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Wikipedia

Libraries and the LGBT community

In the post-Stonewall era, the role of libraries in providing information and services to LGBTQ individuals has been a topic of discussion among library professionals. Libraries can often play an important role for LGBTQ individuals looking to find information about coming out, health, and family topics, as well as leisure reading.[1] In the past 50 years, advocate organizations for LGBTQ content in libraries have emerged, and numerous theorists have discussed various aspects of LGBTQ library service including privacy concerns, programming, collection development considerations and librarian/staff education needs, as well as special services for juvenile and teen patrons.[2]

Stained glass window from the Pride Library at the University of Western Ontario

History edit

Commensurate with the LGBT rights movement in other arenas, LGBTQ activists began visibly advocating for greater representation in libraries in 1969.[1] In 1970, the Task Force on Gay Liberation formed within the American Library Association (ALA). Now known as the Rainbow Round Table, this organization is the oldest LGBTQ professional organization in the United States.[1] Barbara Gittings became its coordinator in 1971. She pushed the American Library Association for more visibility for gays and lesbians in the profession. She staffed a kissing booth at the Dallas convention of the ALA, underneath the banner "Hug a Homosexual", with a "women only" side and a "men only" side. When no one took advantage of it, she and Patience and Sarah author Alma Routsong (pen name: Isabel Miller) kissed in front of rolling television cameras. In describing its success, despite most of the reaction being negative, Gittings said, "We needed to get an audience. So we decided, let's show gay love live. We were offering free—mind you, free—same-sex kisses and hugs. Let me tell you, the aisles were mobbed, but no one came into the booth to get a free hug. So we hugged and kissed each other. It was shown twice on the evening news, once again in the morning. It put us on the map."

In the early 1970s, the Task Force on Gay Liberation campaigned to have books about the gay liberation movement at the Library of Congress reclassified from HQ 71–471 ("Abnormal Sexual Relations, Including Sexual Crimes"). In 1972, after receiving a letter requesting the reclassification, the Library of Congress agreed to make the shift, reclassifying those books into a newly created category, HQ 76.5 ("Homosexuality, Lesbianism—Gay Liberation Movement, Homophile Movement").

Gay rights pioneer Barbara Gittings (July 31, 1932 – February 18, 2007) advocated for a revolution in the inclusion and cataloging of LGBTQ materials in public libraries to create a more positive, supportive, informative environment for all members of the community.

In the 1980s, literature began to emerge which examined information seeking behaviors of gay and lesbian library patrons. The 1981 book The Joy of Cataloging by Sanford Berman outlined the difficulties of accessing gay and lesbian books and information.[1] In 1988, the Task Force on Gay Liberation released the "International thesaurus of gay and lesbian index terms," aimed at standardizing terms used for cataloging gay and lesbian-related library materials, and changing or removal of pejorative Library of Congress Subject Headings in relation to same-sex attraction and the LGBT community.[3]

Four years later, in 1992, Ellen Greenblatt and Cal Gough published the first collection of essays about the information needs of gay and lesbian patrons, entitled Gay and Lesbian Library Service. The work has since been revised as Serving LGBTIQ Library and Archives Users and remains influential.[1]

In 1992, American Libraries published a photo of the Gay and Lesbian Task Force (now the Rainbow Round Table) on the cover of its July/August issue, drawing both criticism and praise from the library world.[4] Some commenters called the cover "in poor taste" and accused American Libraries of "glorifying homosexuality," while others were supportive of the move. Christine Williams, who wrote about the controversy in her 1998 essay A Lesbigay Gender Perplex: Sexual Stereotyping and Professional Ambiguity in Librarianship, concluded that in the mid-90s, the library world was "not an especially welcoming place to gays and lesbians."[4]

In 2007, the Rainbow Project Task Force began within the ALA to promote the presence of LGBTQ juvenile and young adult literature in library collections.[5] The group now, now called the Rainbow Book List Committee maintains an annotated bibliography of LGBTQ titles for youth and teens, as well the yearly Rainbow List featuring the best of LGBTQ YA and children's titles.[6]

In 2010, the GLBT Round Table announced a new committee, the Over the Rainbow Committee.[7] This committee annually compiles a bibliography of books that show the GLBT community in a favorable light and reflects the interests of adults.[8] The bibliographies provide guidance to libraries in the selection of positive GLBT materials.

After the passage of equal marriage in the State of New York in 2011, the Research Library at the Buffalo History Museum in Buffalo, New York, became the first known library in the United States to collect wedding memorabilia from legally-wed same-sex couples.[9]

Challenges edit

Legal restrictions edit

Historically libraries have had instances of being legally restricted from providing LGBTQ materials, in the United Kingdom Section 28 prohibited public libraries run by local authorities to 'promote homosexuality' leading to libraries scaling back what they delivered whilst the law was in place 1988–2003.[10]

The passage of House Bills 1557 and 1467 in Florida state legislature in 2022 raised concerns over a possible increase in limitations on LGBT materials in school libraries.[11] Although neither bill explicitly targets such materials, faculty from schools across the state have reported being directed to remove previously accepted LGBTQ books from their classrooms and school libraries that could now be deemed harmful or offensive to minors under the bills.[12] A proposal to expand HB 1557 to cover all school grades (the original bill prohibits certain materials from being presented to children in Kindergarten through third grade) is now under consideration.[13]

Privacy edit

In their 2006 study of LGBTQ book circulation in an academic library, Stephanie Mathson and Jeffery Hancks found that LGBTQ titles were 20% more likely to circulate via a self-checkout machine than a traditional circulation desk staffed by a person.[14] However, their sample size was small, so study results may be inconclusive.[14]

Need for library staff education edit

Providing unbiased service to all patrons is one of the central tenets of the Code of Ethics of the American Library Association.[15] Articles dating back to Richard Ashby's 1987 piece entitled "Library Services to Lesbian and Gay People" have argued that this commitment to neutrality should provide the foundation for complete library service for all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender presentation.[16] Ashby argues that libraries, especially in their role as providers of literature for pleasure reading, can support LGBTQ individuals overcome a sense of isolation within the larger community. He emphasizes the importance of staff education to provide all LGBTQ individuals a safe space within the library, including:

  • Training staff to work with diverse populations, specifically LGBTQ patrons
  • Comprehensive and effective collection development policies for LGBTQ materials
  • Librarian education to gain familiarity with publishers or sources for LGBTQ materials, including the utilization of local bookstores or community groups.[16]

Echoing many of Ashby's assertions in her 2007 paper entitled "Can Scottish public library services claim they are socially inclusive of all minority groups when lesbian fiction is still so inaccessible?", Jaqueline Goldthorp outlines some of the challenges that lesbians face when trying to find lesbian fiction in Scottish libraries.[17] She ties her study of lesbian literature to the importance of reading fiction on the psychological well-being of women, arguing that women often turn to fiction reading for self-affirmation and identity building.[17] In addition, lesbian fiction titles can be priced up to 30% higher than non-lesbian titles, meaning that, for many low-income or working class lesbians, libraries are the only means of access for these titles[17] Goldthorp surveyed 26 Scottish libraries and found that, in 2007, the majority had less than ten books labelled as "lesbian fiction," and almost no recent award-winning titles. She suggests diversity training and education about methods and resources for providing service to lesbians for library staff as a way of promoting greater inclusion.

Mehra and Braquet's 2007 article "Library and Information Science Professionals as Community Action Researchers in an Academic Setting" expands further upon the central role of librarians in promoting LGBTQ acceptance, noting that the profession is "uniquely situated to provide access to LGBT literature and information."[18]

In the UK 2016 research by Janine Walker and Jo Bates found that Section 28 still had a lasting effect on school libraries, with very little LGBTQ+ literature available or support from librarians being given.[19] Later in 2019, John Vincent said that through his research he still met British librarians who assumed Section 28 was still in place.[20]

Book bans edit

Conservative objections of certain titles available in public and school libraries have had a resurgence in 2021 and 2022, in USA States such as Florida, Wyoming and Texas. One legislator in Texas proposed a list of books to be banned in school libraries, which when analyzed were found to be 62% LGBTQ titles.[21]

The American Library Association maintains a lists of the most challenged books of the year, as well as the most challenged books of the decade, using data collected by their Office of Intellectual Freedom. This data has been collected for three decades now, and materials relating to LGBTQ topics make up a notable portion of these lists time and time again.[22] For example, a study found that "[f]rom 2001 to 2015, sixteen books (22%) on ALA's top ten list were challenged for homosexuality."[23]

Nonprofit organization PEN America has similarly been collecting data on book ban attempts in schools across the nation. Their 2021-2022 report found that out of the 1,648 unique book titles banned during the period studied (July 2021 - June 2022), over 40% of them dealt with LGBTQ themes and/or have major characters that identify as members of the LGBTQ community.[24] As the data PEN America pulls from is limited to publicly accessible records and news sources, it is possible the true scope of banned LGBTQ titles is much greater.

Collection development considerations edit

Barriers edit

In a 2005 article in the journal Progressive Librarian, Jennifer Downey argued that even award-winning books by or about LGBTQ individuals fail to make it into library collections.[25] She cites internal censorship as one potential cause, as well as the assumption that library patrons who want LGBTQ titles will simply request them from other libraries via inter-library loan. In addition, she found that many librarians were unfamiliar with LGBTQ titles. To increase familiarity, she recommends reading LGBTQ book review sources and bringing others, including community members into the process, suggestions which she draws from Loverich and Degnan's 1999 article "Out of the Shelves".[26]

Small publishers edit

A 2012 Publishers Weekly article cites the growing diversity of small presses that publish LGBTQ titles, but a decline in the traditional romance and erotica genres.[27] The article also discusses the mainstreaming of LGBT literature, though emphasizes that even with wider acceptance of LGBTQ identities, the need for LGBTQ stories has not disappeared and that independent publishers are still the largest producers of LGBTQ literature.[27] In his "Rainbow Family Collections", Jamie Naidoo also discusses challenges facing small specialized publishers of LGBTQ children's books and includes interviews with select publishing houses.[28] Smaller publishers also struggle with their titles being found on discovery platforms where their catalogue records often have less detailed metadata.[29]

LGBTQ, classification and subject headings edit

Before the 1960s, the term "homosexuality" was the basic search heading for most libraries[30] that adopted the Library of Congress Subject Headings. According to LGBT librarian Steve Wolf, "homosexuality" was classified under "sexual deviations" until 1972, when it was moved to "sexual life".[31] Since then, individuals who identify as LGBTQ have made major strides in reforming the subject headings that many libraries use. The Library of Congress added "Transgender people" and "Transgenderism" as main subject headings in 2007.[32] Creating new and accurate headings for the LGBTQ community makes it easier for LGBTQ people to find information that is pertinent to their needs.

Recent literature has approached the issue of library classification from a queer theory perspective. In her 2013 article "Queering the Catalog: Queer Theory and the Politics of Correction", librarian Emily Drabinski defines the relationship between LGBTQ identity and the library as a historically contingent one. For Drabinski, "there can be no "correct" categorical or linguistic structures, only those that discursively emerge and circulate in a particular context."[33] Drabinski says that a queer approach to cataloging includes reference librarians and users, who can engage in dialogue about underlying biases and help dismantle oppressive language. In a 2014 article, Drabinski, Amber Billey and K.R. Roberto criticized RDA Rule 9.7, which forces catalogers to assign a gender when creating authority records, leaving out non-binary and gender-fluid identities.[34] Marika Cifor uses queer theory to argue that hatred should be used as an organizing principle in LGBT archives. She writes that "examining the arrangement and description of hate mail and messages, archival collecting around hate crimes, and documenting and describing queer and trans self-hatred demonstrates that hatred is a useful lens for examining and deconstructing normative power and its affective circulations and structures."[35]

Homosaurus has been an initiative introduced as an extensive LGBTQ+ controlled vocabulary.[36][third-party source needed]

LGBTQ children and teen services edit

 
A 2018 display of young adult books featuring LGBTQ+ characters or themes at the Barbara S. Ponce Public Library in Pinellas Park, Florida

Alexander Parks and others have identified libraries as potentially important safe places for LGBTQ youth and teens, especially in the face of bullying.[37] He suggests the inclusion of LGBTQ titles in library displays or book talks to promote greater visibility. However, according to a 2005 study by Ann Curry, though many LGBTQ teens have the very similar concerns to their adult counterparts, librarians often do not answer their questions related to LGBTQ topics in a sensitive or welcoming manner.[38] Studies by Carmichael and Greenblatt have emphasized that the library is an important place for teens who are coming out to find information because of the potential anonymity it provides.[38] In his examination of public libraries in areas with large concentrations of same-sex families, Naidoo finds that many children's librarians are unaware of the LGBTQ families in their community and provide a mixed-bag of services, collections, and programs.[39]

According to the Young Adult Library Services Association's information for being welcoming and inclusionary of trans teens at library programs offering a time for students to give their preferred names or pronouns when starting a program gives them the opportunity to let staff and fellow patrons know how they would prefer to be addressed.[40]

Impact of the Internet edit

LGBTQ individuals were some of the early adopters of the internet, and are still represented in high percentages across social media.[41] In addition, 55% of LGBTQ individuals who responded to a 2009 survey said that they read blogs, compared to 38% of heterosexual respondents.[41] The internet can often be influential to young people seeking information about health, coming out, or to find community, but can also put teens at risk of cyberbullying or harassment.[42] Some libraries and schools, notably the school district in Camdenton, Missouri, have been ordered to remove internet filtering software that blocked access to LGBTQ friendly websites that teens often turn to for support.[43]

Drag Queen Story Time edit

Libraries have been one of the main hosts of Drag Queen Story Hours (also known as Drag Queen Storytime) since the concept creation by Michelle Tea in 2015.[44] Whilst they have been popular busy events internationally, they have also been controversial attracting protests and complaints to libraries. In some communities, the concept of Drag Queen Story Hour can be controversial and might not be universally accepted, potentially leading to protests or boycotts of the library.

This initiative fosters an environment of acceptance and diversity by featuring drag queens as Storytime readers, thereby challenging traditional gender norms and offering a broader perspective on identity. For children, it's an opportunity to engage with literature in a fun, interactive way, while also learning about self-expression, empathy, and the importance of individuality.

While Drag Queen Story Hour offers a range of benefits from educational to social, it's not without its challenges and criticisms. The success of the program often depends on careful planning, community involvement, and a clear understanding of the objectives and potential pitfalls.

User studies related to LGBTQ library services edit

Creelman and Harris (1990) edit

Possibly the first study to provide a comprehensive overview of the information needs of non-heterosexual people, Creelman and Harris' article focused on lesbians' information needs at specific points in their lives.[45] They used a sense-making model which considered lesbians' information needs within a particular context. Their data came from a series of 50 interviews with lesbian women who were part of a lesbian group in Toronto, Canada, and used the snowball sampling approach to recruit additional participants. Eighty-four percent of interviewees said that they were aware of the library as a source of information related to lesbian identities, compared to 62% who were aware of gay bars and 58% aware of gay and lesbian organizations. However, the authors found many respondents were frustrated with the negative or male-centric literature that made up the bulk of information available in libraries; libraries needed to ensure that information was readily available, current and positive to best serve lesbian populations.

Whitt (1993) edit

Alisa Whitt's 1993 study also focused on the information needs of lesbians and what lesbians expected from the library during different life stages.[46] Whitt collected data by sending out a survey via a lesbian newsletter that circulated in North Carolina, which drew 141 respondents.

For many lesbians who responded to Whitt's survey, the library was the most important source for locating information during the initial stages of coming out, especially in remote areas without a visible community. Whitt determined three shifts in the type of information desired by respondents, from early in the coming out process to a later, more established identity. She found that information needs went from broad to specifically focused, from factual or non-fiction to entertainment or fiction and that respondents became more discerning about the information they needed with age.

Many respondents who never used the library cited embarrassment or lack of knowledge about available information as reasons. Even those that did frequent the library often said that they were too embarrassed to ask for help; many expected shocked reactions or outright homophobia from librarians. Some common complaints about library collections from those who did use them were that information was negative, outdated or difficult to find. Whitt concluded that more staff training was needed to address these perceptions. She also found that those respondents who regularly used a college or university library had a more positive experience finding needed information than those who used only the public library.

Joyce and Schrader (1997) edit

In the first user study specifically addressed towards gay males, Joyce and Schrader studied perceptions of the library system in Edmonton, Canada.[47] Using an anonymous questionnaire distributed to gay community organizations, the authors collected data on 21 questions related to three aspects of information seeking: personal information, information needs related to coming out and ongoing information needs. The survey had 47 respondents who had a generally high level of education.

The library was the most often cited resource of information related to coming out and for ongoing needs, followed by gay organizations and friends. When asked what types of materials respondents borrowed from the library, they most frequently cited music, followed by nonfiction and fiction. However, respondents had an overall negative impression about the amount of information related to gay males contained in the library, and suggested the need for expanding the gay collection, networking with gay and lesbian organizations and subscribing to gay magazines.

Joyce and Schrader found similarities between their study and the ones by Whitt and Creelman and Harris which came before it. Some of the common themes included the importance of the library, especially in the early stages of coming out, the need for more specific information over time and the general lack of services.

Norman (1999) edit

Norman's 1999 study provides quantitative analysis of survey responses from 44 self-identified lesbian, gay and bisexual individuals using the Brighton and Hove (UK) public libraries.[48] The survey was aimed at identifying five aspects of the libraries' LGB users, including demographics, the effect of centralizing a collection, whether LGB individuals use bibliographies to find reading as well as reasons for using and perceptions of library service. Results of the survey were analyzed using SPSS.

Results indicated that fiction or other materials for entertainment were the most popular materials from the library, and that more than half used bibliographies to locate new reading materials. Many respondents cited the high prices of gay or lesbian books as one of the reasons for heavy use of the library. Though some respondents felt that the balance of lesbian to gay titles was skewed in favor of lesbian titles, the overall perception of Hove and Brighton's services to LGB patrons was excellent or good.

Rothbauer (2004) edit

As an offshoot of her dissertation research, Rothbauer interviewed 17 self-identified lesbian, bisexual and queer women between the ages of 18 and 23 about their discretionary reading habits.[49] To analyze the data, she used open-coding techniques for textual analysis, and also relied on some participant writing and journals.

Rothbauer's findings indicate that fiction reading is an aspirational activity for young lesbian, bisexual and queer women; many participants hoped that fiction would show the "possibilities of claiming a queer identity" and were frustrated by works that contained an overly negative or homophobic view of lesbian life. Rothbauer identified four trends in her participants reading choices:

  • An orientation towards the future
  • A rejection of the standard coming-out narratives
  • A desire to read about "being lesbian," "being queer," and "being bisexual"
  • A connection with the "textual other"[49]

Interviewees also reported feeling a greater connection to community through reading, whether it was through joining fan communities of favorite authors, or discussing and sharing books with others.

The public library was one of the most important points of access for interviewees, along with the internet and bookstores. Interviewees often relied heavily on online library catalogs as safe, anonymous searches to explore lesbian fiction. Participants often did not find what they were looking for in online catalogs, but were not surprised by the lack of materials. Rothbauer suggests making materials more visible, and also improving the scope and currency of library holdings to reach these users.

Beiriger and Jackson (2007) edit

In an effort to rectify the lack of research related to the information needs of transgender individuals, Beiriger and Jackson's article surveyed the transgender population in the Transgender/Identity Resource Center (TiRC) in Portland, Oregon.[50] Using a survey tool adapted from the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Wellness Project of Ottawa-Carleton, Canada, the authors distributed the survey through TiRC staff and counselors, as well as online through listserves and websites.

Analysis of the 99 responses to the survey show that the library is one of the last places that transgender people turn for information due to lack of up to date health information, or an unwelcoming environment. Library collections meant to support the needs of transgender individuals were generally less comprehensive than those serving their gay and lesbian counterparts. The authors found that librarians should do more outreach to transgender communities to communicate a message of welcome, and that the internet could be a potentially powerful tool for outreach to these underrepresented populations.

National Park Service (2016) edit

The United States National Park Service officially unveiled a study[51] of the history of the LGBTQ community on National Coming Out Day, Tuesday, October 11, during the second week of LGBT History Month. The library and preservation communities hope this study "will assist in the protection of various LGBTQ historic sites across the country."[52]

Organizations edit

Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Round Table (GLBTRT) edit

Founded in 1970, the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Round Table (GLBTRT), now known as the Rainbow Round Table, is a subdivision of the American Library Association.[53] Its goals are both to support library professionals who identify as LGBTQ as well as promote access to LGBTQ materials for library users.[54] In addition, GLBTRT seeks to create new classification schemes for LGBTQ books that do not stigmatize these identities, and promote access under the ALA's Code of Ethics and Library Bill of Rights.[54] The GLBTRT also administers the yearly Stonewall Book Awards for juvenile, young adult, and adult LGBTQ fiction.[55]

Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section edit

The Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section is a group within the Society of American Archivists, founded in 1989, which advocates for the preservation of materials related to LGBT history within the archival profession.[56][57] It was formerly called the Lesbian and Gay Archivists Roundtable, with the name changed to the Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section, known as DSGS for short, at the section's 2017 annual meeting.[58][59][60] In August 2020, DSGS held a joint meeting with the Women's Collections Section on Zoom.[61][62]

In 2017, the section proposed the creation of a Tragedy Response Initiative Task Force to create and compile material for ready accessibility by archivists that are "facing a sudden tragedy" and to explore the feasibility of creating a standing body "within SAA that would update documentation as needed and serve as a volunteer tragedy response team."[63] The section also maintains Lavender Legacies, a directory of LGBTQ collections in North American archival repositories.[64][65]

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer/Questioning (LGBTQ) Users Special Interest Group (SIG) edit

The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) LGBTQ Users SIG is charged to address the gap in professional knowledge of LGBTQ users' needs by offering opportunities to engage in discussions about this often invisible user group. This SIG considers topics including professional attitudes, outreach, privacy, programming, and effective practice in acquiring and collecting materials of importance to LGBTQ people and allies and encourages thoughtful consideration of issues of sexuality and gender identity.[66]

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Health Science Librarians Special Interest Group (SIG) edit

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Health Science Librarians Special Interest Group (SIG) is a unit of the Medical Library Association. Its goals are to identify, collect and disseminate gay/lesbian/bisexual health care information within the Medical Library Association in order to enhance the quality and quantity of information available to colleagues within the association and within members' institutions in order to support the physical and psychological health care concerns of medical library clients.[67]

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Special Interest Group (LGBT SIG) edit

Formerly the Gay and Lesbian Interests/Issues Round Table (GLIRT),[68] the LGBT SIG is part of the Art Libraries Society of North America. They focus on the professional and cultural aspects of the LGBTQ Community through discussion and the informal exchange of information in yearly meetings during the ARLIS/NA Conference.[68]

CILIP LGBTQ+ Network edit

Active in the United Kingdom since 2020, the network seeks to "represent all UK LGBTQ+ Library Knowledge & Information workers", membership is open to both CILIP and non-CILIP members.[69]

GLBT Book Month edit

 
A 2017 LGBTQ+ Pride book display at the Barbara S. Ponce Public Library in Pinellas Park, Florida

Starting in 2015, the American Library Association marked June to be GLBT Book Month, a nationwide celebration of the authors and writings that reflect the lives and experiences of the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender community.

Originally established in the early 1990s by The Publishing Triangle as National Lesbian and Gay Book Month, this occasion is an opportunity for book lovers and libraries with the very best in GLBT literature. GLBT Book Month is an initiative of the American Library Association, and is coordinated through its Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services and the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Round Table.[70]

Additional resources edit

Adult services edit

  • Antell, K.; Strothmann, M.; Downey, J. (2013). "Self-Censorship in Selection of LGBT-Themed Materials". Reference & User Services Quarterly. 53 (2): 104–107. doi:10.5860/rusq.53n2.104.
  • Joyce, Steven L (2000). "Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Library Service: A Review of the Literature". Public Libraries. 39 (5): 270–9.
  • Kingston, M. Information needs of GLBT College Students. Thesis, Indiana University, 1998.
  • Morris, Martin; Roberto, K.R. (2016). "Information-seeking behaviour and information needs of LGBTQ health professionals: a follow-up study". Health Information & Libraries Journal. 33 (3): 204–221. doi:10.1111/hir.12139. PMID 27060995.
  • O'Leary, M. "Pink perceptions: The information needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender library users as perceived by public librarians and by the LGBT communities within Sheffield, UK and Denver, CO. USA" Thesis, University of Sheffield: 2005.
  • Passet, Joanne E (2012). "Hidden in Plain Sight: Gay and Lesbian Books in Midwestern Public Libraries, 1900--1969". Library Trends. 60 (3): 749–64. doi:10.1353/lib.2012.0010. S2CID 30107318.
  • Ritchie, Catherine J. "Collection Development of gay/lesbian/bisexual-Related Adult Non-Fiction in Medium-Sized Illinois Public Libraries." Illinois Libraries 83.2 (2001): 39–70. Library Literature and Information Science. Web. 12 Mar. 2013.
  • Rothbauer, Paulette (2004). "The Internet in the Reading Accounts of Lesbian and Queer Young Women: Failed Searches and Unsanctioned Reading". Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science. 28 (4): 89–112.
  • Stenback, T.L.; Schrader, A.M. Venturing from the closet: A qualitative study of the information needs of lesbians. Pub. Libr. Quart. 1999; 17 (3), 37–50.

Cataloging edit

  • GLBT Controlled Vocabularies and Classification Schemes[3]

Children and teen services edit

  • Abate, Michelle Ann and Kenneth Kidd, eds., Over the Rainbow: Queer Children's and Young Adult Literature (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2001).
  • Austin, J. (2019). Lines of sight and knowledge: Possibilities and actualities of trans and gender non-conforming youth in the library.  In Bharat Mehra (ed.) LGBTQ+ librarianship in the 21st century: Emerging directions of advocacy and community engagement in diverse information environments (Advances in Librarianship, volume 45). Emerald Publishing Limited, 167–196.
  • Booth, E., & Narayan, B. (2018). “Don't talk about the gay character’: Barriers to queer young adult fiction and authors in schools and libraries English in Australia, 53(2), 40–48.
  • Chapman, E (2013). "No More Controversial than a Gardening Display? Provision of LGBT-Related Fiction to Children and Young People in U.K. Public Libraries". Library Trends. 61 (3): 542–568. doi:10.1353/lib.2013.0010. S2CID 5856431.
  • Chuang, L.; Raine, G.; Scott, D.; Tauro, K. (2013). "Out in Society, Invisible on the Shelves: Discussing LIS Literature about LGBTQ Youth". Feliciter. 59 (5): 26–27.
  • Gay-Themed Picture Books for Children
  • Hillias J. Martin Jr. and James R. Murdock, Serving Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Questioning Teens: A How-to-do-it Manual for Librarians (New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, 2007).
  • Hughes-Hassell, S.; Overberg, E.; Harris, S. (2013). "Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Questioning (LGBTQ)-Themed Literature for Teens: Are School Libraries Providing Adequate Collections?". School Library Research. 16: 1–18.
  • Jamie Campbell Naidoo, Rainbow Family Collections: Selecting and Using Children's Books with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Content (Santa Barbara: Libraries Unlimited, 2012)
  • Parks, A (2012). "Opening the Gate". Young Adult Library Services. 10 (4): 22–27.
  • QueerYA: Reviews of Fiction of Interest to LGBTQ Teens
  • Stringer-Stanback, Kynita (2011). "Young Adult Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Non-Fiction Collections and Countywide Anti-Discrimination Policies". Urban Library Journal. 17 (1): 1–27. doi:10.31641/ulj170104.
  • Vincent, John (2014). LGBT+ People and the UK Cultural Sector. (London: Routledge)
  • Australian LGBTQ YA

History edit

  • Carmichael, James V. Daring to Find Our Names: The Search for Lesbigay Library History, Praeger, 1998, ISBN 978-0313299636
  • Gittings, Barbara. Gays in Library Land: The Gay and Lesbian Task Force of the American Library Association: The First Sixteen Years, 1990

Incomplete list of LGBTQ archives/libraries/special collections edit

United States edit

  • Barbara Gittings Collection at Independence Library (PA)
  • Black Queer Studies Collection, University of Texas Libraries (TX)
  • Carter/Johnson Leather Library (PA)
  • Center for Sex and Culture (CA)
  • Compass Gay & Lesbian Community Center Joel M. Starkey Library (FL)
  • Digital Transgender Archive (online)
  • Emory University Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library (GA), LGBT collections
  • Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America (MO)
  • Gay City Health Project's Michael C. Weidemann LGBT Library (WA)
  • Gerber/Hart Library and Archives (IL)
  • GLBT Historical Society (CA)
  • Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa Papers, Benson Latin American Collection, University of Texas Libraries (TX)
  • Human Sexuality Collection (NY)
  • Indiana University Library LGBTQ+ Culture Center (IN)
  • James C. Hormel Gay & Lesbian Center (CA)
  • Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies (MN)
  • John J. Wilcox, Jr. Library, William Way LGBT Community Center (PA)
  • June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives (CA)
  • Kinsey Institute
  • Labadie Collection (MI)
  • Latinx LGBTQ History Project Historical Archive (DC)
  • Lavender Library, Archives, and Cultural Exchange, Sacramento (CA)
  • Lesbian and Gay Pulp Fiction (NC)
  • Lesbian Herstory Archives (NY)
  • LGBT Community Center National History Archive (NY)
  • LGBT History Research Collection, University of Houston Libraries (TX)
  • The LGBTQ Center in South Bend (IN)
  • LGBTQ Iowa Archives & Library (IA)
  • LGBT Library of Raleigh (NC): Contains the largest collection of LGBT materials in the Southeast.
  • Library of Congress LGBT Pride Month Resources (DC)
  • Madeline Davis Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Archives at Buffalo State College
  • Northwest Lesbian and Gay History Museum Project (WA)
  • Oak Park Public Library Transgender Resource Collection (IL): Transgender Resource Collection
  • ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives (CA)
  • Quatrefoil Library (MN)
  • Queer Zine Archive Project (WI)
  • Rainbow History Project (DC)
  • Rae Lee Siporin Library (CA)
  • Texas A&M University (TX): LGBTQ+ Gender and Ethnic Studies Collections
  • The Stonewall National Museum & Archives (FL)
  • Transgender Foundation of America's Transgender Archive (TX)
  • University of Central Oklahoma Women's Research Center and BGLTQ+ Student Center (OK)
  • University of North Texas Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Archive (TX)
  • University of South Florida LGBT Initiative (FL)
  • U.S. Latinx LGBTQ Collection, Benson Latin American Collection, University of Texas Libraries (TX)

International edit

  • Australian Queer Archives
  • Book 28 Library (London, UK)
  • Bishopsgate Institute (London, UK)
  • Victorian Women's Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archive
  • Sydney Pride History Group
  • Hunter Rainbow History Group
  • Canadian LGBTQ2+ Archives
  • Cooper-Sparks Queer Community Library and Resource Centre (South Africa)
  • IHLIA LGBT Heritage (Amsterdam)
  • Lesbian and Gay Archives of New Zealand/Te Pūranga Takatāpui o Aotearoa
  • Pride NZ
  • Quebec Gay Archives/Les Archives gaies du Québec (Canada): Homepage
  • Open Book Library/Bibliothèque à livres ouverts (Canada)
  • Out on the Shelves (Canada)
  • Pride Library (Canada)
  • Small Trans Library Cardiff (Wales, UK)
  • Small Trans Library Dublin (Ireland)
  • Small Trans Library Glasgow (Scotland, UK)
  • University of Victoria Transgender Archives (Canada)
  • Hall-Carpenter Archives (UK)
  • Schwules Museum has a library and archive (Germany)

Footnotes edit

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  2. ^ Poole, Alex H. 2020. “‘Tearing the Shroud of Invisibility’: Communities of Protest Information Practices and the Fight for LGBTQ Rights in US Librarianship.” Library Quarterly 90 (4): 530–62.
  3. ^ a b Johnson, Matt (August 2007). "GLBT Controlled Vocabularies and Classification Schemes". American Library Association. Retrieved February 9, 2022.
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  5. ^ "The LGBT movements and libraries". Retrieved 13 December 2013.
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  7. ^ admin (2011-07-24). "Over the Rainbow Book List Committee". Round Tables. Retrieved 2020-02-01.
  8. ^ "Over the Rainbow Books". Over the Rainbow Books. Retrieved 2020-02-01.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2015-07-13.
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  12. ^ Woodcock, Claire (January 31, 2023). "Florida Teachers Are Emptying Classroom Libraries to Avoid Going to Jail".
  13. ^ "CS/CS/HB 1069: Education". April 3, 2023.
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  42. ^ Czarnecki, Kelly (2010-10-06). "Recent GLBT Teen Tragedies - What Can We Do?". Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  43. ^ Winerip, Michael (March 26, 2012). "Missouri School District Told to Replace Filter Blocking Pro-Gay Sites". New York Times. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  44. ^ "About". Drag Queen Story Hour. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  45. ^ Creelman, J.A.E.; Harris, R.M. (1990). "Coming out: The information needs of lesbians". Collection Building. 10 (3–4): 37–41. doi:10.1108/eb023281.
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  47. ^ Joyce, S.L.P.; Schrader, A.M. (1997). "Hidden perceptions: Edmonton gay males and the Edmonton Public Library". Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science. 22 (1): 19–37.
  48. ^ Norman, M (1999). "Out on loan: A survey of the use and information needs of users of the lesbian, gay and bisexual collection of Brighton and Hove libraries". Journal of Librarianship and Information Science. 31 (4): 188–196. doi:10.1177/096100069903100402. S2CID 145777226.
  49. ^ a b Rothbauer, Paulette (2004). ""People Aren't Afraid Anymore, but it's Hard to Find Books": Reading Practices that Inform the Personal and Social Identities of Self-Identified Lesbian and Queer Young Women". Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science. 28 (3): 53–74.
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libraries, lgbt, community, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing, excessive, inappropriate, external, links, converting, useful, links, where, appropriate, into, footnote, references,. This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the post Stonewall era the role of libraries in providing information and services to LGBTQ individuals has been a topic of discussion among library professionals Libraries can often play an important role for LGBTQ individuals looking to find information about coming out health and family topics as well as leisure reading 1 In the past 50 years advocate organizations for LGBTQ content in libraries have emerged and numerous theorists have discussed various aspects of LGBTQ library service including privacy concerns programming collection development considerations and librarian staff education needs as well as special services for juvenile and teen patrons 2 Stained glass window from the Pride Library at the University of Western Ontario Contents 1 History 2 Challenges 2 1 Legal restrictions 2 2 Privacy 2 3 Need for library staff education 2 4 Book bans 3 Collection development considerations 3 1 Barriers 3 2 Small publishers 4 LGBTQ classification and subject headings 5 LGBTQ children and teen services 5 1 Impact of the Internet 5 2 Drag Queen Story Time 6 User studies related to LGBTQ library services 6 1 Creelman and Harris 1990 6 2 Whitt 1993 6 3 Joyce and Schrader 1997 6 4 Norman 1999 6 5 Rothbauer 2004 6 6 Beiriger and Jackson 2007 6 7 National Park Service 2016 7 Organizations 7 1 Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Round Table GLBTRT 7 2 Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section 7 3 Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Queer Questioning LGBTQ Users Special Interest Group SIG 7 4 Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered Health Science Librarians Special Interest Group SIG 7 5 Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered Special Interest Group LGBT SIG 7 6 CILIP LGBTQ Network 7 7 GLBT Book Month 8 Additional resources 8 1 Adult services 8 2 Cataloging 8 3 Children and teen services 8 4 History 8 5 Incomplete list of LGBTQ archives libraries special collections 8 5 1 United States 8 5 2 International 9 FootnotesHistory editThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with United States of America and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Commensurate with the LGBT rights movement in other arenas LGBTQ activists began visibly advocating for greater representation in libraries in 1969 1 In 1970 the Task Force on Gay Liberation formed within the American Library Association ALA Now known as the Rainbow Round Table this organization is the oldest LGBTQ professional organization in the United States 1 Barbara Gittings became its coordinator in 1971 She pushed the American Library Association for more visibility for gays and lesbians in the profession She staffed a kissing booth at the Dallas convention of the ALA underneath the banner Hug a Homosexual with a women only side and a men only side When no one took advantage of it she and Patience and Sarah author Alma Routsong pen name Isabel Miller kissed in front of rolling television cameras In describing its success despite most of the reaction being negative Gittings said We needed to get an audience So we decided let s show gay love live We were offering free mind you free same sex kisses and hugs Let me tell you the aisles were mobbed but no one came into the booth to get a free hug So we hugged and kissed each other It was shown twice on the evening news once again in the morning It put us on the map In the early 1970s the Task Force on Gay Liberation campaigned to have books about the gay liberation movement at the Library of Congress reclassified from HQ 71 471 Abnormal Sexual Relations Including Sexual Crimes In 1972 after receiving a letter requesting the reclassification the Library of Congress agreed to make the shift reclassifying those books into a newly created category HQ 76 5 Homosexuality Lesbianism Gay Liberation Movement Homophile Movement Gay rights pioneer Barbara Gittings July 31 1932 February 18 2007 advocated for a revolution in the inclusion and cataloging of LGBTQ materials in public libraries to create a more positive supportive informative environment for all members of the community In the 1980s literature began to emerge which examined information seeking behaviors of gay and lesbian library patrons The 1981 book The Joy of Cataloging by Sanford Berman outlined the difficulties of accessing gay and lesbian books and information 1 In 1988 the Task Force on Gay Liberation released the International thesaurus of gay and lesbian index terms aimed at standardizing terms used for cataloging gay and lesbian related library materials and changing or removal of pejorative Library of Congress Subject Headings in relation to same sex attraction and the LGBT community 3 Four years later in 1992 Ellen Greenblatt and Cal Gough published the first collection of essays about the information needs of gay and lesbian patrons entitled Gay and Lesbian Library Service The work has since been revised as Serving LGBTIQ Library and Archives Users and remains influential 1 In 1992 American Libraries published a photo of the Gay and Lesbian Task Force now the Rainbow Round Table on the cover of its July August issue drawing both criticism and praise from the library world 4 Some commenters called the cover in poor taste and accused American Libraries of glorifying homosexuality while others were supportive of the move Christine Williams who wrote about the controversy in her 1998 essay A Lesbigay Gender Perplex Sexual Stereotyping and Professional Ambiguity in Librarianship concluded that in the mid 90s the library world was not an especially welcoming place to gays and lesbians 4 In 2007 the Rainbow Project Task Force began within the ALA to promote the presence of LGBTQ juvenile and young adult literature in library collections 5 The group now now called the Rainbow Book List Committee maintains an annotated bibliography of LGBTQ titles for youth and teens as well the yearly Rainbow List featuring the best of LGBTQ YA and children s titles 6 In 2010 the GLBT Round Table announced a new committee the Over the Rainbow Committee 7 This committee annually compiles a bibliography of books that show the GLBT community in a favorable light and reflects the interests of adults 8 The bibliographies provide guidance to libraries in the selection of positive GLBT materials After the passage of equal marriage in the State of New York in 2011 the Research Library at the Buffalo History Museum in Buffalo New York became the first known library in the United States to collect wedding memorabilia from legally wed same sex couples 9 Challenges editLegal restrictions edit Historically libraries have had instances of being legally restricted from providing LGBTQ materials in the United Kingdom Section 28 prohibited public libraries run by local authorities to promote homosexuality leading to libraries scaling back what they delivered whilst the law was in place 1988 2003 10 The passage of House Bills 1557 and 1467 in Florida state legislature in 2022 raised concerns over a possible increase in limitations on LGBT materials in school libraries 11 Although neither bill explicitly targets such materials faculty from schools across the state have reported being directed to remove previously accepted LGBTQ books from their classrooms and school libraries that could now be deemed harmful or offensive to minors under the bills 12 A proposal to expand HB 1557 to cover all school grades the original bill prohibits certain materials from being presented to children in Kindergarten through third grade is now under consideration 13 Privacy edit In their 2006 study of LGBTQ book circulation in an academic library Stephanie Mathson and Jeffery Hancks found that LGBTQ titles were 20 more likely to circulate via a self checkout machine than a traditional circulation desk staffed by a person 14 However their sample size was small so study results may be inconclusive 14 Need for library staff education edit Providing unbiased service to all patrons is one of the central tenets of the Code of Ethics of the American Library Association 15 Articles dating back to Richard Ashby s 1987 piece entitled Library Services to Lesbian and Gay People have argued that this commitment to neutrality should provide the foundation for complete library service for all people regardless of sexual orientation or gender presentation 16 Ashby argues that libraries especially in their role as providers of literature for pleasure reading can support LGBTQ individuals overcome a sense of isolation within the larger community He emphasizes the importance of staff education to provide all LGBTQ individuals a safe space within the library including Training staff to work with diverse populations specifically LGBTQ patrons Comprehensive and effective collection development policies for LGBTQ materials Librarian education to gain familiarity with publishers or sources for LGBTQ materials including the utilization of local bookstores or community groups 16 Echoing many of Ashby s assertions in her 2007 paper entitled Can Scottish public library services claim they are socially inclusive of all minority groups when lesbian fiction is still so inaccessible Jaqueline Goldthorp outlines some of the challenges that lesbians face when trying to find lesbian fiction in Scottish libraries 17 She ties her study of lesbian literature to the importance of reading fiction on the psychological well being of women arguing that women often turn to fiction reading for self affirmation and identity building 17 In addition lesbian fiction titles can be priced up to 30 higher than non lesbian titles meaning that for many low income or working class lesbians libraries are the only means of access for these titles 17 Goldthorp surveyed 26 Scottish libraries and found that in 2007 the majority had less than ten books labelled as lesbian fiction and almost no recent award winning titles She suggests diversity training and education about methods and resources for providing service to lesbians for library staff as a way of promoting greater inclusion Mehra and Braquet s 2007 article Library and Information Science Professionals as Community Action Researchers in an Academic Setting expands further upon the central role of librarians in promoting LGBTQ acceptance noting that the profession is uniquely situated to provide access to LGBT literature and information 18 In the UK 2016 research by Janine Walker and Jo Bates found that Section 28 still had a lasting effect on school libraries with very little LGBTQ literature available or support from librarians being given 19 Later in 2019 John Vincent said that through his research he still met British librarians who assumed Section 28 was still in place 20 Book bans edit Main article 2021 2023 book banning in the United States Conservative objections of certain titles available in public and school libraries have had a resurgence in 2021 and 2022 in USA States such as Florida Wyoming and Texas One legislator in Texas proposed a list of books to be banned in school libraries which when analyzed were found to be 62 LGBTQ titles 21 The American Library Association maintains a lists of the most challenged books of the year as well as the most challenged books of the decade using data collected by their Office of Intellectual Freedom This data has been collected for three decades now and materials relating to LGBTQ topics make up a notable portion of these lists time and time again 22 For example a study found that f rom 2001 to 2015 sixteen books 22 on ALA s top ten list were challenged for homosexuality 23 Nonprofit organization PEN America has similarly been collecting data on book ban attempts in schools across the nation Their 2021 2022 report found that out of the 1 648 unique book titles banned during the period studied July 2021 June 2022 over 40 of them dealt with LGBTQ themes and or have major characters that identify as members of the LGBTQ community 24 As the data PEN America pulls from is limited to publicly accessible records and news sources it is possible the true scope of banned LGBTQ titles is much greater Collection development considerations editBarriers edit In a 2005 article in the journal Progressive Librarian Jennifer Downey argued that even award winning books by or about LGBTQ individuals fail to make it into library collections 25 She cites internal censorship as one potential cause as well as the assumption that library patrons who want LGBTQ titles will simply request them from other libraries via inter library loan In addition she found that many librarians were unfamiliar with LGBTQ titles To increase familiarity she recommends reading LGBTQ book review sources and bringing others including community members into the process suggestions which she draws from Loverich and Degnan s 1999 article Out of the Shelves 26 Small publishers edit A 2012 Publishers Weekly article cites the growing diversity of small presses that publish LGBTQ titles but a decline in the traditional romance and erotica genres 27 The article also discusses the mainstreaming of LGBT literature though emphasizes that even with wider acceptance of LGBTQ identities the need for LGBTQ stories has not disappeared and that independent publishers are still the largest producers of LGBTQ literature 27 In his Rainbow Family Collections Jamie Naidoo also discusses challenges facing small specialized publishers of LGBTQ children s books and includes interviews with select publishing houses 28 Smaller publishers also struggle with their titles being found on discovery platforms where their catalogue records often have less detailed metadata 29 LGBTQ classification and subject headings editBefore the 1960s the term homosexuality was the basic search heading for most libraries 30 that adopted the Library of Congress Subject Headings According to LGBT librarian Steve Wolf homosexuality was classified under sexual deviations until 1972 when it was moved to sexual life 31 Since then individuals who identify as LGBTQ have made major strides in reforming the subject headings that many libraries use The Library of Congress added Transgender people and Transgenderism as main subject headings in 2007 32 Creating new and accurate headings for the LGBTQ community makes it easier for LGBTQ people to find information that is pertinent to their needs Recent literature has approached the issue of library classification from a queer theory perspective In her 2013 article Queering the Catalog Queer Theory and the Politics of Correction librarian Emily Drabinski defines the relationship between LGBTQ identity and the library as a historically contingent one For Drabinski there can be no correct categorical or linguistic structures only those that discursively emerge and circulate in a particular context 33 Drabinski says that a queer approach to cataloging includes reference librarians and users who can engage in dialogue about underlying biases and help dismantle oppressive language In a 2014 article Drabinski Amber Billey and K R Roberto criticized RDA Rule 9 7 which forces catalogers to assign a gender when creating authority records leaving out non binary and gender fluid identities 34 Marika Cifor uses queer theory to argue that hatred should be used as an organizing principle in LGBT archives She writes that examining the arrangement and description of hate mail and messages archival collecting around hate crimes and documenting and describing queer and trans self hatred demonstrates that hatred is a useful lens for examining and deconstructing normative power and its affective circulations and structures 35 Homosaurus has been an initiative introduced as an extensive LGBTQ controlled vocabulary 36 third party source needed LGBTQ children and teen services edit nbsp A 2018 display of young adult books featuring LGBTQ characters or themes at the Barbara S Ponce Public Library in Pinellas Park FloridaAlexander Parks and others have identified libraries as potentially important safe places for LGBTQ youth and teens especially in the face of bullying 37 He suggests the inclusion of LGBTQ titles in library displays or book talks to promote greater visibility However according to a 2005 study by Ann Curry though many LGBTQ teens have the very similar concerns to their adult counterparts librarians often do not answer their questions related to LGBTQ topics in a sensitive or welcoming manner 38 Studies by Carmichael and Greenblatt have emphasized that the library is an important place for teens who are coming out to find information because of the potential anonymity it provides 38 In his examination of public libraries in areas with large concentrations of same sex families Naidoo finds that many children s librarians are unaware of the LGBTQ families in their community and provide a mixed bag of services collections and programs 39 According to the Young Adult Library Services Association s information for being welcoming and inclusionary of trans teens at library programs offering a time for students to give their preferred names or pronouns when starting a program gives them the opportunity to let staff and fellow patrons know how they would prefer to be addressed 40 Impact of the Internet edit LGBTQ individuals were some of the early adopters of the internet and are still represented in high percentages across social media 41 In addition 55 of LGBTQ individuals who responded to a 2009 survey said that they read blogs compared to 38 of heterosexual respondents 41 The internet can often be influential to young people seeking information about health coming out or to find community but can also put teens at risk of cyberbullying or harassment 42 Some libraries and schools notably the school district in Camdenton Missouri have been ordered to remove internet filtering software that blocked access to LGBTQ friendly websites that teens often turn to for support 43 Drag Queen Story Time edit Main article Drag Queen Story Hour Libraries have been one of the main hosts of Drag Queen Story Hours also known as Drag Queen Storytime since the concept creation by Michelle Tea in 2015 44 Whilst they have been popular busy events internationally they have also been controversial attracting protests and complaints to libraries In some communities the concept of Drag Queen Story Hour can be controversial and might not be universally accepted potentially leading to protests or boycotts of the library This initiative fosters an environment of acceptance and diversity by featuring drag queens as Storytime readers thereby challenging traditional gender norms and offering a broader perspective on identity For children it s an opportunity to engage with literature in a fun interactive way while also learning about self expression empathy and the importance of individuality While Drag Queen Story Hour offers a range of benefits from educational to social it s not without its challenges and criticisms The success of the program often depends on careful planning community involvement and a clear understanding of the objectives and potential pitfalls User studies related to LGBTQ library services editCreelman and Harris 1990 edit Possibly the first study to provide a comprehensive overview of the information needs of non heterosexual people Creelman and Harris article focused on lesbians information needs at specific points in their lives 45 They used a sense making model which considered lesbians information needs within a particular context Their data came from a series of 50 interviews with lesbian women who were part of a lesbian group in Toronto Canada and used the snowball sampling approach to recruit additional participants Eighty four percent of interviewees said that they were aware of the library as a source of information related to lesbian identities compared to 62 who were aware of gay bars and 58 aware of gay and lesbian organizations However the authors found many respondents were frustrated with the negative or male centric literature that made up the bulk of information available in libraries libraries needed to ensure that information was readily available current and positive to best serve lesbian populations Whitt 1993 edit Alisa Whitt s 1993 study also focused on the information needs of lesbians and what lesbians expected from the library during different life stages 46 Whitt collected data by sending out a survey via a lesbian newsletter that circulated in North Carolina which drew 141 respondents For many lesbians who responded to Whitt s survey the library was the most important source for locating information during the initial stages of coming out especially in remote areas without a visible community Whitt determined three shifts in the type of information desired by respondents from early in the coming out process to a later more established identity She found that information needs went from broad to specifically focused from factual or non fiction to entertainment or fiction and that respondents became more discerning about the information they needed with age Many respondents who never used the library cited embarrassment or lack of knowledge about available information as reasons Even those that did frequent the library often said that they were too embarrassed to ask for help many expected shocked reactions or outright homophobia from librarians Some common complaints about library collections from those who did use them were that information was negative outdated or difficult to find Whitt concluded that more staff training was needed to address these perceptions She also found that those respondents who regularly used a college or university library had a more positive experience finding needed information than those who used only the public library Joyce and Schrader 1997 edit In the first user study specifically addressed towards gay males Joyce and Schrader studied perceptions of the library system in Edmonton Canada 47 Using an anonymous questionnaire distributed to gay community organizations the authors collected data on 21 questions related to three aspects of information seeking personal information information needs related to coming out and ongoing information needs The survey had 47 respondents who had a generally high level of education The library was the most often cited resource of information related to coming out and for ongoing needs followed by gay organizations and friends When asked what types of materials respondents borrowed from the library they most frequently cited music followed by nonfiction and fiction However respondents had an overall negative impression about the amount of information related to gay males contained in the library and suggested the need for expanding the gay collection networking with gay and lesbian organizations and subscribing to gay magazines Joyce and Schrader found similarities between their study and the ones by Whitt and Creelman and Harris which came before it Some of the common themes included the importance of the library especially in the early stages of coming out the need for more specific information over time and the general lack of services Norman 1999 edit Norman s 1999 study provides quantitative analysis of survey responses from 44 self identified lesbian gay and bisexual individuals using the Brighton and Hove UK public libraries 48 The survey was aimed at identifying five aspects of the libraries LGB users including demographics the effect of centralizing a collection whether LGB individuals use bibliographies to find reading as well as reasons for using and perceptions of library service Results of the survey were analyzed using SPSS Results indicated that fiction or other materials for entertainment were the most popular materials from the library and that more than half used bibliographies to locate new reading materials Many respondents cited the high prices of gay or lesbian books as one of the reasons for heavy use of the library Though some respondents felt that the balance of lesbian to gay titles was skewed in favor of lesbian titles the overall perception of Hove and Brighton s services to LGB patrons was excellent or good Rothbauer 2004 edit As an offshoot of her dissertation research Rothbauer interviewed 17 self identified lesbian bisexual and queer women between the ages of 18 and 23 about their discretionary reading habits 49 To analyze the data she used open coding techniques for textual analysis and also relied on some participant writing and journals Rothbauer s findings indicate that fiction reading is an aspirational activity for young lesbian bisexual and queer women many participants hoped that fiction would show the possibilities of claiming a queer identity and were frustrated by works that contained an overly negative or homophobic view of lesbian life Rothbauer identified four trends in her participants reading choices An orientation towards the future A rejection of the standard coming out narratives A desire to read about being lesbian being queer and being bisexual A connection with the textual other 49 Interviewees also reported feeling a greater connection to community through reading whether it was through joining fan communities of favorite authors or discussing and sharing books with others The public library was one of the most important points of access for interviewees along with the internet and bookstores Interviewees often relied heavily on online library catalogs as safe anonymous searches to explore lesbian fiction Participants often did not find what they were looking for in online catalogs but were not surprised by the lack of materials Rothbauer suggests making materials more visible and also improving the scope and currency of library holdings to reach these users Beiriger and Jackson 2007 edit In an effort to rectify the lack of research related to the information needs of transgender individuals Beiriger and Jackson s article surveyed the transgender population in the Transgender Identity Resource Center TiRC in Portland Oregon 50 Using a survey tool adapted from the Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Wellness Project of Ottawa Carleton Canada the authors distributed the survey through TiRC staff and counselors as well as online through listserves and websites Analysis of the 99 responses to the survey show that the library is one of the last places that transgender people turn for information due to lack of up to date health information or an unwelcoming environment Library collections meant to support the needs of transgender individuals were generally less comprehensive than those serving their gay and lesbian counterparts The authors found that librarians should do more outreach to transgender communities to communicate a message of welcome and that the internet could be a potentially powerful tool for outreach to these underrepresented populations National Park Service 2016 edit The United States National Park Service officially unveiled a study 51 of the history of the LGBTQ community on National Coming Out Day Tuesday October 11 during the second week of LGBT History Month The library and preservation communities hope this study will assist in the protection of various LGBTQ historic sites across the country 52 Organizations editGay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Round Table GLBTRT edit Founded in 1970 the Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Round Table GLBTRT now known as the Rainbow Round Table is a subdivision of the American Library Association 53 Its goals are both to support library professionals who identify as LGBTQ as well as promote access to LGBTQ materials for library users 54 In addition GLBTRT seeks to create new classification schemes for LGBTQ books that do not stigmatize these identities and promote access under the ALA s Code of Ethics and Library Bill of Rights 54 The GLBTRT also administers the yearly Stonewall Book Awards for juvenile young adult and adult LGBTQ fiction 55 Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section edit The Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section is a group within the Society of American Archivists founded in 1989 which advocates for the preservation of materials related to LGBT history within the archival profession 56 57 It was formerly called the Lesbian and Gay Archivists Roundtable with the name changed to the Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section known as DSGS for short at the section s 2017 annual meeting 58 59 60 In August 2020 DSGS held a joint meeting with the Women s Collections Section on Zoom 61 62 In 2017 the section proposed the creation of a Tragedy Response Initiative Task Force to create and compile material for ready accessibility by archivists that are facing a sudden tragedy and to explore the feasibility of creating a standing body within SAA that would update documentation as needed and serve as a volunteer tragedy response team 63 The section also maintains Lavender Legacies a directory of LGBTQ collections in North American archival repositories 64 65 Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Queer Questioning LGBTQ Users Special Interest Group SIG edit The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA LGBTQ Users SIG is charged to address the gap in professional knowledge of LGBTQ users needs by offering opportunities to engage in discussions about this often invisible user group This SIG considers topics including professional attitudes outreach privacy programming and effective practice in acquiring and collecting materials of importance to LGBTQ people and allies and encourages thoughtful consideration of issues of sexuality and gender identity 66 Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered Health Science Librarians Special Interest Group SIG edit The Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered Health Science Librarians Special Interest Group SIG is a unit of the Medical Library Association Its goals are to identify collect and disseminate gay lesbian bisexual health care information within the Medical Library Association in order to enhance the quality and quantity of information available to colleagues within the association and within members institutions in order to support the physical and psychological health care concerns of medical library clients 67 Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgendered Special Interest Group LGBT SIG edit Formerly the Gay and Lesbian Interests Issues Round Table GLIRT 68 the LGBT SIG is part of the Art Libraries Society of North America They focus on the professional and cultural aspects of the LGBTQ Community through discussion and the informal exchange of information in yearly meetings during the ARLIS NA Conference 68 CILIP LGBTQ Network edit Active in the United Kingdom since 2020 the network seeks to represent all UK LGBTQ Library Knowledge amp Information workers membership is open to both CILIP and non CILIP members 69 GLBT Book Month edit nbsp A 2017 LGBTQ Pride book display at the Barbara S Ponce Public Library in Pinellas Park FloridaStarting in 2015 the American Library Association marked June to be GLBT Book Month a nationwide celebration of the authors and writings that reflect the lives and experiences of the gay lesbian bisexual and transgender community Originally established in the early 1990s by The Publishing Triangle as National Lesbian and Gay Book Month this occasion is an opportunity for book lovers and libraries with the very best in GLBT literature GLBT Book Month is an initiative of the American Library Association and is coordinated through its Office for Diversity Literacy and Outreach Services and the Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Round Table 70 Additional resources editAdult services edit Antell K Strothmann M Downey J 2013 Self Censorship in Selection of LGBT Themed Materials Reference amp User Services Quarterly 53 2 104 107 doi 10 5860 rusq 53n2 104 Joyce Steven L 2000 Lesbian Gay and Bisexual Library Service A Review of the Literature Public Libraries 39 5 270 9 Kingston M Information needs of GLBT College Students Thesis Indiana University 1998 Morris Martin Roberto K R 2016 Information seeking behaviour and information needs of LGBTQ health professionals a follow up study Health Information amp Libraries Journal 33 3 204 221 doi 10 1111 hir 12139 PMID 27060995 O Leary M Pink perceptions The information needs of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender library users as perceived by public librarians and by the LGBT communities within Sheffield UK and Denver CO USA Thesis University of Sheffield 2005 Passet Joanne E 2012 Hidden in Plain Sight Gay and Lesbian Books in Midwestern Public Libraries 1900 1969 Library Trends 60 3 749 64 doi 10 1353 lib 2012 0010 S2CID 30107318 Ritchie Catherine J Collection Development of gay lesbian bisexual Related Adult Non Fiction in Medium Sized Illinois Public Libraries Illinois Libraries 83 2 2001 39 70 Library Literature and Information Science Web 12 Mar 2013 Rothbauer Paulette 2004 The Internet in the Reading Accounts of Lesbian and Queer Young Women Failed Searches and Unsanctioned Reading Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 28 4 89 112 Stenback T L Schrader A M Venturing from the closet A qualitative study of the information needs of lesbians Pub Libr Quart 1999 17 3 37 50 Cataloging edit GLBT Controlled Vocabularies and Classification Schemes 3 Children and teen services edit Abate Michelle Ann and Kenneth Kidd eds Over the Rainbow Queer Children s and Young Adult Literature Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press 2001 Austin J 2019 Lines of sight and knowledge Possibilities and actualities of trans and gender non conforming youth in the library In Bharat Mehra ed LGBTQ librarianship in the 21st century Emerging directions of advocacy and community engagement in diverse information environments Advances in Librarianship volume 45 Emerald Publishing Limited 167 196 Booth E amp Narayan B 2018 Don t talk about the gay character Barriers to queer young adult fiction and authors in schools and libraries English in Australia 53 2 40 48 Chapman E 2013 No More Controversial than a Gardening Display Provision of LGBT Related Fiction to Children and Young People in U K Public Libraries Library Trends 61 3 542 568 doi 10 1353 lib 2013 0010 S2CID 5856431 Chuang L Raine G Scott D Tauro K 2013 Out in Society Invisible on the Shelves Discussing LIS Literature about LGBTQ Youth Feliciter 59 5 26 27 Gay Themed Picture Books for Children Hillias J Martin Jr and James R Murdock Serving Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Questioning Teens A How to do it Manual for Librarians New York Neal Schuman Publishers 2007 Hughes Hassell S Overberg E Harris S 2013 Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Questioning LGBTQ Themed Literature for Teens Are School Libraries Providing Adequate Collections School Library Research 16 1 18 Jamie Campbell Naidoo Rainbow Family Collections Selecting and Using Children s Books with Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer Content Santa Barbara Libraries Unlimited 2012 Parks A 2012 Opening the Gate Young Adult Library Services 10 4 22 27 QueerYA Reviews of Fiction of Interest to LGBTQ Teens Stringer Stanback Kynita 2011 Young Adult Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Questioning LGBTQ Non Fiction Collections and Countywide Anti Discrimination Policies Urban Library Journal 17 1 1 27 doi 10 31641 ulj170104 Vincent John 2014 LGBT People and the UK Cultural Sector London Routledge Australian LGBTQ YAHistory edit Carmichael James V Daring to Find Our Names The Search for Lesbigay Library History Praeger 1998 ISBN 978 0313299636 Gittings Barbara Gays in Library Land The Gay and Lesbian Task Force of the American Library Association The First Sixteen Years 1990Incomplete list of LGBTQ archives libraries special collections edit United States edit Barbara Gittings Collection at Independence Library PA Black Queer Studies Collection University of Texas Libraries TX Carter Johnson Leather Library PA Center for Sex and Culture CA Compass Gay amp Lesbian Community Center Joel M Starkey Library FL Digital Transgender Archive online Emory University Stuart A Rose Manuscript Archives and Rare Book Library GA LGBT collections Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid America MO Gay City Health Project s Michael C Weidemann LGBT Library WA Gerber Hart Library and Archives IL GLBT Historical Society CA Gloria Evangelina Anzaldua Papers Benson Latin American Collection University of Texas Libraries TX Human Sexuality Collection NY Indiana University Library LGBTQ Culture Center IN James C Hormel Gay amp Lesbian Center CA Jean Nickolaus Tretter Collection in Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Studies MN John J Wilcox Jr Library William Way LGBT Community Center PA June L Mazer Lesbian Archives CA Kinsey Institute Library amp Special Collections IN Labadie Collection MI Latinx LGBTQ History Project Historical Archive DC Lavender Library Archives and Cultural Exchange Sacramento CA Lesbian and Gay Pulp Fiction NC Lesbian Herstory Archives NY LGBT Community Center National History Archive NY LGBT History Research Collection University of Houston Libraries TX The LGBTQ Center in South Bend IN LGBTQ Iowa Archives amp Library IA LGBT Library of Raleigh NC Contains the largest collection of LGBT materials in the Southeast Library of Congress LGBT Pride Month Resources DC Madeline Davis Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Archives at Buffalo State College Northwest Lesbian and Gay History Museum Project WA Oak Park Public Library Transgender Resource Collection IL Transgender Resource Collection ONE National Gay amp Lesbian Archives CA Quatrefoil Library MN Queer Zine Archive Project WI Rainbow History Project DC Rae Lee Siporin Library CA Texas A amp M University TX LGBTQ Gender and Ethnic Studies Collections The Stonewall National Museum amp Archives FL Transgender Foundation of America s Transgender Archive TX University of Central Oklahoma Women s Research Center and BGLTQ Student Center OK University of North Texas Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Archive TX University of South Florida LGBT Initiative FL U S Latinx LGBTQ Collection Benson Latin American Collection University of Texas Libraries TX International edit Australian Queer Archives Book 28 Library London UK Bishopsgate Institute London UK Victorian Women s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archive Sydney Pride History Group Hunter Rainbow History Group Canadian LGBTQ2 Archives Cooper Sparks Queer Community Library and Resource Centre South Africa IHLIA LGBT Heritage Amsterdam Lesbian and Gay Archives of New Zealand Te Puranga Takatapui o Aotearoa Pride NZ Quebec Gay Archives Les Archives gaies du Quebec Canada Homepage Open Book Library Bibliotheque a livres ouverts Canada Out on the Shelves Canada Pride Library Canada Small Trans Library Cardiff Wales UK Small Trans Library Dublin Ireland Small Trans Library Glasgow Scotland UK University of Victoria Transgender Archives Canada Centre de Documentacio Armand de Fluvia of Casal Lambda Spain Hall Carpenter Archives UK Schwules Museum has a library and archive Germany Footnotes edit a b c d e Keilty Patrick 2009 Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Information Needs Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science 3rd Edition 3275 3280 doi 10 1081 E ELIS3 120044121 ISBN 978 0 8493 9712 7 Poole Alex H 2020 Tearing the Shroud of Invisibility Communities of Protest Information Practices and the Fight for LGBTQ Rights in US Librarianship Library Quarterly 90 4 530 62 a b Johnson Matt August 2007 GLBT Controlled Vocabularies and Classification Schemes American Library Association Retrieved February 9 2022 a b Glodoski K 1992 Controversy American Libraries highlight GLBTF on cover of July August issue members take issue Retrieved 13 December 2013 The LGBT movements and libraries Retrieved 13 December 2013 About Rainbow Books Retrieved 13 December 2013 admin 2011 07 24 Over the Rainbow Book List Committee Round Tables Retrieved 2020 02 01 Over the Rainbow Books Over the Rainbow Books Retrieved 2020 02 01 Wedding memorabilia made historic Archived from the original on 2015 07 13 Retrieved 2015 07 13 The Destruction Caused by Clause 28 Glasgow Women s Library Retrieved 2022 02 13 Izaguirre Anthony Gomez Licon Adriana August 15 2022 Don t Say Gay law brings worry confusion to Florida schools PBS Woodcock Claire January 31 2023 Florida Teachers Are Emptying Classroom Libraries to Avoid Going to Jail CS CS HB 1069 Education April 3 2023 a b Mathson Stephanie Hancks Jeffrey 2006 Privacy Please A Comparison between Self Checkout and Book Checkout Desk Circulation Rates for LGBT and Other Books Journal of Access Services 4 3 27 37 doi 10 1300 j204v04n03 02 S2CID 143736073 Code of Ethics of the American Library Association a b Ashby R 1987 Library Services to Lesbian and Gay People Assistant Librarian 80 10 153 5 a b c Goldthorp J 2007 Can Scottish public library services claim they are socially inclusive of all minority groups when lesbian fiction is still so inaccessible Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 39 4 234 248 doi 10 1177 0961000607083215 S2CID 33543252 Braquet Donna and Bharat Mehra Library and Information Science Professionals as Community Action Researchers in an Academic Setting Top Ten Directions to further Institutional Change for People of Diverse Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities Library Trends 56 2 2007 542 565 Academic OneFile Web 4 Mar 2013 Walker Janine Bates Jo 2016 Developments in LGBTQ provision in secondary school library services since the abolition of Section 28 Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 48 3 269 283 doi 10 1177 0961000614566340 ISSN 0961 0006 S2CID 36944979 Vincent John 2019 Moving into the Mainstream Is that Somewhere We Want to Go in the United Kingdom LGBTQ librarianship in the 21st century emerging directions of advocacy and community engagement in diverse information environments Bharat Mehra United Kingdom ISBN 978 1 78756 473 2 OCLC 1098173907 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link It s 2021 and once again they re banning books What message does that send Juno Dawson the Guardian 2021 12 19 Retrieved 2022 02 13 Steele Jennifer Summer 2022 Challenges to Children s Picture Books with LGBTQ Themes A 30 Year Review Children amp Libraries The Journal of the Association for Library Service to Children 20 2 3 9 Sheffield Sonja Summer 2017 An Assessment of Frequently Challenged LGBTQ Books in Alabama Public Libraries Southeastern Librarian 65 2 1 14 Friedman Jonathan Johnson Nadine eds September 19 2022 Banned in the USA The Growing Movement to Censor Books in Schools Downey Jennifer 2005 Public Library Collection Development Issues regarding the Information Needs of Glbt Patrons PDF Progressive Librarian 25 86 95 Loverich Patricia Degnan Darrah 1999 Out on the Shelves Not Really Gay Lesbian Bisexual Books in Short Supply Library Journal 124 11 55 a b Bond Gwenda Breaking Out Publishers Weekly 259 16 2012 26 28 Professional Development Collection Web Naidoo Jamie Campbell 2012 Rainbow Family Collections Selecting and Using Children s Books with Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer Content Santa Barbara CA Libraries Unlimited George Isadore Auerbach 2023 Acquiring Transgender Literature PDF nag org uk pp 12 14 McClary Carrie From Homosexuality to Transvestites An analysis of subject headings assigned to works of GLBT fiction in Canadian public libraries Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 31 2 Wolf Steve 1972 Sex and the Single Cataloger in Revolting Librarians San Francisco Booklegger Johnson Matt 2010 09 27 Transgender Subject Access History and Current Practice Cataloging amp Classification Quarterly 48 8 661 683 doi 10 1080 01639370903534398 ISSN 0163 9374 S2CID 62583277 Drabinski Emily 2013 01 01 Queering the Catalog Queer Theory and the Politics of Correction The Library Quarterly Information Community Policy 83 2 94 111 doi 10 1086 669547 JSTOR 10 1086 669547 S2CID 54961169 What s Gender Got to Do With It A Critique of RDA Rule 9 7 University Libraries Faculty and Staff Publications 19 Cifor Marika Spring 2016 Aligning Bodies Collecting Arranging and Describing Hatred for a Critical Queer Archives Library Trends 64 4 756 775 doi 10 1353 lib 2016 0010 hdl 2142 94939 S2CID 49481911 Homosaurus About Parks Alexander F 2012 Opening the Gate Young Adult Library Services 10 4 22 7 a b Curry Ann 2005 If I Ask Will they Answer Reference amp User Services Quarterly 45 1 65 75 Naidoo Jamie 2013 Over the rainbow and under the radar Library services and programs to LGBTQ families Children and Libraries Children amp Libraries The Journal of the Association for Library Service to Children 11 3 34 40 Supporting Trans Teens in the Public Library PDF Young Adult Library Services Association Retrieved 2018 10 27 a b Greenblatt Ellen 2011 Serving LGBTIQ Library and Archives Users essays on outreach service collections and access McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 9780786448944 Czarnecki Kelly 2010 10 06 Recent GLBT Teen Tragedies What Can We Do Retrieved 13 December 2013 Winerip Michael March 26 2012 Missouri School District Told to Replace Filter Blocking Pro Gay Sites New York Times Retrieved 13 December 2013 About Drag Queen Story Hour Retrieved 2023 08 06 Creelman J A E Harris R M 1990 Coming out The information needs of lesbians Collection Building 10 3 4 37 41 doi 10 1108 eb023281 Whitt A J 1993 The information needs of lesbians Library and Information Science Research 15 3 275 288 Joyce S L P Schrader A M 1997 Hidden perceptions Edmonton gay males and the Edmonton Public Library Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 22 1 19 37 Norman M 1999 Out on loan A survey of the use and information needs of users of the lesbian gay and bisexual collection of Brighton and Hove libraries Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 31 4 188 196 doi 10 1177 096100069903100402 S2CID 145777226 a b Rothbauer Paulette 2004 People Aren t Afraid Anymore but it s Hard to Find Books Reading Practices that Inform the Personal and Social Identities of Self Identified Lesbian and Queer Young Women Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 28 3 53 74 Beiriger Angie Jackson Rose M 2007 An Assessment of the Information Needs of Transgender Communities in Portland Oregon Public Library Quarterly 26 1 45 54 doi 10 1300 j118v26n01 03 S2CID 46496526 Series LGBTQ America A Theme Study of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer History National Park Service Retrieved February 9 2022 Bajko Matthew S 2016 Park service releases LGBT history study The Bay Area Reporter GLBTRT History Timeline 2017 01 25 a b GLBTRT Bylaws 2009 11 11 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Stonewall Awards Retrieved 15 November 2013 Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on January 19 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 Mission Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved April 3 2021 2017 Annual Meeting Minutes Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists July 26 2017 Archived from the original on February 4 2019 Retrieved April 3 2021 2018 Annual Meeting Minutes Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists August 17 2018 Archived from the original on February 4 2019 Retrieved April 3 2021 McGovern Nancy Y 2018 Archives History and Technology Prologue and Possibilities for SAA and the Archival Community American Archivist 81 2 9 22 doi 10 17723 0360 9081 81 1 9 Retrieved April 3 2021 SAA Annual Meeting 2020 Diverse Sexuality and Gender DSGS Women s Collections WCS joint section meeting Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists August 17 2020 Archived from the original on April 4 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 REVISED Women s Collections and Diverse Sexuality and Gender Sections Call for Proposals SAA 2020 Women s Collections Section Society of American Archivists January 27 2020 Archived from the original on March 12 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 Zanish Belcher Tanya December 5 2017 From the November SAA Council Meeting Off the Record Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 Retzloff Tim October 18 2017 Queer Digging in the Archives Process a blog for american history Organization of American Historians Archived from the original on May 20 2020 Retrieved April 3 2021 Lesbian and Gay Archives Roundtable Guide to Sources in North America Diverse Sexuality and Gender Section Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on April 27 2020 Retrieved April 3 2021 IFLA LGBTQ Users SIG Retrieved 3 February 2014 MLA LGBT SIG Retrieved 6 December 2014 a b ARLIS L Archives ARLIS Archives Retrieved February 9 2022 CILIP LGBTQ network group page Retrieved 13 February 2022 GLBT Book Month 2015 03 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Libraries and the LGBT community amp oldid 1207656253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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