Increasingly, libraries are moved to seek partnerships with other libraries, with other organizations in the information and technology fields, with other entities in our institutions, and with other groups and enterprises in our communities. While partnerships of all sorts have had a long history in the field of librarianship, today, as never before, there is greater urgency to develop and exploit library partnerships, and to think widely and creatively on new types of, and potentials for, partnerships.
Current Issue: Volume 12, Issue 3 (2020) Issues 3 & 4
Editorial
Endings and Beginnings: Announcement of Editorial Change at Collaborative Librarianship
Jill Emery and Michael Levine-Clark
Columns
What Collaboration Means to Us: The SPARC Journal Negotiation Community of Practice
Caitlin Schleicher, Nick Shockey, and Greg Tananbaum
From the Field
Keep@Downsview: an evolving shared print project
Heather McMullen, Liz Hayden, Harriet Rykse, Caitlin Tillman, Louise White, and Wade Wyckoff
A Quiet Celebration of Whitman’s 200th Birthday: A Collaborative Opportunity to Discover, Grow, and Share a Collection
Blythe E. Roveland-Brenton and Bern Mulligan
Creating the Entrepreneurship & Libraries Conference 2020: A Collaboration of Public, Special, and Academic Librarians, Vendors, and Economic Development Stakeholders
Morgan Ritchie-Baum, Sara M. Thynne, and Steven M. Cramer
Peer Reviewed Articles
Collaboration as Locus for Information Literacy Teacher Knowledge Development
Juval V. Racelis, Daniel Neal, and Margaret Bean
Collaborative Data Literacy Education for Research Labs: A Case Study at a Large Research University
John Watts, Laura Sare, and David E. Hubbard
