The Washington Library Association (WLA) is a professional organization for librarians and library workers in the U.S. state of Washington. It is headquartered in Seattle and has 1,504 individual members and 49 institution members as of 2019[update].[1]
Formation | March 27, 1905 |
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Headquarters | Seattle, Washington |
Website | wla |
WLA was founded by the Washington State Library at a meeting in Tacoma on March 27, 1905.[2] Meetings were held annually until 1909 when the first WLA was merged with the newly formed Pacific Northwest Library Association.[3] It was briefly organized as the Puget Sound Library Association and then re-established in its current form with its first meeting on June 30, 1932.[2][3] The WLA has published an academic journal called Alki since 1983.[2]
WLA has four divisions: Academic, Public, School, and Special.[2] WLA also has eleven interest-based sections, Collection Development & Technical Services (CATS), Children's and Young Adult Services (CAYAS), College Libraries Across Washington State (CLAWS), Intellectual Freedom Section (IFS), Leadership is For Everyone (LIFE), Library & Information Student Section (LISS), Serving Adults in Libraries (SAIL), Social Responsibilities (SRRT), WA Library Employees (WALE), WA Library Trainers (WALT), and WA Library Friends, Foundations, Trustees, and Advocates (WLFFTA).[2]
References
edit- ^ Association, Washington Library. "About Us". Home. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e Cordes, Sara (October 17, 2019). "Washington Library Association Historical Archives Exhibit". Museology Master of Arts Program. University of Washington. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
- ^ a b Johns, Helen (1956). Twenty-five years of the Washington Library Association. Palo Alto, California: Pacific Book. pp. 6–7. hdl:2027/uc1.$b670374.
External links
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