Emerging technologies create new concerns about information privacy within library and information organizations, and many information professionals lack guidance on how to navigate the ethical crises that emerge when information privacy and library policy clash. What should we do when a patron leaves something behind? How do we justify filtering internet access while respecting accessibility and privacy? How do we balance new technologies that provide anonymity with the library's need to prevent the illegal use of their facilities?
Library Patrons' Privacy presents clear, conversational, evidence-based guidance on how to navigate these ethical questions in information privacy. Ideas from professional organizations, government entities, scholarly publications, and personal experiences are synthesized into an approachable guide for librarians at all stages of their career. This guide, designed by three experienced LIS scholars and professionals, is a quick and enjoyable read that students and professionals of all levels of technical knowledge and skill will find useful and applicable to their libraries.
Presents practical, evidence-based guidance for navigating common ethical problems in library and information science
Introduces library and information professionals and students to emerging issues in information privacy
Provides students and practitioners with a foundation of practical problem-solving strategies for handling information privacy issues in emerging technologies
Guides the design of new information privacy policy in all types of libraries
Encourages engagement with information privacy technologies to assist in fulfilling the American Library Association's core values
Share This Book: