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The deadline for proposals for the 2022 ARLIS/NA 50th Anniversary Conference
has been extended!
The deadline for all papers, pre-coordinated panels, speakers and workshops
is now:
Tuesday September 21st, 2022.

 




The Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/NA) will hold its 50th
annual conference, Past Present Future: Aspiring to New Heights in Chicago,
IL, April 5th to 9th, 2022. 

As the Art Libraries Society of North America celebrates its golden
anniversary, the conference theme underscores the history of art
librarianship, focuses on the current emergence of new technologies and
modes of interaction, and provides an opportunity to consider how the events
of the past two years may impact the future. It also reflects Chicago's own
story, from the resiliency and optimism that allowed Chicago to reinvent
itself as a modern city after the Great Fire, to its development as a city
of dynamic diversity where issues of equity, inclusion, accessibility and
anti-racism are of paramount importance.

The Chicago Conference Program Committee invites fellow librarians and
library professionals, archivists, curators, museum professionals,
publishers, educators, artists, designers, architects, and scholars to
propose papers, sessions, workshops, and speakers that reflect reinvention
and the aspiration to reach new heights.

The 2021 conference survey revealed that attendees were most interested in
the following topics, listed in ranked order. The program committee
encourages submissions that include, but are not limited to:

*	Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility
*	Local Art and Architecture
*	Advocacy, Social Justice, Public Policy and Activism
*	Archives, Rare Books and Special Collections
*	Collection Development and Management
*	Critical Librarianship
*	Digital Humanities and Digital Scholarship
*	Alternative Publications, Artists' Books, Graphic Novels, 'zines
etc.
*	Teaching and Pedagogical Practice
*	Visual Literacy
*	User Experience

Types of Submissions

PAPERS: An individual paper presentation, potentially addressing new
research, a case study, or an innovative idea with a total time of 15-20
minutes. Presentations provide attendees with new tools, strategies, or
inspiration that they can apply in their own practice. The Conference
Program Co-Chairs and the Conference Program Committee will group individual
presentations into paper panels with a common topic or theme, which will run
from 60 to 90 minutes, including a Q&A.

PRE-COORDINATED PANELS: A pre-coordinated session of 2-5 presenters with a
moderator addressing a common topic or theme with a total time of 60-90
minutes, including a Q&A. Panels provide attendees with multiple
views/strategies on a single topical area, a comparison of tools or methods,
or a number of case studies on related topics. It is not necessary to
identify all potential presenters before submitting. Naming a moderator, who
will advocate for and develop the session, is required.

SPEAKER SUGGESTIONS & PLENARIES: A plenary may be a prepared paper or
discussion panel of significant importance to the profession. Plenaries are
60-90 minutes in length. No other meetings, sessions, etc. are scheduled
during plenaries. The content of plenaries should be current and of broad
interest to attendees. Non-member speakers who will speak on a significant
topic of interest to ARLIS/NA members may be suggested here.

WORKSHOPS: An opportunity to teach and explore current and emerging topics
in an intimate atmosphere. Workshops encourage a focused, hands-on
experience led by experts who combine presentation, active learning,
collaboration, and discussions. They may last two, four, or eight hours.
Consider ways to benefit from local educational or cultural institutions in
Chicago.


Additional Details

WORD LIMIT: All proposal abstracts are limited to 500 words or fewer.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES: You'll be asked to list 2-3 learning objectives,
takeaways, or goals for your proposal.

TOPICS: You'll be asked to select up to 5 topics relevant to your session.

AUDIENCES: You'll be asked to pick up to 5 target audiences for your
session.

NEW VOICES: You will be asked if you are a student or in your first five
years of librarianship as you may be eligible for the New Voices in the
Profession session.

DEIA-AR: You will be asked if your presentation addresses issues of
diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility or anti-racism. The committee is
particularly interested in seeing papers and sessions that include attention
to DEIA-AR.

How to Submit Proposals

You must anonymize your proposal description. All personal or institutional
names must be removed from the description and learning objectives (however,
these details must remain in other fields of the form), and may be replaced
by terms such as "presenter," "author," or "speaker", or in the case of
institutions, terms such as "large academic library," "small museum
library," etc. The review of proposals is a blind peer review process.
Non-anonymized proposals may be ineligible.

Submit your presentation, panel, and workshop proposals via the button
below: 

 



 <https://www.openconf.org/arlisna2022/author/submit.php> Submit your
proposal here 

 




The call for posters, roundtables, and lightning talks will be announced
soon.

Please direct any questions to the Program Co-chairs:

*	Cara List, Northwestern University
<mailto:[log in to unmask]
ls> [log in to unmask]
*	Jamie Vander Broek, University of Michigan
<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask]

 



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