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Borrow Direct

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interlibrary loan service for some US universities

Borrow Direct is aninterlibrary loan service that allows member university students, faculty, and staff with library borrowing privileges and active e-mail accounts to borrow books directly from the libraries of the other member universities. The patrons' home library bears the cost of the service and there is no charge to patrons. The service began within and slowly spread to all the members of theIvy League, and has expanded since 2011 with the inclusion of theMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to non-Ivy (often so-called "Ivy Plus") institutions.[1]

Patrons may request monographs, microfilm, compact discs, and digital video discs, but no other print materials (such as journals or archives) or non-print media (such as ebooks). The Borrow Direct system will not allow patrons to place requests for items that the library believes to be available for checkout locally. Items requested are normally delivered within four business days after the request is placed, with an initial loan period of six weeks, with one renewal. Items may be recalled by the owning library at any time.[2]

History

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Borrow Direct went live in fall 1999 after a four-year planning and development period during which the three founding institutions,Columbia,Penn, andYale, collaborated with the Research Libraries Group (RLG) for project management and assessment. Borrow Direct expanded to seven member libraries in 2002 with the addition ofBrown,Cornell,Dartmouth, andPrinceton. In 2004, Borrow Direct exceeded 100,000 transactions for the first time. Borrow Direct grew to includeHarvard andMIT in 2011. TheUniversity of Chicago,Johns Hopkins University,Duke University, andStanford University joined Borrow Direct in 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2017, respectively.[3][4] Since its inception, Borrow Direct has successfully filled over 1.8 million user requests.[5]

Participating institutions

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InstitutionLocationFirst Participating YearLibrary Holdings (Titles, millions) (2017)[6]
Brown UniversityProvidence,Rhode Island20024.8
Columbia UniversityNew York,New York19999.8
Cornell UniversityIthaca,New York20028.0
Dartmouth CollegeHanover,New Hampshire20023.0
Duke UniversityDurham,North Carolina20158.2
Harvard UniversityCambridge,Massachusetts201115.2
Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimore,Maryland20145.2
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyCambridge,Massachusetts20112.5
Princeton UniversityPrinceton,New Jersey20028.0
Stanford UniversityStanford,California2017
University of ChicagoChicago,Illinois20137.6
University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania19996.4
Yale University[2]New Haven,Connecticut199911.7

References

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  1. ^"BorrowDirect".
  2. ^ab"Yale University Library Research Guides: Get it @ Yale: Borrow Direct".
  3. ^"Library cooperative programs".Stanford Libraries. Retrieved2017-07-23.
  4. ^"Duke Press Release".BorrowDirect. Retrieved2015-04-25.
  5. ^"Overview and History".Borrowdirect. Archived fromthe original on April 28, 2015. RetrievedJune 5, 2022.
  6. ^Morris, Shaneka; Roebuck, Gary (2019)."ARL Statistics 2016-2017". ARL Statistics. pp. 40–57.doi:10.29242/stats.2016-2017.ISBN 9781948964043.S2CID 67898129.

External links

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