or abridged because of origin, age,
background, or views.
3 Intellectual Freedom Core Values of
Librarianship Impact Immigrants
- Access
- Confidentiality/Privacy
- Democracy
- Education and Lifelong Learning
- Intellectual Freedom
- The Public Good
- Professionalism
- Service
- Social Responsibility
4 Immigrant populations are diverse.
Who are the immigrants?
- Assume nothing about the customer.
-
- Immigrant populations are as diverse as any
population group Comprised of affluent and
impoverished, literate and illiterate, highly
educated professionals and unskilled laborers,
refugees who have endured untold suffering and
individuals who have enjoyed lives of privilege
and comfort.
5Know your community of users and identify primary
immigrant populations.
Demographics
- The American population is changing and shifting
rapidly. - View the website of the demographer or geographic
analyst for your state. - U.S. Census resources such as the American
Community Survey (ACS) reveal how communities are
changing by filling in the gaps between each
10-year census. See http//www.census.gov/acs/ww
w/index.html
6(No Transcript)
7 A nation of immigrants
8 What challenges do we face
and how do we manage libraries in a climate of
rapid demographic change?
- Depressed economic conditions exacerbate fear and
pit one group against another. - Immigrants are sometimes suspicious of government
agencies, including libraries. - Library budgets and resources are limited. How
and where should the money be spent? - Professional guidelines, manuals, and codes of
ethics can help to inform our decisions.
9Restrictions, Impediments Fears
- Are privileges curtailed if immigrants dont
provide approved identifying documents that might
be linked to immigration status? - What is your policy about requiring approved
identification such as a drivers license to
secure a library card, use a computer, or use the
library to the fullest extent? - There may be some individual and collective
anxiety about participating in the 2010 Census. - What remedies would reduce obstacles?
10 Newest immigrants have disadvantages
within the context of American society and
culture.
- Strive to create a welcoming environment in which
immigrants are given extra attention and special
considerations. - Translators can help to explain rules regarding
registration, borrowing privileges, penalties for
overdue or lost materials, and other issues
causing misunderstandings. - Recruit bi-lingual members of the community to
work in the library or serve as volunteers.
11Immigrants are being empowered to articulate
their hopes, aspirations and expectations.
May 1, 2006 Protest march in Los Angeles for
immigrants rights affected by U.S. Congressional
reform on illegal immigration.
12 How can we help to empower immigrants and ease
their transition into American life?
- Adapt policies that acknowledge the special needs
of the newest immigrants. - Become reacquainted with sections of the
American Library Associations Policy Manual,
such as the guidelines about Library Services
For the Poor Policy Objectives, 61.11.
Promoting the removal of all barriers to library
and information services, particularly fees and
overdue charges.
13Make full use of professional resources.
- ALA EMIERT (Ethnic and Multicultural
Information Exchange Roundtable) - ALA Affiliates Asian/Pacific American
Librarians, Black Caucus, Chinese American
Librarians, ProLiteracy Worldwide, REFORMA, etc. - ALA - Office for Diversity
- ALA - Office for Literacy Outreach Services
- National Coalition for Literacy
- PLA Public Librarian Recruitment tools
- Urban Libraries Council
- Your State Library and State Department of
Education
14Create a user-friendly environment.
- Prepare multilingual audio-tours that may be used
to acquaint new immigrants to library services
resources. - If not daily, on specific days of the week, offer
the help of translators to assist specific
immigrant populations. - Provide opportunities for immigrants to
participate in Conversation Circles enabling them
to practice English speaking skills in a
non-judgmental environment.
15Staff Preparedness
- Endeavor to create diversity in staff
composition. - Require staff to learn at least three facts about
a new immigrant population group. - Encourage staff to learn a new language or
improve upon existing language skills and reward
them for their efforts. - We must be culturally and linguistically
sensitive, not ethnocentrically arrogant.
16 Facing negative stereotypes
17Partnerships Outreach The library must be
connected to the community.
- Befriend Community leaders, ethnic newspapers
editors, agency heads serving targeted
populations, teachers, school librarians, and
youth leaders. - Know the local immigrant organizations and
subscribe to ethnic newspapers and magazines. - Communicate regularly and establish relationships
of trust and respect. - Create a New Americans Center or develop strong
collections, programs and services for
immigrants. - Library staff must be recognized as friends, and
active community participants.
18Invite participation and input from the
community.
- Encourage the use of the library as a meeting
place for immigrants. - Offer special VIP library tours to identified
leaders of the community. - Ask leaders to help identify ways that the
library might best serve the community. - Use translators to assist with needs assessments
focus groups, user surveys, or discussions or
interviews with community members to ascertain
their needs.
19Youth are often our best link to the immigrant
community.
- If I had influence with the good fairy. . . I
should ask her that her gift to each child in the
world be a sense of wonder so indestructible that
it would last throughout life, as an unfailing
antidote against the boredom and disenchantments
of later years, the sterile preoccupation with
things that are artificial, the alienation from
the sources of our strength. - --- Rachel Carson, The Sense of Wonder
20Win the hearts and minds of the young they can
become our best advocates.
- Provide bilingual storytime and other early
literacy initiatives. - Offer family literacy programs.
- Provide space and discussion opportunities for
immigrant teens. - Offer cultural programs that appeal to families
and youth. - Create a place where immigrant youth are valued
and feel a sense of ownership.
21Work with direct service providers to offer
classes or create strong referral lists.
- Class offerings or referrals for
- English Language Learning, ABE, TOEFL, GED
- Citizenship test preparation
- Finding a job or starting a business
- Legal aid including immigration concerns
- Computer applications and Internet use
- Coping with financial challenges banking
- Physical and mental health issues
- Schools and education for children adults
- Finding affordable, safe housing
22Work with your Friends organization.
- They may help to fund programs, collections, and
special initiatives. - Encourage immigrants to become members of your
Library Friends organization and offer a special
rate to immigrants who wish to join. - Persuade Friends to have a longstanding
commitment to serving the immigrant community.
23Fundraising
- Engage the private sector and create corporate
partnerships. - Pursue LSTA, IMLS, and other federal or state
grants. - Review successful grant applications to learn
techniques and strategies. - Use resources in The Foundation Center such as
the list of the Top 50 U.S. Foundations Awarding
Grants for Immigrants and Refugees. -
24As a Nation of Nations
Everywhere immigrants have
strengthened the fabric of American life.
Our role as a public library is critical to the
health and strength of this country. The
public library is the principal means whereby the
record of mans thoughts and ideas and the
expression of his creative imagination are made
available to all. --- UNESCO Public Library
Manifesto
25Brief List of Resources
- American Library Association, Association for
Library Services to Children (ALSC), New
Immigrants Resources. Online resource list. - Chua, Amy. Day of Empire how hyperpowers rise to
global dominance -- and why they fall. New York
Doubleday, 2007. - Ethnic NewsWatch a ProQuest database.
- Kennedy, John F. A Nation of Immigrants. New
York Harper and Row, 1964. - MultiCultural Review. Tampa, FL The Goldman
Group. - Portes, Alejandro, and Rubén G. Rumbaut.
Immigrant America a portrait. 3rd ed. Berkeley
University of California Press, 2006. - Schulz, William F. In Our Own Best Interest how
defending human rights benefits us all. Boston
Beacon Press, 2001.
26- Sullivan, Robert, ed. The American Immigrant an
illustrated history. New York Life Books, 2004. - U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Civics
and Citizenship Toolkit a collection of
educational resources for immigrants.
Washington, D.C. U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Institute of Museum and
Library Services, U.S. Govt. Printing Office,
2007. (Multimedia toolkit or online resource) - Urban Library Council. Welcome Stranger public
libraries build the global village. Evanston,
IL Urban Libraries Council, 2007. - Urban Libraries Council. Public Library Services
to New Americans speeding transitions to
learning, work and life in the U.S. Evanston,
IL Urban Libraries Council, 2003.
27Contacts and Organizations
- American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
www.aclu.org - American Friends Service Committee (AFSC).
www.afsc.org - American Library Association, Association of
Library Service to Children (ALSC).
www.ala.org/ala/alsc/alscresources/for
librarians/new immigrantsresources.cfm - American Library Association, Office of Literacy
Outreach Services. www.ala.org/ala/olos/literacy
outreach.htm - Foundation Center. http//foundationcenter.org/
- National Institute for Literacy. www.nifl.gov/
- Urban Libraries Council (ULC). www.urbanlibraries.
org - U.S. Citizenship Immigration Services.
www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis