The ALA World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services [Dr. Robert Wedgeworth]

Dr. Robert Wedgeworth edited the ALA World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services (later simply titled World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services in its final edition). 

It was a major one-volume reference work on librarianship, library history, institutions, technologies, concepts, practices, research, education, and information services worldwide. 

​Dr. Robert Wedgeworth ​ was ALA Executive Director from 1972–1985, later president of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA), and a key figure in library education)​. He initiated and edited the work. He saw it as a way to provide a comprehensive overview of library programs and the profession, building on his earlier creation of the ALA Yearbook.

Publication History and Editions

  • 1st edition (1980): Published by the American Library Association (ALA) in Chicago. Approximately xxii + 601 pages. It was the foundational volume.
  • 2nd edition (1986): Also by ALA (with a co-publisher in London: Adamantine Press). xxv + 895 pages. Expanded and updated.
  • 3rd edition (1993): Retitled World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services (still under ALA). xvii + 905 pages (hardcover). This was a substantial revision, updated through about 1990, with roughly 70% new or revised content overall. It remains the final edition.

The book has not seen further editions since 1993 and is now considered a historical reference​.

Content and Scope

The encyclopedia aim​ed to be a global, authoritative overview in a single volume—something between a dictionary and a multi-volume set like the separate Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences. It features hundreds of signed articles (around 500 in the 3rd edition, written by roughly 300–437 international contributors) with bibliographies, an index, and illustrations (hundreds of black-and-white photos, plus a new 16-page color portfolio in the 3rd edition highlighting major libraries).

Key features include​d:

  • Nation-by-nation surveys: About 160 articles on libraries and librarianship in individual countries, each often including statistical tables on library types, collections, staff, and population served. These were praised as informative, authoritative, and (for their time) up-to-date.
  • General and thematic articles: Coverage of principles/practices of library and information services, education and research, historical/theoretical overviews, organizations, technologies, concepts, procedures, and institutions.
  • Biographies: Around 216 entries on key individuals (living and deceased)​.
  • Institutions and organizations: Profiles of major libraries (e.g., new entries in the 3rd ed. on the New York Public Library, Library of Congress, Bibliothèque Nationale, Harvard University Libraries, and British Library) and international bodies.
  • Practical and emerging topics: Articles on topics like bibliographic instruction, electronic data sources, rare books, audiovisual materials, archives, and reprography​.

It was designed for accessibility—lucid and succinct writing aimed at a general professional audience, library schools, large libraries, and practitioners needing a broad reference.

Webinar–Adam Smyth on The Book-Makers: A History of the Book in Eighteen Lives [Caxton Club]

“From the aptly named Wynkyn de Worde to creators of Zines, Adam Smyth unspools the story of books by illuminating the lives of eighteen fascinating characters. Entertaining, enlightening, engaging, and alliterative, his book puts a fresh perspective on some familiar names while introducing others you may not be familiar with.”

Find full details and register at: https://caxtonclub.org/event-6625809

Call for Nominations for LHRT Service Awards

The Innovation and Advocacy in Library History Award

The Innovation and Advocacy in Library History Award is presented by the ALA Library History Round Table (LHRT) as a “best of year” achievement award that acknowledges individuals or organizations that have made recent, substantive contributions to LHRT or to the wider library history community. The intention of this non-monetary award is to recognize efforts that are ineligible for other LHRT prizes; thus, nominations which emphasize publication of articles, books, dissertations, or essays will not be considered.

Eligibility and Criteria

Nominations, including self-nominations, are welcomed from all interested parties but must pertain to activities taking place in the past two years. Nominations will be judged on the contributions’ quality, impact, and relevance to LHRT or the library history community. The LHRT is particularly interested in recognizing those who have promoted library history in exceptional or new ways or who have reached audiences that have not been engaged previously. Nominee membership in LHRT is encouraged but not required.

Submissions and Selection

Each nomination must include a brief statement thoroughly explaining the contribution or project and why the nominee is worthy of consideration. It must also include at least two (2) letters of support. Individual nominees must include a CV or resume, while organizational nominees must include a statement indicating the organization’s mission and other background information. Nominators of the same entity may be asked to collaborate to produce stronger applications and reduce duplicative effort. The selection of awardees will be made by an LHRT committee and will be announced in June 2026. Please submit nominations using this form by Friday, May 29, 2026. Contact Jennifer Bartlett, LHRT Chair, at jbartl22@utk.edu for more information.


The Distinguished Service in Library History Award

The Distinguished Service in Library History Award is presented annually by the ALA Library History Round Table (LHRT) and honors the career of a person who has a lifetime of scholarship and service in the field of library history. This non-monetary award is intended to be given to an individual who has a record of contributions; who demonstrates length, breadth, and depth of involvement in library history; and who has had a significant impact on the work of the ALA Library History Round Table or on the library history community at large.

Eligibility and Criteria

Criteria for the Award include the significance of contributions to library history, such as publications in the field, courses taught in library history, and service to the field through the LHRT or other groups. The intention of the Award is to recognize service; thus, nominations which emphasize research and publication and do not describe service or other activities pertaining to library history will not be considered. Personal membership in the LHRT is encouraged but is not required for an individual to be selected for the Award.

Submissions and Selection

Current LHRT members may submit a letter of nomination. The nomination must include the nominee’s curriculum vitae and at least two (2) letters of support. Nominators of the same individual may be asked to collaborate to produce stronger nominations and to reduce duplicate effort. The selection of the awardee will be made by an LHRT committee and will be announced in June 2026. Please submit nominations using this form by Friday, May 29, 2026. Contact Jennifer Bartlett, LHRT Chair, at jbartl22@utk.edu for more information.

Article Alert–“Manuscript Collecting as Social Prestige in Quattrocento Italy: The Case of Tommaso Spinelli.” [Carson Koepke, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America]

Koepke, Carson. “Manuscript Collecting as Social Prestige in Quattrocento Italy: The Case of Tommaso Spinelli.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 120.1 (2026): 5–45.

Abstract
“Tommaso Spinelli was a fifteenth-century papal banker and Florentine textile merchant who collected a variety of manuscripts, including works by Cicero, Ovid, Jerome, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. This paper undertakes a codicological investigation of manuscripts in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and documents in the Spinelli Archive to reconstruct a broken codex that once belonged to Spinelli and to reevaluate his reading and collecting habits. 


I argue for a new schema of categorization for Spinelli’s manuscript collection based on three distinct types of edification, demonstrate that his literary interests lay largely in vernacular works, including volgarizzamenti, and ultimately show that his personal library reinforces the notion that the nouveau riche merchant class of Quattrocento Italy used book collecting to enhance their social prestige alongside public endeavors such as ecclesiastical patronage—a relationship that in Spinelli’s case also involved the gifting of manuscripts.”