Modernization of libraries in a postcommunist state: The roles of the George Soros, Andrew W. Mellon, and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundations in the development of Latvian libraries
Vilks, Andris; Dreimane, Jana
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/89809
Description
Title
Modernization of libraries in a postcommunist state: The roles of the George Soros, Andrew W. Mellon, and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundations in the development of Latvian libraries
Author(s)
Vilks, Andris
Dreimane, Jana
Issue Date
2014
Keyword(s)
Central and Eastern Europe--Libraries
Russia--Libraries
History of Libraries
Post-Communism Development
Abstract
This paper presents the most important changes in the library system
of Latvia in the late 1980s, when, as a result of a nonviolent struggle,
Latvia regained full independence from the Soviet Union in 1990.
Particular attention is paid to contributions by private foundations in
the United States—the George Soros, Andrew W. Mellon, and Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundations—to fulfill the main goal of library work:
namely, helping to create a democratic society in which everyone has
the opportunity to express their views and be able to freely access
information. During the Soviet period, libraries were mainly agents
of the dominant power; they were often forced to ignore the needs of
Latvian society or even to work against them. The activities of libraries
were strictly regulated and controlled. Latvian independence has
allowed the libraries to end political censorship and strict control,
and to independently determine their future directions and work
methods. Political changes occurred so rapidly that the immediate
normalization of professional work after fifty years of occupation
was not possible. However, US private foundations supported strategically
important areas of library work: automation and access to
the internet, the creation of the State Unified Library Information
System (SULIS), and the professional development of library staff.
The US foundations, through requirements for the cofinancing of
large-scale projects, also motivated state and municipalities in Latvia
to increase their investment in libraries. The interest expressed in
libraries by these foundations emphasized that Latvian libraries were
vital. Consequently, targeted investments shortly after independence
ensured the timely inclusion of the basic elements of the national
library system—the National Library of Latvia and public, school, and academic libraries—in the modern information environment,
thus allowing them to fulfill the main task of all libraries: the provision
of public access to information.
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
ISSN
0024-2594
Type of Resource
text
Language
en
Permalink
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/89809
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1353/lib.2014.0036
Copyright and License Information
Copyright (2014) Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
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