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Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SALALM
Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials
Formation1956; 69 years ago (1956)
President
Laura Martin
Co-Executive Director
Jill Baron
Co-Executive Director
Angela Carreño
Websitehttps://salalm.org/

TheSeminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials (SALALM) is the oldest professionalArea Studies library organization foracademic librarians,archivists,book vendors, scholars, and students who specialize in Latin American and Caribbean Studies.[1] Members are from at least 20 different countries.[2] SALALM promotes better library services and purchasing power among individual members and member libraries.[3] With the Secretariat based atNew York University, it is an international non-profit professional organization with three official languages: English, Spanish, and Portuguese.[4] SALALM is an affiliate of theAmerican Library Association.[5] As of May 2015, the organization had 242 personal and 84 institutional members including librarians, archivists, book dealers, vendors, and university libraries.[6]

History

[edit]

SALALM had its first meeting in 1956 with approximately 30 librarians and professors and one international bookseller met in Florida atChinsegut Hill[5] in a meeting convened by thePan-American Union.[7] Their discussions were “concerned with the selection, acquisition, and processing of library materials from the Latin American nations and the dependent territories of the Caribbean.”[5] Although participants thought this meeting would be a one-time occurrence,[8] they agreed there was a need for more study of the challenges with acquisitions and to continue the discussion by meeting for annual seminars held at the invitation of an institution or organization. Each conference has a theme,[9] like the 57th annual conference theme, "Popular Culture: Arts and Social Change in Latin America," and plenary sessions may discuss the theme, present new research or projects related to Latin American Librarianship, or share committee reports.

Since the 1960s, SALALM has published a number of serials and monograph series including a newsletter, conference proceedings, progress reports, and bibliographies.[10] Conference proceedings cover topics like "The Handbook of Latin American Studies: Its Automated History and a Comparison of Available Formats."[11] The archival records of the organization are held at theBenson Latin American Collection at theUniversity of Texas at Austin.[12]

Since 1956, SALALM has provided a unique national and international forum that focuses onlibrary collection development and services related to Latin American resources. SALALM was incorporated as a nonprofit organization in 1968, and the members adopted a constitution and bylaws and elected A. Curtis Wilgus as the first president. An Executive Board administers SALALM from the Secretariat, which, as of July 2023, is headquartered at the New York University Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (previously at the Latin American Library at Tulane University). The operational aspects are managed by several Executive Board committees. Program committees take care of intellectual and technical activities related to the resources and services of libraries with Latin American collections. The SALALM Secretariat is typically housed for three to five year periods at institutions that have strong Latin American programs. Jill Baron and Angela Carreño are the current Co-Executive Directors.

Locations of past conferences and presidents

[edit]

SALALM has held conferences is North and South America, Europe, and the Caribbean.[13][14] In the table below, Presidents are listed with institutional affiliations, if applicable, at the time of their service during the year the end of their terms.

Table showing the ordinal number, year, institution, and location of past SALALM Conferences.
NumberYearHost InstitutionLocationSALALM President, and Institution
I1956University of FloridaChinsegut Hill, Florida, USA*
II1957The University of Texas at AustinAustin, Texas, USA*
III1958University of California, BerkeleyBerkeley, California, USA*
IV1959Library of CongressWashington, DC, USA*
V1960New York Public LibraryNew York, New York, USA*
VI1961Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale, Illinois, USA*
VII1962University of MiamiCoral Gables, Florida, USA*
VIII1963University of Wisconsin–MadisonMadison, Wisconsin, USA*
IX1964Washington University in St. LouisSt. Louis, Missouri, USA*
X1965Wayne State UniversityDetroit, Michigan, USA*
XI1966Columbia UniversityNew York, New York, USA*
XII1967University of California, Los AngelesPasadena, California, USA*
XIII1968University of KansasLawrence, Kansas, USA(the first president elected—term ends in 1969)
XIV1969University of Puerto RicoSan Juan, Puerto RicoA. Curtis Wilgus, unaffiliated
XV1970University of TorontoToronto, Ontario, CanadaCarl Deal, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
XVI1971Puebla, MexicoNettie Lee Benson, U. of Texas at Austin
XVII1972University of MassachusettsAmherst, Massachusetts, USAGlenn Read, Cornell U.
XVIII1973University of the West IndiesPort-of-Spain, TrinidadDonald Wisdom, Library of Congress
XIX1974University of Texas at AustinAustin, Texas, USARosa Q. Mesa, U. of Florida
XX1975Bogotá, ColombiaEmma Simonsen, Indiana U.
XXI1976Indiana UniversityBloomington, Indiana, USARosa Abella, U. of Miami
XXII1977University of FloridaGainesville, Florida, USAMary Ruth Magruder Brady, U. of Saskatchewan
XXIII1978Institute of Latin American Studies,University of LondonLondon, EnglandWilliam V. Jackson, U. of Texas at Austin
XXIV1979University of California, Los AngelesPasadena, California, USAAlma T. Jordan, U. of West Indies
XXV1980University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, New Mexico, USALudwig "Larry" Lauerhass Jr., U. of California Los Angeles
XXVI1981Tulane UniversityNew Orleans, Louisiana, USALaura Gutiérrez-Witt, U. of Texas at Austin
XXVII (joint meeting with LASA)1982Library of CongressWashington, DC, USABarbara Valk, U. of California Los Angeles
XXVIII1983University of Kansas &University of Costa RicaUniversity of Kansas & Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica, USAJane Garner, U. of Texas at Austin
XXIX1984University of North Carolina at Chapel HillChapel Hill, North Carolina, USAJohn Hébert, Library of Congress
XXX1985Princeton UniversityPrinceton, New Jersey, USADan C. Hazen, unaffiliated (formerly at Stanford U.)
XXXI1986Ibero-American InstituteBerlin, GermanyIliana Sontag, San Diego State U.
XXXII (joint meeting with ACURIL)1987University of MiamiCoral Gables, Florida, USAMina Jane Grothey, U. of New Mexico
XXXIII1988University of California, Berkeley &Stanford UniversityBerkeley, California, USAPaula Covington, Vanderbilt U.
XXXIV1989University of VirginiaCharlottesville, Virginia, USABarbara Jon Robinson, U. of Southern California
XXXV1990Library of Congress Office, Rio &Fundação Getúlio VargasRio de Janeiro, BrazilAnn Hartness, U. of Texas at Austin
XXXVI1991San Diego State University &University of California, San DiegoSan Diego, California, USADeborah Jakubs, Duke U.
XXXVII1992The University of Texas at AustinAustin, Texas, USADavid Block, Cornell U.
XXXVIII1993Feria Internacional del Libro & Instituto de Bibliotecas,Universided de GuadalajaraGuadalajara, Jalisco, MexicoPatricia Noble, U. of London
XXXIX1994Brigham Young UniversitySalt Lake City, Utah, USANelly Sfeir González, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
XL1995University of GeorgiaAthens, Georgia, USARobert A. McNeil, Oxford U. (England)
XLI1996New York University,New York Public Library,Columbia UniversityNew York, New York, USAPeter Stern, Rutgers U.
XLII1997Library of Congress,Oliveira Lima Library, andUniversity of MarylandRockville, Maryland, USAMark Grover, Brigham Young U.
XLIII1998University of Puerto RicoSan Juan, Puerto RicoGayle Ann Williams, U. of Georgia
XLIV1999Vanderbilt UniversityNashville, Tennessee, USARichard Phillips, U. of Florida
XLV2000University of California, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, USACésar Rodríguez, Yale U.
XLVI2001Arizona State UniversityTempe, Arizona, USAVictor Federico Torres, Universidad de Puergo Rico
XLVII2002Cornell UniversityIthaca, New York, USADenise A. Hibay, New York Public Library
XLVIII2003Banco de la República,Biblioteca Luis Ángel ArangoCartagena, ColombiaDarlene Hull, U. of Connecticut
XLIX2004University of MichiganAnn Arbor, Michigan, USAAngela Carreño, New York U.
L2005University of FloridaGainesville, Florida, USAPamela Howard-Reguindin, Library of Congress
LI2006Stanford UniversitySanto Domingo, Dominican RepublicAdán Griego, Stanford U.
LII2007University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, New Mexico, USAMolly Molloy, New Mexico State U.
LIII2008Tulane UniversityNew Orleans, Louisiana, USAJohn Wright, Brigham Young U.
LIV2009Ibero-American InstituteBerlin, GermanyPamela Graham, Columbia U.
LV2010Brown UniversityProvidence, Rhode Island, USAFernando Acosta-Rodríguez, Princeton U.
LVI2011University of Pennsylvania andTemple UniversityPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, USANerea Llamas, U. of Michigan
LVII2012University of the West Indies, St Augustine, The National Library and Information System Authority of Trinidad and Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago and the Library Association of Trinidad and TobagoTrinidad and TobagoLynn Shirey, Harvard U.
LVIII2013University of Miami Libraries and Florida International University LibrariesCoral Gables, Florida, USAMartha Mantilla, U. of Pittsburgh
LIX2014Brigham Young UniversitySalt Lake City, Utah, USARobert Delgadillo, U. of California Davis
LX2015Princeton UniversityPrinceton, New Jersey, USALuis A. González, Indiana U.
LXI2016University of VirginiaCharlottesville, Virginia, USAPaloma Celis Carbajal, U. of Wisconsin-Madison
LXII2017University of MichiganAnn Arbor, Michigan, USADaisy V. Domínguez, The City College of New York (CUNY)
LXIII2018El Colegio de MéxicoMexico City, MexicoSuzanne Schadl, U. of New Mexico
LXIV2019The University of Texas at AustinAustin, Texas, USAMelissa Guy, U. of Texas at Austin
LXV (All but business meetings postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic)2020University of California, DavisSacramento, California, USASarah Buck-Kachaluba, U. of California San Diego
LXVI (Remote due to COVID-19 pandemic)2021New York University and New York Public LibraryNew York, New York, USASócrates Silva, Columbia U.
LXVII2022Biblioteca Nacional de Colombia, Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango, andInstituto Caro y CuervoBogotá, ColombiaAntonio Sotomayor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
LXVIII2023Dumbarton Oaks, Georgetown University, and Library of CongressWashington, DC, USAAnne Barnhart, University of West Georgia
LXIX2024Tulane UniversityNew Orleans, LA, USAChristine Hernandez, Tulane University
LXX2025New York University, New York Public Library, City University of New York, and Columbia UniversityNew York, NY, USADavid Woken, University of Chicago

*Note: 1st SALALM President elected at 13th conference.

Purpose

[edit]

SALALM's primary mission revolves around the control and dissemination ofbibliographic information about all types of Latin American publications and the development of library collections of Latin Americana in support of educational research.[15] SALALM also promotes cooperative efforts to achieve better library service. SALALM is a forum for the unique challenges ofLatin American and Caribbean Studies Librarians and with related professional development. In collaboration withREFORMA, SALALM also provides library materials for the Spanish and Portuguese-speaking populations in the United States. SALALM shares and disseminates the work of its member through an annual conference proceeding.[16]

Awards and scholarships

[edit]

SALALM currently sponsors a series of Awards and Scholarships including the SALALM Conference Attendance Scholarship, the Dan C. Hazen SALALM Fellowship, Enlace Travel Awards, theJosé Toribio Medina Award, and the SALALM Award for Institutional Cooperation.[17] SALALM also awards honorary memberships to retired members who have a long record of service to the organization combined with professional achievements.[18]

Since 1986, SALALM has sponsored the Enlace Travel Awards, which provides funding for librarians and information professionals from Latin American and the Caribbean to attend SALALM's annual meetings.[19] To date, the awards have funded conference attendance opportunities from every Spanish-speaking country in the Americas in addition to Brazil, Guyana, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and the Basque Country in Spain.[20]

Since 2011, SALALM has provided scholarships to students enrolled in ALA-accredited library and information science programs. Originally a general scholarship, the scholarship now funds attendance at the group's annual conference.[21]

Jose Toribio Medina Award Winners

[edit]
Jose Toribio Medina Monument Santiago, Chile, Plaza Brasil.


SALALM 2025

  • Silberberg, Eric. "Teachers’ Reactions to the Bans and Biblioclasm of Mexico’s National Free Textbooks in 2023: A Descriptive Qualitative Study."Diálogos sobre educación. Temas actuales en investigación educativa, vol. 30, no. 15, 2024, doi:10.32870/dse.v0i30.1452

SALALM 2024

  • Dyck, Jason, transcription and introduction:Francisco de Florencia. Vidas de los varones ilustres. El tercer volumen de la Historia de la Provincia de la Compañía de Jesús de Nueva España. Mexico: ITESO, Universidad Iberoamericana León and Universidad Iberoamericana, 2023.

SALALM 2023

  • Aponte, Sarah.La presencia dominicana en el periódico Las Novedades, 1876-1918: De breve mención a propietarios en la ciudad de Nueva York. Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; New York: Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña; CUNY Dominican Studies Institute.

SALALM Virtual Conference 2022

  • Cid Carmona, Víctor.Ciudad Letrada: La Gazeta de México y la difusión de la cultura impresa durante el siglo XVIII. Biblioteca Daniel Cosío Villegas. El Colegio de México.

SALALM 2021

  • Gardinier, Lisa and Manuel Ostos. "Spanish-language Print Materials Within Academic Consortia: Assessing the Impact of Resource Sharing in Two Academic Libraries."The Journal of Academic Librarianship 44, no. 2 (March 2018): 295-299.

SALALM Virtual Conference 2020

  • Tarragó, Rafael E. The Ignored Contender: A Select Annotated Bibliography of the Cuban Autonomist Party (1878-1898). SALALM Secretariat, The Latin American Library, Tulane University, 2017.

2019 LXIIII Austin, Texas

  • Gayle Ann Williams and Jana Lee Krentz, editors.Latin American Collection Concepts: Essays on Libraries, Collaborations, and New Approaches. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2019.

2018 LXIII Mexico City, Mexico

  • Marisol Ramos, Jennifer Snow & Charles Venator-Santiago. “The Puerto Rican Citizenship Archives Project: A History of the Extension of U.S. Citizenship to Puerto Rico”

2017 LXII, Ann Arbor, MI

  • Sotomayor, Antonio.The Sovereign Colony: Olympic Sport, National Identity, and International Politics in Puerto Rico (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2016).

2016 LXI, Charlottesville, VA

  • Urzáiz Rodríguez, Eduardo. 2016.Eugenia : A Fictional Sketch of Future Customs. Edited by Sarah A. Buck Kachaluba and Aaron Dziubinskyj. Critical edition. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Schadl, Suzanne M., and Marina Todeschini. “Cite Globally, Analyze Locally: Citation Analysis from a Local Latin American Studies Perspective”.College & Research Libraries (2014): crl13-442.

2014 LIX, Salt Lake City, Utah

  • Sarah Aponte.Autores dominicanos de la diáspora: apuntes bio-bibliográficos (1902-2012) co-authored with Franklin Gutiérrez. (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic: Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña, 2013)

2012 LVII Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

  • Molly Molloy. Frontera List for Mexico and Border News. (2009-current)

2009 LIV, Berlin, Germany

  • Víctor Federico Torres.Diccionario de Autores puertorriqueños contemporáneos (San Juan, P.R.: Editorial Plaza Mayor, 2009)

2007 LII, Albuquerque, NM

  • Cid Carmona, Víctor Julián., and Biblioteca Nacional (Spain). 2004.Repertorio de Impresos Mexicanos En La Biblioteca Nacional de España, Siglos XVI-XVII. 1. ed. México, D.F.: Colegio de México, Biblioteca Daniel Cosío Villegas.

2006 LI, Santo Domingo, DR

  • Richard D. Woods.Autobiographical Writings on Mexico: an annotated bibliography of primary sources (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2005)

2005 L, Gainesville, FL

  • Ana María Cobos.Latin American Studies: an annotated bibliography of core works (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2002)

2004 XLIX, Ann Arbor, MI

  • Tony A. Harvell.Latin American Dramatists since 1945: a bio-bibliographical guide (Westport, CN: Praeger, 2003)

2003 XLVIII, Cartagena, Colombia

  • Torres, Victor F. 2001.Narradores PuertorriqueñOs Del 70 : Guía BiobibliográFica. San Juan, P.R.: Editorial Plaza Mayor.

2002 XLVII, Ithaca, NY

  • Gayle Williams. Index Guide to Latin American Journals (Austin, TX: SALALM Secretariat, Benson Latin American Collection. The University of Texas at Austin, 1999)

2001 XLVI, Tempe, AZ

  • Iliana Sonntag Blay.Twentieth Century Poetry from Spanish America: An Index to Spanish Language and Bilingual Anthologies (Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1998)

2000 XLV, Long Beach, CA

  • Eileen Oliver. Afro-Brazilian Religions: A Selective Bibliography 1990-1997 (Austin, TX.: SALALM Secretariat, Benson Latin American Collection. The University of Texas at Austin, 1998)

1999 XLIV, Nashville, TN

  • Cecilia Puerto.Latin American Women Artists, Kahlo and Look Who Else: a selective, annotated bibliography* (Westport, CN: Greenwood Press, 1996)

1998, XLIII, San Juan, PR

Peter A. Stern. Sendero Luminoso:an annotated bibliography of the Shining Path guerrilla movement, 1980-1993 (Albuquerque, NM: SALALM, 1995)

1997, XLII, Rockville, MD

  • Barbara Tennenbaum.Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture (New York: C Scribner’s Sons, 1996)

1996, XLI, New York

  • Library of Congress, Hispanic Division. Handbook of Latin American Studies Compact Disk (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995)

1995, XL, Athens, GA

  • Nelly Sfeir González.Bibliographic Guide to Gabriel García Márquez, 1986-1992 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994)

1994, XXXIX, Salt Lake City

  • C. Jared Loewenstein.A Descriptive Catalogue of the Jorge Luis Borges Collection in the University of Virginia Library (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1993)

1993, XXXVIII, Guadalajara

  • A. Covington.Latin America and the Caribbean: A Critical Guide to Research Sources(New York: Greenwood Press, 1992)

1992, XXXVII, Austin

  • Robert A. McNeil and Barbara G. Valk.Latin American Studies: A Basic Guide to Sources (2d ed., revised and enlarged; Metuchen, New Jersey and London: Scarecrow Press, 1990)

1991, XXXVI, San Diego

  • Carole Travis. A Guide to Latin American and Caribbean Census Material: A Bibliography and Union List (London: British Library, 1990)

1990, XXXV, Rio de Janeiro

  • Martha Davidson.Picture Collections, Mexico: A Guide to Picture Sources in the United Mexican States (Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1988)

And

  • Lionel V. Loroña.A Bibliography of Latin American Bibliographies, 1980-1984: Social Sciences and Humanities (Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1987)

1989, XXXIV, Charlottesville

  • Barbara Valk. Borderline: A Bibliography of the United States-Mexico Borderlands (Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications, 1988)

1988, XXXIII, Berkeley

  • George F. Elmendorf. Nicaraguan National Bibliography, 1800-1978 (Redlands: Latin American Bibliographic Foundation, 1987)

1987, XXXII, Miami

  • Nelly Sfeir González and Margaret E. Fau.Bibliographic Guide to Gabriel García Márquez, 1979-1985(Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1986)

1986, XXXI, Berlin

Alma Jordan and Barbara Comissiong.The English-speaking Caribbean: A Bibliography of Bibliographies (Boston: G.K. Hall, 1984)

1985, XXX, Princeton

  • Werner Guttentag. Bio-bibliografía boliviana (Cochabamba: Los Amigos del Libro, 1975- )

And

  • Paula Covington. Indexed Journals: a Guide to Latin American Serials (Madison, WI: Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1983)

1984, XXIX, Chapel Hill

  • Robin M. Price. An Annotated Catalogue of Medical Americana in the Library of the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine: Books and Printed Documents, 1557-1821, from Latin America and the Caribbean Islands and Manuscripts from the Americas, 1575-1927 (London: The Institute, 1983)

1983, XXVIII, Costa Rica

  • Dolores Moyano Martin. Handbook of Latin American Studies (Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1935- )

And

  • Sara de Mundo Lo. Index to Spanish American Collective Biography (Boston: G.K. Hall, 1981- )

1982, XXVII, Washington, D.C.

  • Barbara Valk. HAPI, Hispanic American Periodical Index (Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications, University of California, 1976- )

Multiple people have won the Jose Toribio Medina award more than once: Paula Covington (1985 & 1993), Nelly Sfeir Gonzalez (1987 & 1995), Barbara Valk (1982, 1989 & 1992), Gayle Ann Williams (2002 & 2019).

Honorary Memberships

[edit]

Honorary Members and year elected

Felix Reichman, elected 1970*

Arthur Gropp, elected 1972*

Nettie Lee Benson, elected 1977*

Emma Simonson, elected 1977*

Irene Zimmerman, elected 1977*

Marietta Daniels Shepard, elected 1978*

A. Curtis Wilgus, elected 1980*

Alice Ball, elected 1984

Peter de la Garza, elected 1989

Donald F. Wisdom, elected 1991*

Pauline Collins, elected 1997*

Carl Deal, elected 1997

Suzanne Hodgman, elected 1997

Rosa Q. Mesa, elected 1997*

Iliana Sonntag, elected 1997

Laurence Hallewell, elected 1998

Juan Risso, elected 1998

Alma T. Jordan, elected 1999

Dolores M. Martin, elected 1999*

Jane Garner, elected 2005

Laura Gutiérrez-Witt, elected 2005

Peter Johnson, elected 2005

Barbara Valk, elected 2006*

Robert McNeil, elected 2006*

Ann Hartness, elected 2008

Nelly Sfeir de González, elected 2009

César Rodríguez, elected 2013

Mark Grover, elected 2014

David Block, elected 2015

Dan Hazen, elected 2015*

Richard Phillips, elected 2015

Scott Van Jacob, elected 2016*

Sonia T.D.G. Silva, elected 2017

Georgette Dorn, elected 2019

Angela Carreño, elected 2020


  • deceased

[22]

Additional information

[edit]

As of 2019, SALALM has held 64 annual conferences around the world. The 2020 in-person conference has been postponed because of theCOVID-19 crisis but business meetings will be held remotely as scheduled.[23]

SALALM's outreach efforts include an extensive bibliography on Latin American, US Latinx, and Iberian Studies librarianship.[24]

Affinity groups

[edit]

SALALM has both regional and topical/working groups that function through member participation but are outside of the SALALM organizational structure.

Regional groups

[edit]
  • LANE is the Latin American North East Libraries Network.LANE is the oldest of the regional groups and includes participants from academic and research libraries.
  • LASER is the Latin American Studies Southeast Region.
  • MOLLAS stands for the Midwest Organization of Libraries for Latin American Studies.
  • CALAFIA is the California Cooperative Latin American Collection Development Group which also includes members from Oregon, Washington, and Utah.

Topical/working groups

[edit]
  • ALZAR: Academic Latina/o Zone of Activism & Research
  • DíScoLA: Digital Scholarship in Latin America. DíScoLA was founded in 2015 during a no-host lunch at Princeton University during the SALALM annual conference for three purposes: to explore what digital scholarship means in Latin American Studies, to build skills and share knowledge about projects, tools and methods within the SALALM community, and to raise SALALM's profile in this emergent area.[25]
  • HAPI: Hispanic American Periodicals Index. HAPI evolved out of The SALALM Committee on Bibliography.[26]
  • LAIPA: Latin American and Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Subject Authority Cooperative Program Funnel
  • LAMP: Latin American Materials Project
  • LARRP: Latin Americanist Research Resources Project
  • Libreros (book vendors)

Similar organizations

[edit]

REFORMA is the National Organization to Promote Library & Information Services to Latinos and the Spanish Speaking and is based in Anaheim, CA with 21 chapters.[27]Latin American Studies Association or LASA has over 13,000 members.[28] SALALM members are active in both REFORMA and LASA. The Bolivian Studies Journal was founded by SALALM members.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Mission, Organization, Activities, and Documents".Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  2. ^"SALALM's Membership".Google My Maps. Retrieved2020-05-28.
  3. ^Schadl, Suzanne; Todeschini, Marina (2015)."Cite Globally, Analyze locally: Citation Analysis from a local Latin American Studies Perspective".College & Research Libraries.76 (2):136–149.doi:10.5860/crl.76.2.136.
  4. ^"Bylaws/Articles of Incorporation".Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  5. ^abcALA (2008-03-10)."Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials".About ALA. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  6. ^Calvo, Hortensia."Executive Director's Report, 2015".Salalm. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  7. ^Shirey, Lynn (2007). Hazen, Dan; Spohrer, James (eds.).Building area studies collections. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.ISBN 9783447055123. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  8. ^Cobos, Ana María; McCleod, Philip S. (2011). "The Role of Library Associations: SALALM, the Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials; The Evolution of an Area Studies Librarianship Organization". In Ayala, John L.; Güereña, Salvador (eds.).Pathways to Progress: Issues and Advances in Latino Librarianship(PDF). Santa Barbara: Libraries Unlimited. pp. 181–203.
  9. ^Jerôme."Upcoming Conference SALALM « ACD Blog, by IFLA Acquisition & Collection Development Section". Retrieved2020-05-28.
  10. ^"Worldcat Search: "Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials"".Worldcat.org. OCLC. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  11. ^"The Handbook of Latin American Studies Automated History: A SALALM Paper".lcweb2.loc.gov. Retrieved2020-05-28.
  12. ^SALALM."Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials (SALALM) Records, 1956-".legacy.lib.utexas.edu. Retrieved2020-05-28.
  13. ^"SALALM: 60+ Years of Latin American Studies Librarianship".Google My Maps. Retrieved2020-05-28.
  14. ^Hallock, Nancy L.SALALM, the First Fifty Years : a Handlist of Publications with Author Index. New Orleans, La: SALALM Secretariat, the Latin American Library, Tulane University, 2008.
  15. ^Hazen, Dan C. (1986).Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials (2nd ed.). Chicago: American Library Association. pp. 753–755.
  16. ^SALALM (1963). Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials; Columbus Memorial Library (eds.).Final report and working papers of the Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials. Washington: General Secretariat, Organization of American States.OCLC 5796275.
  17. ^"Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  18. ^"Honorary Membership".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  19. ^"Enlace Travel Awards".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  20. ^"Past Enlace Fellows".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  21. ^"SALALM Scholarship Past Winners".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  22. ^"Honorary Membership".SALALM. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  23. ^"SALALM 65 Postponed".Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials. 2020-04-06. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  24. ^"Zotero | Groups > Latin American, U.S. Latinx, and Iberian Studies Librarianship Bibliography".www.zotero.org. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  25. ^"About DíScoLA".Facebook. Retrieved2020-05-28.
  26. ^Grover, Mark L. (2008). "Library Area Studies Organizations and Multidisciplinary Collection and Research: The Latin American Experience".International Federation of Library Associations, Social Science Libraries Section, Satellite Conference. August 6–7.
  27. ^"REFORMA: Chapters".www.reforma.org. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  28. ^"Latin American Studies Association (LASA)".Latin American Studies Association. Retrieved2020-05-27.

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