*Apologies for Cross-Postings*
Call for Proposals
CAPAL16: BEYOND THE LIBRARY: AGENCY, PRACTICE, AND SOCIETY
CAPAL/ACBAP Annual Conference – May 28–June 3, 2016
Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences 2016
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta
The Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians (CAPAL) invites participation in its annual conference, to be held as part of Congress
of the Humanities and Social Sciences 2016 at the University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (http://congress2016.ca/).
The conference offers opportunity to share critical research and scholarship, challenge current thinking, and forge new relationships across all disciplines.
THEME
In keeping with the Congress 2016 theme,
Energizing Communities, CAPAL16 seeks to look “Beyond the Library” to rethink how academic librarians engage with their communities within which our institutions are situated or those with whom we share disciplinary concerns or approaches. Such communities
may be physical, epistemic, academic, or imagined communities, communities of identity, or those communities around us and to which we contribute.
What can the discipline of library and information studies (LIS) learn from other disciplines? What might LIS as an interdisciplinary field look like?
Where and how should academic librarianship be situated within and in relation to other communities?
RATIONALE
Like any institution, academic libraries both reflect and help shape the societies of which they are part. It is therefore critical for academic librarians
to consider how they and their work are situated – professionally, ontologically, ethically, epistemologically, and physically. As social agents, we share and occupy socio-economic, political, and technological spaces in our efforts to provide diverse, high
quality, informational resources and critical education within a contemporary (i.e., neoliberal) legal and economic framework.
In such an environment, effecting change requires seeking out, examining, and engaging with new ideas, approaches, theories, communities, understandings,
and ways of knowing, which, themselves, may fall outside the traditional boundaries of the discipline of library and information studies. We need to move our lines of inquiry “beyond the library”–physically and intellectually–into new arenas and new communities.
This conference is an invitation to academic librarians and scholars who study libraries and information to discuss how we can reframe academic librarianship: in practice, in policy, in theory, and in society.
Potential topic areas include but are not limited to:
SUBMISSION INFORMATION
The Program Committee invites proposals for individual papers as well as proposals for panel submissions of three papers. Individual papers are typically
20 minutes in length. For individual papers, please submit an abstract of 300 words and a presentation title, with brief biographical statement and your contact information. For complete panels, please submit a panel abstract of 300 words as well as a list
of all participants and brief biographical statements, and a separate abstract of 300 words for each presenter. Please identify and provide participants’ contact information for the panel organizer. International proposals and proposals from non-members and
students are welcome.
Please feel free to contact the Program Committee to discuss a topic for a paper, panel, or other session format. Proposals should be emailed as an
attachment as a doc. or docx. file, using the following filename format:
Lastname_Keywordoftopic.docx
Proposals and questions should be directed to the Program Chairs:
Michael Dudley:
m.dudley@uwinnipeg.ca
John Wright:
jpwright@ucalgary.ca
Deadline for proposals: January 4th, 2016.
*******************************************************************************
Harriet Sonne de Torrens, MISt., Ph.D., L.M.S.| Academic Librarian |
HMALC Library and Department of Visual Studies, UTM
| 905-569-4610 |
https://utoronto.academia.edu/HarrietSonnedeTorrens
https://utlibrarians.wordpress.com/