Read Jean Preer’s Award Winning Article: “Promoting Citizenship: How Librarians Helped Get Out the Vote in the 1952 Presidential Election,”

Posted in Bibliography, Publications of Interest at 4:53 pm by Nancy Kranich

ALA and the library community have encouraged citizen participation in the political process for many years.  Here’s a great article by Jean Preer talking about the role of libraries in the 1952 Presidential election.

Preer, Jean L ,

  • “Promoting Citizenship: How Librarians Helped Get Out the Vote in the 1952 Presidential Election,” Libraries & the Cultural Record 43 no1 1-28 2008

    Abstract:

      In 1952 the American Library Association joined an array of nonprofit organizations, corporations, and the media in the National Non-Partisan Register and Vote Campaign to increase citizen participation in the electoral process. With ALA providing technical support and encouragement, librarians all over the country promoted reading, organized discussion groups, mounted exhibits, and sponsored programs to draw informed voters to the polls. ALA’s participation in the Register and Vote Campaign highlighted the role of the public library in providing quality information on candidates and issues. Librarians demonstrated that libraries could serve as local information centers, working with nonprofit organizations, the commercial sector, and the broadcast media to reach out to the whole community to create an informed citizenry.

1 Comment »

  1. The Shifted Librarian » How Librarians Helped Get Out the Vote… in 1952 said,

    September 15, 2009 at 8:32 am

    […] I was preparing for my ACPL Library Camp presentation about libraries and civic engagement, I saw a post on the Civic Engagement blog in which Nancy Kranich pointed to a fascinating article on the topic. […]

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