IFLA/FAIFE
Intellectual Freedom Statements
Association of College &
Research Libraries (USA)
Intellectual Freedom Principles
for Academic Libraries
Adopted by ACRL Intellectual Freedom Committee: June 28, 1999.
Approved by ACRL Board of Directors: June 29, 1999.
A strong intellectual freedom perspective is critical to the development of
academic library collections and services that dispassionately meet the education and
research needs of a college or university community. The purpose of this statement is to
provide an interpretation of general intellectual freedom principles in an academic
library setting and, in the process, raise consciousness of the intellectual freedom
context within which academic librarians work. These principles should be reflected in all
relevant library policy documents.
- The general principles set forth in the Library Bill of Rights form an indispensable
framework for building collections, services, and policies that serve the entire academic
community.
- The privacy of library users is and must be inviolable. Policies should be in place that
maintain confidentiality of library borrowing records and of other information relating to
personal use of library information and services.
- The development of library collections in support of an institution's instruction and
research programs should transcend the personal values of the selector. In the interests
of research and learning, it is essential that collections contain materials representing
a variety of perspectives on subjects that may be considered controversial.
- Preservation and replacement efforts should ensure that balance in library materials is
maintained and that controversial materials are not removed from the collections through
theft, loss, mutilation, or normal wear and tear. There should be alertness to efforts by
special interest groups to bias a collection though systematic theft or mutilation.
- Licensing agreements should be consistent with the Library Bill of Rights, and should
maximize access.
- Open and unfiltered access to the Internet should be conveniently available to the
academic community in a college or university library. Content filtering devices and
content-based restrictions are a contradiction of the academic library mission to further
research and learning through exposure to the broadest possible range of ideas and
information. Such restrictions are a fundamental violation of intellectual freedom in
academic libraries.
- Freedom of information and of creative expression should be reflected in library
exhibits and in all relevant library policy documents.
- Library meeting rooms, research carrels, exhibit spaces, and other facilities should be
available to the academic community regardless of research being pursued or subject being
discussed. Any restrictions made necessary because of limited availability of space should
be based on need, as reflected in library policy, rather than on content of research or
discussion.
- Whenever possible, library services should be available without charge in order to
encourage inquiry. Where charges are necessary, a free or low-cost alternative (e.g.,
downloading to disc rather than printing) should be available when possible.
- A service philosophy should be promoted that affords equal access to information for all
in the academic community with no discrimination on the basis of race, values, gender,
sexual orientation, cultural or ethnic background, physical or learning disability,
economic status, religious beliefs, or views.
- A procedure ensuring due process should be in place to deal with requests by those
within and outside the academic community for removal or addition of library resources,
exhibits, or services.
- It is recommended that this statement of principle be endorsed by appropriate
institutional governing bodies, including the faculty senate or similar instrument of
faculty governance.