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 Strengthening Connections, Advancing Global Understanding

IMLS International Activities

Overview   |   IMLS Spotlight on Global Projects   |   International Visitors and Travel   |   News & Resources

Overview

Now Available!
cover of Strengthening Connections, Advancing Global Understanding
Strengthening Connections, Advancing Global Understanding (PDF, 415 KB): An Update on the International Strategic Partnership Initiative

As technology and globalization make the world a smaller place, increased global and cultural awareness have become essential skills for 21st -century U.S. citizens. Museums and libraries are well positioned to help foster these proficiencies for Americans. These valued community institutions are centers for intercultural learning, ideal venues for cross-cultural communication, and prime partners for international collaborations. They are rich in collections, exhibits, programs, digital networks, and other resources to connect people, institutions, and communities across the globe.

Throughout its history, IMLS has emphasized the important role museums and libraries can play in facilitating global understanding and the sharing of experiences. Through establishing partnerships with overseas cultural agencies and ministers, initiating programs with international components, participating in international policy meetings, hosting foreign museum and library professionals, and convening U.S. professionals to explore ways to connect with their global counterparts, IMLS encourages dialogue that is critical in our increasingly globalized world.

While IMLS does not make grants to non-U.S. libraries and museums, such institutions located abroad may partner with eligible U.S. institutions on an IMLS-funded grant project. International partnerships should demonstrate how the knowledge gained by such international activities can directly support American museums and libraries in their missions, and thus benefit the American people.

Tang Gengsheng, Secretary General of the Library Society of China (L), and Shuyong Jiang (R), University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Tang Gengsheng, Secretary General of the Library Society of China (L), and Shuyong Jiang (R), University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, celebrate the extension of their partnership during the 5th China-North America Library Conference in Beijing, September 2010. The partnership, jointly supported by IMLS and the Chinese Ministry of Culture, is funded through 2011 to train Chinese librarians in U.S. library public service practices and to create a portal of online Chinese resources, with both Chinese and English interfaces.

 

IMLS Spotlight on Global Projects

International Plant Collections Portal

Beijing Botanical Garden
Beijing Botanical Garden

In 2005, IMLS awarded a National Leadership Grant to the Chicago Botanic Garden, in collaboration with the North American Plant Collections Collaborative of the American Public Gardens Association, the University of Kansas Biodiversity Research Center and Natural History Museum, Morphbank at Florida State University School of Computational Sciences, Google Base, Beijing Botanical Garden (China), and the National Trust (UK) to develop PlantCollections, an internationally linked database system that aims to provide access to the records of more than 50,000 taxa in collections located in botanic gardens and arboreta around the world. The project, now online, strengthens relationships among worldwide living collections institutions and fosters information sharing with the public. For more information see www.plantcollections.org.

Educating Librarians in the Middle East: Building Bridges for the 21st Century: ELIME-21

The American University in Cairo
The American University in Cairo

In 2010, IMLS awarded a Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program grant to the School of Information and Library Science (SILS) at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in partnership with the university's Carolina Center for the Study of the Middle East and Muslim Civilization, to launch a program to promote graduate-level education in library and information science at two universities-the American University in Cairo (Egypt) and Al Akhawayn University in Morocco. Six doctoral students will earn joint degrees from the two UNC programs and will be involved with SILS faculty in providing on-site and distance learning opportunities for students at the two universities. The project will help to prepare future U.S. library educators to be knowledgeable about the Middle East and will promote collaboration among libraries in areas such as collection development and cataloging of Arabic-language resources.

Frequently Asked Questions about Global Partnership Projects

Please see Frequently Asked Questions Regarding International Activities (PDF; 102KB).

 

International Visitors and Travel 

IMLS staff members frequently meet with delegations from foreign museums and libraries, through contacts from the U.S. State Department, foreign embassies, and other cultural organizations. These meetings are opportunities for our staff to provide information on IMLS and its activities in U.S. museums and libraries, and to learn about our colleagues around the world. IMLS has recently met with visitors from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Korea, Japan, Morocco, Poland, the United Kingdom, Romania, and Russia.

IMLS staff members have traveled abroad for professional meetings and events or participated in cultural delegations to the following countries: Argentina, Austria, Barbados, Canada, China, Germany, Haiti, Italy, France, Norway, Senegal, Scotland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.

If you are interested in meeting with IMLS staff while in Washington, DC on international travel, please contact Michele Farrell (mfarrell@imls.gov).

Italian visitors Romanian visitors
IMLS staff meet with Mr. Dario Nardella (R), President of the Commission for Education, Sport, and Cultural Politics, Florence City Council, Italy, who is accompanied by interpreter
Mr. Max Ullmann (L).
IMLS staff meet with Romanian visitors Ms. Adina Doroltan (L), Librarian, American Corner Coordinator at Petre Dulfu County Library, Baia Mare, and Rodica Toma (R), American Corner Coordinator at Ovidius University, Constanta.

News & Resources

SGS Report 2012 hlt
New Report Explores Roles of Libraries and Museums in an Era of Participatory Culture

May 16, 2012 04:15 PM
Report from the Institute of Museum and Library Services and the Salzburg Global Seminar convening of 58 library, museum and cultural heritage leaders from 31 countries to explore the changing nature of "community," "access," "public value" and "participation writ large" in a digital world. Read More

 
IMLS and Chinese Ministry of Culture Renew Cultural Exchange Agreement

May 8, 2012 11:58 AM
Museum and library professional exchange continues to play an important role in people-to-people engagement between the U.S. and China. Read More

 
Ad for Museums and Libraries in an Era of Participatory Culture
Blog Post: Join the Conversation: Libraries and Museums in an Era of Participatory Culture

October 19, 2011 09:06 AM
IMLS is hosting a seminar, Libraries and Museums in an Era of Participatory Culture, in partnership with the Salzburg Global Seminar in Austria. The seminar is convening international leaders in libraries and museums to explore and debate the changing roles and responsibilities of libraries and museums in society. Read More

 
Participants gather for a group photo during the “Thinking Outside the Borders” conference, September 2005.
June 2010: Librarians Learning to Think Outside the Borders


In this age of instantly accessible information, librarians from all nations find they need to be able to navigate varied resources around the globe. Opportunities to learn how to work with foreign libraries, however, are scarce. Read More

 
SGS Report 2012 hlt
Libraries and Museums in an Era of Participatory Culture


Report from the Institute of Museum and Library Services and the Salzburg Global Seminar convening of 58 library, museum and cultural heritage leaders from 31 countries to explore the changing nature of “community,” “access,” “public value” and “participation writ large” in a digital world. Read More

 
cover of Connecting to the World's Collections: Making the Case for the Conservation and Preservation of our Cultural Heritage
Connecting to the World's Collections: Making the Case for the Conservation and Preservation of our Cultural Heritage


Sixty cultural heritage leaders from thirty-two countries, including representatives from Africa, Asia, the Middle East, South America, Australia, Europe, and North America gathered in October 2009 in Salzburg, Austria, to develop a series of practical recommendations to ensure optimal collections conservation worldwide. Read More

 
pubIntl
Strengthening Connections, Advancing Global Understanding: An Update on the International Strategic Partnership Initiative


The International Strategic Partnership Initiative aims to strengthen connections between U.S. museums and libraries and their global counterparts. In 2009, IMLS convened three meetings to help the agency move forward in its international work. This update provides information about these and other recent IMLS international activities. Read More

 
Haitian Cultural Recovery Project Podcast

June 10, 2010 11:54 AM
Susan Blakney, a senior painting conservator at Westlake Conservators and member of the AIC Collections Emergency Response Team (AIC-CERT), traveled to Haiti May 4-8 to help conduct an assessment of the country’s artwork damaged by the January earthquake. Blakney and two other conservators visited a dozen museums, which she says have made great strides in retrieving and storing damaged artwork. She describes seeing 500 paintings that were stacked “in a pile like pancakes” awaiting conservation care. Haitians are anxious to save their paintings, which are one of their “national loves and largest exports,” she said. However, the country doesn’t have the materials to conserve the “vivid, colorful, and thematic” artworks that are part of their social history, she says. Conservators will be needed for many years to help restore the country’s artwork and to train Haitian artists on conservation techniques. Blakney is certain that the paintings she assessed can be restored to exhibition standards. Read More