Position statement: Access to legacy oral history collections
This statement outlines the public position of NSLA libraries regarding the provision of access to legacy oral history collections.
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This statement outlines the public position of NSLA libraries regarding the provision of access to legacy oral history collections.
Anna Raunik is the Executive Director of Content and Client Services at the State Library of Queensland and the convenor of NSLA’s Heads of Collections advisory group. We asked her about her career, her passion for data and what she sees on the horizon for libraries working with technology.
NSLA’s strategic plan for 2020-2023 focuses on three priorities for collaboration: shared digital systems; strengthening community identity; and, building cultural and intellectual capital.
Members convened online for their mid-year meeting, Discussions included our continuing responses to Covid-19, project funding, and finalising the NSLA strategic plan for 2020-2023.
NSLA’s submission supports the essential role of public libraries as government entities in delivering a wide range of highly valued services, programs and resources to diaspora communities.
This resource is part of a national effort to provide culturally safe public spaces and services in libraries for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and a supportive workplace for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff where they are able
A report on the current collection development policies in NSLA libraries, with a focus on web archiving practices, current and future.
For NSLA libraries, the COVID-19 pandemic has called for a common collecting effort unlike any in living memory.
The National edeposit service’s 100,000th deposit is a tribute to these times, now preserved in perpetuity.
NSLA members joined the millions around the world conducting their business on screen, to discuss issues including the COVID-19 pandemic, staff wellbeing, governance and logistics, and digital library services.
Members of National and State Libraries Australasia (NSLA) acknowledge the Traditional Custodians and Kaitiaki of the lands on which
our libraries do their daily work, preserving and sharing our collective cultural heritage.