Getting Back to the Basics of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion in Higher Education
Two U.S. experts in EDI discuss how universities can continue to support and advance equality of opportunity in the face of mounting challenges to diversity work.
Learn about the efforts of U.S. librarians to protect valuable public data from sudden erasure by the Trump administration and a pioneering project that saw a U.K. university partner with a local council to create a joint library that is open to anyone.
In this episode of the podcast, we discuss the changing role of the university library, and librarian, and learn how these often-iconic institutions are not just responding to change but actively seeking out new opportunities to improve their services and ensure access to valuable information.
Hear about the efforts of U.S. librarians to protect valuable public data and government records from sudden erasure by the Trump administration. Plus, a U.K. vice chancellor describes a pioneering project that saw his university partner with the local council to create a joint library that is open to anyone.
Lynda Kellam is the Snyder-Granader Director of Research Data and Digital Scholarship at the University of Pennsylvania. She has held previous data librarian roles at Cornell University and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She serves as secretary of the International Association for Social Science Information Service and Technology (IASSIST) and is a past president of the Government Documents Round Table (GODORT). Independent of her role at Penn, she is a leading figure in the Data Rescue Project, which is coordinating efforts to protect U.S. public data at risk of deletion or mismanagement.
David Green is the vice chancellor of the University of Worcester. A Cambridge-educated economist with a career-long commitment to education and social equality, he was instrumental in establishing The Hive, which is the only fully integrated university–public library in Europe, in partnership with the Worcestershire County Council. Before joining Worcester in 2003, he held senior academic posts at London South Bank University, Leeds Metropolitan University and the University of West London and worked as a researcher and consultant in the private sector and for U.K. homeless campaign SHELTER. In 2019, he was awarded a C.B.E. for his services to higher education.
Find more advice and insight on these topics in our latest spotlight guide: Redefining the university library for 2025 and beyond.
This episode is sponsored by Elsevier.
Listen to this podcast on Spotify, Apple podcasts or Google podcasts.
Two U.S. experts in EDI discuss how universities can continue to support and advance equality of opportunity in the face of mounting challenges to diversity work.
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