Identifying standard practices in research library book conservation

View/ Open
Issue Date
2010-01-26Author
Baker, Whitney
Dube, Liz
Publisher
American Library Association: Association for Library Collections and Technical Services
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The field of research library conservation has emerged as a distinct discipline and undergone
major refinements over the past fifty years: professional organizations and training programs have been established, new treatment techniques have been developed and promoted, and, increasingly, special and general collections practitioners have collaborated on treatment solutions. Despite such dramatic growth and definition within the field, there has been no comprehensive assessment of the book treatment practices employed by research libraries for special and general collections. In response to this need, a study was undertaken to investigate and document the types of treatments employed by research libraries to conserve and maintain their book collections, and to compare the practices used for special collections with those used for general collections. This paper describes the
evolution of the field over the past fifty years and identifies book conservation techniques the study
found to be routinely, moderately, or rarely employed in research libraries. A comparison of special and general collections treatment practices suggests that while notable differences exist, many
treatment practices are common in both contexts. Implications of the study's results and potential
applications for this new information are stated.
Collections
Citation
Baker, Whitney, and Liz Dube. 2010. Identifying Standard Practices in Research Library Book Conservation. Library Resources & Technical Services 54 (1): 21-39.
Items in KU ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
We want to hear from you! Please share your stories about how Open Access to this item benefits YOU.