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PUBLIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
PUBLICATIONS GUIDELINES AND PROCEDURES
The Public Library Association wants to make available publications
that will enhance the best in public library service. To assure the continued
availability of top-quality PLA publications, the following guidelines
and procedures have been developed. These guidelines describe the subject
matter of interest to PLA, the three types of PLA publications, the criteria
used to evaluate manuscripts and publications, rights of first refusal,
the process of getting items published, and the responsibilities of relevant
parties.
For more information, contact the PLA office for the name of the current
PLA Publications Committee Chair, 1-800-545-2433, ext. 5PLA.
rev. 6/13/94
PUBLICATION POLICIES AND PRACTICES
The Public Library Association engages in an active program of publishing
materials of interest to the public library community. The following statement
sets forth the association's policies on what subjects the association
will consider, how materials are selected for publication, the format
in which those materials will be published, guidelines for authors submitting
materials, and preparation, promotion, and publicity for the publications.
- Publications Of Interest To The Public Library Association
- Content
The highest priority subjects for PLA Publications are:
- Practical information related to public library operations
(such as manuals, cost studies, training guides, etc.)
- Issues/Hot Topics
- Applied research useful to library management and staff
Publications addressing the priority concerns of the Public
Library Association are particularly encouraged. The priority
concerns are (1991):
- Adequate funding for libraries
- Improved management of public libraries
- Recognition of the importance of all library staff in providing
quality public service
- Recruitment, education, training and compensation of public
librarians
- Effective use of technology
- Intellectual freedom
- Improved access to library resources
- Effective communication with the non-library world
Subject matter must be timely and focus primarily on public
libraries. Topics having the lowest priority are historical and
theoretical works.
- Audience
Public library staff, managers and other library personnel comprise
the primary target audience for PLA publications.
- Format
The PLA Publications Program includes materials in a variety
of formats: monographs, videocassettes, audiocassettes. However,
the program's main focus is on manuscripts with sufficient number
of pages to constitute a "book." Works of fewer pages may ne more
appropriate for Public Libraries, the division journal,
and can be sent directly to Public Libraries for consideration.
- Sources of Publications
PLA accepts original, never before published material, as well as
publications that have been written or produced for another audience
but would be of interest to the broader PLA membership. There are
currently three categories of PLA Publications:
- PLA Unit-Generated Titles
These include, but are not limited to, publications produced
by a PLA unit, in addition to manuscripts related to unit programs
given at conferences and workshops.
WHEN A UNIT IS CONSIDERING A PUBLICATION, IT IS ESSENTIAL
THAT THE CHAIR CONTACT THE PLA OFFIE BEFORE WORK BEGINS. THE OFFICE
WILL PUT THE CHAIR IN CONTACT WITH THE PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE.
To expedite the coordination of activities on publications,
the unit originating the publication shall identify an author
and a promotion person for each title. (These may be the same
person.)
- The author prepares the text and the camera-ready copy and
will be the person the PLA office staff will contact concerning
the publication.
- The promotion person will handle correspondence to selected
audiences and identified markets, such as literary groups that
might receive a mailing about a PLA publication on the topic.
PLA can only publish materials that require minimal resources for
production. Camera-ready copy is a must.
For purposes of this program, "camera-ready" means that the
document can go directly to a printer once it is received by the
PLA office. No additional work is required by the PLA staff to
get the document ready for printing. Thus, the author must supply
a clean, black and white layout suitable for reproduction, with
all art work, supplementary pages (such as table of contents),
text and cover in place. Documents not received in this manner
will be returned.
Funding Unit-Generated Titles
The following two lines have been established in the PLA budget
to assist in publication activities:
- The "prepublication" fund line has been established to assist
in getting materials ready to publish, when necesary. While
this does not lessen the responsibility of the author and/or
committee to deliver camera-ready copy, the funds in this line
will be used to underwrite copy editing, cover preparation,
and other expenses for selected publications at the discretion
of the PLA Executive Director with advice from the Publications
Committee.
- The "promotion" fund line has been established to allow the
originating committee of the publication to market its availability
to relevant organizations. (For example, it may be useful for
the committee that originates a publication on literacy to contact
national or regional literacy organizations to tell them about
a PLA book on this subject.) These funds can be used to defray
the costs of postage, photocopying letters and flyers, and related
expenses. Requests for these funds, not to exceed $100 per title,
should be sent to the PLA Executive Director.
Extensive promotion of unit-generated publications, beyond what
is discussed in section 5 below, will continue to be the responsibility
of the originating committee.
Neither of these lines will be available for use by publications
that are funded through a Challenge Grant, the application for
which should include funds to cover these expenses.
- Solicited Manuscripts
These are original manuscripts with "hot topic" contents as
identified by members of the Publications Committee. The Committee
also solicits authors to write such titles. The finished manuscript
must be submitted in camera-ready format.
- PLA Select Publications
These include, but are not limited to, publications produced by or for
libraries -- usually in-house documents intended for local decision-making
or publications of other library groups, such as state associations.
This category constitutes a distribution network of already-existing
titles. Please see the "PLA Select Publications Factsheet" for additional
titles.
- Rights of Fist Refusal
PLA has the right of first refusal for the work of any PLA unit.
This means that potential publications must be offered to PLA first;
if turned down by PLA, then they must be offered to ALA. If turned
down by ALA, outside publishers may be sought. If an outside publisher
accepts the material, the PLA office will work with the publisher
and the committee to see the manuscript through to completion.
This right of first refusal extends to information presented at
PLA-sponsored programs. If the presenter has not been contacted by
a PLA representative by the end of the thirty days immediately following
such a program, the information may be released to another publisher.
- Role of the PLA Publications Committee
The charge of the Publications Committee is:
"To initiate and coordinate the publication of materials and the
production of resources pertinent to the role of public library services;
to work with PLA sections and committees to evaluate the need for
revision of published materials; to aid in originating new publications,
and in defining the purpose, audience, and scope of each publication;
to ensure representation at meetings of the ALA Publishing Committee;
to review publications in the public library field, especially publications
of the division, to ensure that they are current and relevant to member
needs."
The PLA Publications Committee is free to pursue Select titles in
a broad range of areas. For its Solicited Manuscripts the group seeks
to avoid projects that are clearly part of anotehr division's or unit's
subject specialty or will consider inviting said divisions or units
to participate in a jointly published project.
The PLA Publications Committee does not have responsibility for
PLA publications that have their own dedicated committee, such as
Public Libraries and the Public Library Data Service Statistical
Report. However, chairs of these committees should regularly update
the Publications Committee on the status of their publications.
Publications distributed by PLA are reviewed by the PLA Publications
Committee, except as noted in the case of dedicated committees above.
The committee looks at subject matter, intended audience, format,
author/scholarship credibility, and presentation. The content of each
publication is the work and responsibility of its authors.
- Role of the PLA Office
The PLA office manages the publications program. This work includes
facilitation of the acquisition process, oversight of the editorial
and production process, inventory control, and warehouse/distribution
and financial management. The PLA office provides a limited amount
of basic promotion for new titles, according to the outline found
in this document. The office also sends a staff liaison to the Publications
Committee meetings.
- Guidelines for Evaluating Potential Publications
The following criteria are general in nature and will guide the
Publications Committee in its assessment of manuscripts/media submitted.
These should also be kept in mind as unit-generated publications/solicited
manuscripts are developed.
- Subject
- Is the topic clearly defined?
- Is the conclusion clear?
- Is the subject of current interest?
- Is the subject addressed significant to public libraries?
- Does the manuscript provide new information or insights?
- Does it build on previous work?
- Does it duplicate existing works?
- Does the purpose of the manuscript, i.e., historical, reference,
etc., fit within the PLA publication priorities as defined in
this document?
- Audience
- Is the manuscript clearly directed toward a specific audience?
- Who is this audience?
- What is the size of the potential audience?
- Is the audience clearly identified in the work?
- Scholarship/Credibility
- What are the author's/editor's/compiler's qualifications to
write on this topic?
- If the work suggests a thesis or argument, does the evidence
presented support it?
- If the tone of the work is scholarly, do the points made in
the manuscript have supporting documentation such as footnotes,
statistics, references, etc.?
- Is the methodology described clearly? Is it appropriate to
the topic?
- Organization and Written Expression
- Does the treatment of the material suit the intended audience?
- Is the work well organized and coherent? Does it have, for
example, an introduction, helpful breaks (chapters, subsections,
paragraphs), and a conclusion?
- Is it clear, logical, and interesting?
- Format/Presentation
- What is the most appropriate format for this work? Monograph,
journal article, booklet, AV, other?
- What is the current format of this work?
- Is the material camera-ready or will camera-ready material
be available?
- Does the manuscript follow conventional rules for spelling,
punctuation, hyphenation, and footnote style?
- Are tables, graphs, and illustrations effectively used and
adequately explained?
- What is the size and physical complexity of the manuscript?
- What resources are needed for publication?
- Bibliographies as Separate Publications
- Is the objective of the bibliography clearly stated?
- Is the basis of selection stated and adhered to?
- Is the format consistent and easy to understand?
- If annotated, are the annotations in a consistent style and
format?
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