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APLIC-INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATORSpring 2003, Issue #77 |
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Table of Contents
President's Messageby Margie Shiels As we look to our fast approaching Annual Meeting, I am encouraged by the enthusiasm and innovation within our group. Zuali Malsawma, and Mary Panke have led the effort to organize an outstanding program on knowledge management for us in Minneapolis. To think we were worried about locating speakers... Knowledge Management is a term I've heard in our organization for a couple of years now. I will be interested to hear how colleagues are involved in projects that seek to organize this nebulous asset. Since knowledge is an individual response to life experience, I am intrigued by the efforts to capture knowledge and pin it down so that others can benefit. To explore the topic further, please visit http://www.brint.com/km/ as a starting point. The site includes full text articles, case studies and an abundance of resources on KM. Study up before the meeting! The conference planning seems to have gone exceptionally smoothly this year. I appreciate everyone's efforts and participation in the planning. I'm sure I won't remember to thank everyone, but I'd especially like to express my appreciation to: Zuali Malsawama for spearheading the conference; John Carlson for planning the banquet; Mary Panke for organizing our tour and helping to locate and plan speakers; Julia Cleaver for organizing the breakout sessions; and Anil Kumar for writing the checks. I also applaud those members who are presenting or leading breakout sessions this year. I am especially pleased that Modou Fall Sall of the Information and Documentation Center, African AIDS Research Network in Senegal will be able to join us and present some of the issues related to KM in Africa. I look forward to seeing you in Minneapolis. Margie Shiels APLIC-I Board Meeting 2002 Wrap-upby Yan Fu The annual Fall APLIC-I Board Meeting was successfully held on October 24 and 25, 2002 in Washington, DC. Population Reference Bureau generously hosted the gathering of 13 attendees, providing delicious breakfast/lunch, a spacious conference room, computing equipment and a personal welcome address from PRB Director of Domestic Programs, John Haaga. He spoke highly of the value of population libraries and acknowledged his dependence on Zuali Malsawma for his information/research needs. Board members reviewed the work of APLIC-I in the past year. Committee chairs reported in their areas of responsibilities including finance, archives, duplicate program, website, listserv, newsletter and membership. Board members engaged in heated discussions on several issues regarding future directions. The Board discussed the issue of how to increase membership and the role of publicity in such an endeavor. Conference was seen as one of the major publicity channels we have. Conference registration and membership renewal notices will go out together. Funmi Akhigbe volunteered to help Julia Cleaver. Awarding travel stipends was seen as another way to attract members. The policy of awarding travel stipends was discussed and a $1000 maximum figure was set for applicants from developing countries and $500 for those from developed countries. The Board determined that a maximum of $2000 per year could be allocated for granting stipends related to APLIC-I conference attendance. The Board discussed the international component of APLIC-I and ways to better integrate the international members. The suggestion to mail the Communicator to related international libraries was approved. An outreach piece will be written to solicit email addresses from potential international members to be added to our distribution list. The issue of APLIC-I website and electronic resource guides was also discussed. Tara Murray has since updated the member libraries list with OPAC availability, which we have found extremely useful. More work will be done in the areas of updating existing electronic resources guides and developing new ones so that members will come to the website often to find what they need. Conference planning is a great part of the Fall Board Meeting. A lot of discussion went into setting the theme and schedule and coming up with the names of conference speakers. The Board has put together an exciting program and we look forward to seeing old and new members in Minneapolis. For details, follow the conference link in this issue of the Communicator. We were very excited to have 3 new Board of Directors at the annual meeting. Funmi Akhigbe from Popline, Tara Murray from Penn State and Mary Panke from Population Action International brought with them a lot of enthusiasm and fresh ideas. Anne Ilacqua from Brown was wooed back to serve again after many years of prior experience with the Board. The Board under the leadership of Margie Shield and Zuala Malsawma is in a very good position to make greater progress and provide rewarding experiences for APLIC-I members. More details about the Board Meeting can be found via meeting
minutes by APLIC- I Secretary Kay Willson. 2003 Annual Conference Announcement & AgendaThe 36th Annual APLIC-I Conference is coming up very soon. The conference will be held on April 28-30, 2003 in Minneapolis, MN. This year's theme is "Knowledge Management: Experience Counts." We hope to see you there. Report from the field:
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Tara E. Murray I have been the Information Core Director for both the Population Research Institute and the Social Science Research Institute at Penn State for almost two years now. One of the first things I did in my job was to join APLIC-I, thanks to a suggestion from my predecessor and former APLIC-I member, Tonya Allen. I immediately got to know APLIC-I as a great source for hard-to-find interlibrary loans when a graduate student in our demography |
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program came looking for a document that was not available in our collection. I received two quick emails with offers to fax the document, and as a result made one of my first customers very happy. At the APLIC-I conference in Atlanta last year, I met for the first time the people who had been so helpful on the email list. I enjoyed both the presentations and the chance to talk to my colleagues. Like many APLIC-I members, I am the only professional librarian in my location, so it was great to be able to share experiences with others. Before joining the Population Research Institute, I was the library director for the Carnegie Library of Homestead, one of the original Carnegie libraries just outside Pittsburgh. I had graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in the summer of 2000 with an MLIS, fully expecting that I would take a reference job at a college or university library, but when the opportunity came up to work at a truly unique library which not only included the usual books, videos, and computers, but also a swimming pool, gym, and music hall, I couldn't resist. To see a picture of the library building, go to its web site at http://www.einetwork.net/ein/homested/index.html. I'm fortunate to have work experience in many different library settings-a small liberal arts college library, a university library, a regional consortium, an engineering firm library, a public library, and a research institute. My non-library interests are about as diverse as my work history, but lately I've been reading comic books, attempting to teach myself to play the guitar, and watching kung fu movies. |
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Mary Panke
Librarian, Population Action International
Membership in APLIC-I is encoded in the institutional memory passed from librarian to librarian at Population Action International. From my first week on the job I recognized why. This intensely supportive association serves as a lifeline for a small specialized library like PAI's. Not only can a solo librarian not always cover all the bases, but coming from an energy/environmental background, I faced a steep learning curve on population issues and resources. Support from the APLIC-I community has sped up the learning process and the listserve has sped up the turnaround time on several urgent requests since I signed on as librarian at Population Action International a year ago.
I came to PAI from EPA where I handled international information requests for the US information arm of the United Nations Environment Program. During several months I also served as editor/writer of Caribbean Currents newsletter where I clambered up another steep learning curve to write about Pesticide Use and Integrated Pest Management in the Caribbean Islands. Those couple years of intensive online searching, research, and reference work for UNEP served in many ways as a "recertification" course. I had just returned to the library profession following a leave of nearly 10 years - the whole decade of the 90's…the decade of digitization…and the internet. While my colleagues were sharpening their search and computer skills in this new digital landscape, I got my library fix shelving books in the school libraries, running book fairs, answering a million inquiries while carpooling. I worked part-time for a Community Foundation, but my favorite stint was helping a small family-run company (not my family) to launch and market a product that was always an easy sell - milk, white or dark chocolate bars bearing the shapes and histories of historic buildings. (Want a chocolate Supreme Court? See: http://www.historicalchocolate.com/). During the 80's I was librarian for the Washington Office of the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). It was there at EPRI, where necessity required organizing a library and handling all public inquiries, that I realized I had a knack for library work. I took time off to earn an MLS at Columbia University, couldn't talk my honey into relocating to NYC and headed back to DC where I married and returned to EPRI to develop and run their library and information services for several years.
While it's wonderful to be returned full throttle into the professional library world, I've had to reign in other interests to stay focused on family life. With two daughters in middle school and one a high school junior, time is flying. As they depart for college I can begin to get back to dividing plants and puttering around the yard, cooking up elaborate meals for adults, reading for sheer delight, traveling to points unknown - at least unknown in the travel soccer circuit. I have managed to indulge in one fun but humbling activity, playing in a women's soccer league. It keeps me sympathetic with my daughters' scrapes and bruises, mindful of the seasons, and appreciating the sedentary side of library work.
The following people joined APLIC-I in 2002 or 2003:
Funmi Akhigbe
Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication ProgramsKiet Hao Bang
Population Research Institute
Pennsylvania State UniversityJuel Brathwaite
The Alan Guttmacher InstituteAnne Brosowsky
Planned Parenthood of WisconsinJohn Carper
John Snow, Inc.Sambhavi Cheemalapati
Jennifer Darragh
Population Research Institute
Pennsylvania State UniversityDr. Eddy Koswara
Center for Population and Policy Studies
Gadjah Mada University,Christine Loredo
The Alan Guttmacher InstituteJennifer Nadeau
The Alan Guttmacher InstituteIndreswari Nurmalia S
PATH - Program for Appropriate Technology in HealthMary Panke
Population Action InternationalLee Ridley
The Population Studies Center
University of MichiganKari Swanson
University of Wisconsin Madison
Center for Demography Information ServicesDr. Shyam Thapa
FHI PRH Office Nepal
c/o Family Health InternationalChengzhi Wang
Princeton University - Stokes LibraryRebecca Wind
The Alan Guttmacher InstituteXiao Jason Yu
The California Center for Population Research
UCLA
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April 10-13, 2003 |
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL), 11th National Conference: Learning to Make a Difference, Charlotte, North Carolina. http://www.ala.org/acrl/charlotte/ |
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April 28-30, 2003 |
APLIC-I Annual Conference 2003, Minneapolis, Minnesota. |
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May 1-3, 2003 |
PAA Annual Conference, Minneapolis, Minnesota. http://www.popassoc.org/meetings.html |
| May 2-7, 2003 | Medical Library Association, Annual Conference, MLA '03: Catch the Wave!, San Diego, California. http://www.mlanet.org/am/am2003/index.html |
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May 25-30, 2003 |
International Association for Social Science Information Service and Technology (IASSIST) Annual Conference, Ottawa, Canada. http://iassist2003.ssc.uwo.ca/ |
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June 7-12, 2003 |
Special Libraries Association Annual Conference, New York, New York. http://www.sla.org/content/Events/conference/2003annual/index.cfm |
| June 19-25, 2003 | American Library Association (ALA) Annual Conference & Canadian Library Association (CLA) Annual Conference, Toronto, Ontario. http://www.ala.org/events/annual2003/ & http://www.cla.ca/conference/cla_ala2003.htm |
| July 13-17, 2003 | Seminar on Taking Stock of the Condom in the Era of HIV/AIDS, Organized by the IUSSP Committee on Reproductive Health, in collaboration with The Department of Population Studies, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana. http://www.iussp.org/English%20Site/Activities/5-rep-call02.htm |
| August 1 - 9, 2003 | International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA), 69th General Conference and Council, Access Point Library: Media - Information - Culture. http://www.ifla.org/IV/ifla69/index.htm |
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August 16-19, 2003 |
American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Atlanta, Georgia. http://www.asanet.org/convention/2003/index.html |
Please send updates and additions to Nykia M. Perez : nmperez@pop.upenn.edu.
The APLIC-I Communicator Needs You
Annual Conference Reporters needed to report on this year's Breakout Sessions & Presentations. Please let us know if you would like to report on one of the sessions, a brief or in-depth write-up for the next issue of the Communicator will be required. E-mail the APLIC-I Communicator Editors if you are interested in assisting with the Conference Issue: nmperez@pop.upenn.edu & yanfu@isr.umich.edu.
"Spotlight On Our Members" will profile a different member of APLIC-I in each issue of the APLIC-I Communicator. The member is selected from the membership list and is then interviewed by one of the Editors or members can volunteer to participate. The goal is to foster a broader appreciation of the diverse membership of the association. Do you have a story you would like to tell? Talk to us: nmperez@pop.upenn.edu & yanfu@isr.umich.edu.
"Spotlight On Our Libraries" will profile a different type of information organization as per our APLIC-I in each issue of the APLIC-I Communicator. A member library is selected at from the membership list and is then asked to contribute a short description of their organizations library or information services. Members can also volunteer to participate. The goal is to foster a broader appreciation of the diversity in our member's organizations and to share the different types of work that APLIC-I members do. Did you want to know how another library does "it"? Here is where we will try to provide you with some answers. nmperez@pop.upenn.edu & yanfu@isr.umich.edu
Call for APLIC-I Electronic Resource Guides
Currently there are five POPIN-APLIC-I Electronic Resource Guides which were compiled by members of APLIC-I and POPIN in 2000 and early 2001. Please see the table below for details about the current Electronic Resource Guides.
Your ideas and expertise is needed to compile new issues of the electronic resource guides. It is time to add to our list of resources.
- Is there a topic you would like to know more about?
- Do you have expertise in a particular field and would you like to share the resources you think are outstanding with other librarians and information professionals?
- Have you ever wondered if there may be a more appropriate source for the information you need?
- Would you like to see a list of core materials in demography, population studies, reproductive health, etc.?
- What resources do other population, reproductive health librarians and information professionals use to answer this question?
If your answer is yes to any of the above questions, please let us know.
Current POPIN-APLIC-I Electronic Resource GuidesNo.1 Getting Started: Selected Electronic Resources on HIV/AIDS No. 2 Guide to Citation of Electronic Information, Copyright and Intellectual Property No. 3 Electronic Training Resources on Population and Reproductive Health No. 4 Electronic Training Resources on Best Practices and Lessons Learned in
Pop/RHNo. 5 Using the Internet: Courses, Self-Tutorials, and Training Materials To see the PDF's visit http://www.aplici.org/publications/pubs.htm. In addition, if your library or organization has already done this in an area or subject and would like to share the link with other members, please send us the URL and we can post in the Internet Population/Family Planning Resources Links section of the APLIC-I web site.
Thank you and I look forward to hearing from you, Nykia M. Perez, nmperez@pop.upenn.edu.
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Last updated 4/7/03