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SUMMARY:Handbook of Black Librarianship - A Conversation with Tracie D. Hall
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a very special session in our series 
 celebrating the Handbook of Black Librarianship. For our October webinar we 
 are honored to share a conversation with Tracie D. Hall\, former Executive 
 Director of the American Library Association and lifelong library leader 
 and advocate.\n\nTracie D. Hall is Distinguished Practitioner in Residence 
 and Professor of Practice at the University of Washington Information 
 School in Seattle. Hall previously served as Executive Director of the 
 American Library Association (ALA)\, becoming the first Black woman to helm 
 ALA in its nearly 150-year history. Hall has served in numerous library and 
 arts leadership positions nationwide including Culture Program Director at 
 The Joyce Foundation where she was recognized for creating programs in 
 support of arts-based community and economic development\; Deputy 
 Commissioner of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special 
 Events where she received the Mayor’s citations for her work to expand 
 arts and fresh food access\; Vice President of Strategy and Organizational 
 Development at Queens Library where during her tenure she founded the NYC 
 Early Learning Network\; Community Investment Strategist and Community 
 Investor for the Boeing Company’s Global Corporate Citizenship division\; 
 Assistant Dean of Dominican University’s Graduate School of Library and 
 Information Science\; other library positions at the Hartford Public 
 Library\, New Haven Free Public Library\, and Seattle Public Library and 
 non-profit and public sector roles across the country.\n\nHolding dual 
 bachelor’s degrees from University of California at Santa Barbara\, and 
 master’s degrees from the Yale University School of International and 
 Area Studies and the University of Washington Information School\, Hall’s 
 work in library and arts-based community development has focused on 
 advancing early and adult literacy\, expanding broadband access\, and 
 advocating for library and literacy services for people who are 
 incarcerated\, with her current research and writing centers on Black 
 Information Futures.\n\nIn 2022\, Hall was honored with a National Book 
 Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award. In April 2023\, TIME Magazine named 
 Hall to its annual TIME100 list of the most influential people in the 
 world. In September 2023\, Hall followed Rep. John Lewis and journalist 
 Nikole Hannah-Jones in receiving the medal for Freedom of Speech and Free 
 Expression from the Franklin D. Roosevelt Institute. In 2023\, Hall was 
 honored with the Sojourner Truth Leadership Award for career-long 
 commitment to equity and inclusion by the Metropolitan Chicago YWCA\, and 
 the Public Humanities Beacon Award for outstanding contributions to arts 
 and letters by Illinois. Humanities. In 2025\, Hall received an honorary 
 doctorate from the University of London for her lifelong advocacy for 
 information access and the freedom to read. Hall has delivered keynotes and 
 lectures across the United States\, Europe\, Australia\, and South America. 
 Her writings have appeared in various publications including American 
 Libraries\, Journal of Library Administration\, Obsidian\, Maine Policy 
 Review\, Public Libraries\, and TIME Magazine. She has been profiled by 
 Association Forum\, Australian Broadcasting Corporation\, Chicago 
 Magazine\, Forbes Magazine\, Los Angeles Times\, NBC Chicago\, National 
 Public Radio\, and Publishers Weekly. \n\nThis conversation will be 
 facilitated by Taina Evans\, with participation from two of the editors of 
 the Handbook of Black Librarianship\,  Michele Felton and Andrew 'Sekou' 
 Jackson.\n\nThis public program is made possible by federal Library Service 
 and Technology Act funds from the Institute of Museum and Library 
 Services\, which enable the New York State Library to champion lifelong 
 learning.  \n\nThe Handbook of Black Librarianship was first published in 
 1977\, intended to “provide reference information on the relationship of 
 Afro-Americans to various aspects of librarianship and libraries.” 
 Compiled and edited by E.J. Josey during his time as Chief of the Bureau of 
 Specialist Library Services for the New York State Library\, this volume 
 provided resources for developing African/Afro-American collections\, 
 program guidance for serving Black youth\, directories of library school 
 programs primarily attended by Black students\, and essays from Black 
 educators\, writers\, librarians\, and more. A second edition was published 
 in 2000\, adding to and updating the first volume. \n\nA third edition has 
 just been published\, edited by Andrew "Sekou” Jackson\, Marva L. 
 Deloach\, and Michele Fenton. Beyond updating previous volumes\, the new 
 edition adds over 70 new essays on Vital Issues\, Service to Our 
 Communities\, Library Technology\, Wisdom from Retirees\, Global Issues\, 
 and Banned Books and Censorship. In this webinar\, you will hear from the 
 editors about their relationship to the Handbook\, how this edition came to 
 be\, and how you can use it to engage with your library and its community.
ORGANIZER;CN="Tor Loney":MAILTO:tor.loney@nysed.gov
CATEGORIES:
CONTACT;CN="Tor Loney":MAILTO:tor.loney@nysed.gov
STATUS:CONFIRMED
UID:LibCal-15472002
URL:https://nyslibrary.libcal.com/calendar/13947/HandbookOctober
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