Innovation and the Library: The Adoption of New Ideas in Public Libraries

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Bloomsbury Academic, Jul 24, 1995 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 189 pages

Today's rapidly evolving information-based society demands that public libraries implement planned, proactive, and innovative change to meet patron needs. Rapid, widespread, and substantive change and innovation in public librarianship depends on the ability of public librarians to share in the exchange of new ideas, regardless of the size of their communities. This book explores how managerial innovations are generated and disseminated among public librarians.

To examine how new ideas are created and spread among public librarians, the volume focuses on the case of the dissemination of a particular innovation, a set of techniques developed and promoted by a national professional association, which allows public librarians to engage in user-oriented planning, community-specific role setting, and self-evaluation of library performance. This case study is placed within a larger context of classical models of the diffusion process and the literature on organizational change and innovation. Drawing on her findings, the author offers suggestions to facilitate public library change.

About the author (1995)

Verna L. Pungitore is an associate professor in the School of Library and Information Science at Indiana University. Her previous publications include Greenwood's Public Librarianship.

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