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This Collection Development Policy sets out the principles by which books, audio-visual materials and other resources should be acquired, managed and made available for the maximum benefit of the people of Dorset, with the budget available.
The Dorset Library Strategy 2023-2033 has been co-designed with our customer, communities and partners.
Trusted community spaces for everyone, with services to inspire your future.
To Inspire, Connect and Enable our communities through our services:
To invest in the development of our workforce and volunteers to deliver services that meet current and future community needs and exceed customer expectations.
Dorset Library Service is part of the Libraries West consortium.
The vision and core aims of the consortium is set out below and can also be viewed via the following link to the Libraries West Mission Statement.
Seven library services working together to add value and deliver a better library experience.
The route to achieving our shared vision is encapsulated in our two core aims, which form the basis of our operational work plan.
This policy outlines the basis on which library resources for Dorset Library Service are: acquired, selected and managed.
This policy supports Dorset Library Service in:
Throughout this policy, the term ‘stock’ is used to refer to books, newspapers, magazines and other electronic resources.
Dorset Library Service aims to:
In order to achieve these aims, the following principles are adopted:
The policy will cover how Dorset Library Service:
The library service provides access to a wide range of materials both fiction and non-fiction. As well as latest titles, the service provides backlists of popular authors and can cater for even the most specialist needs.
Dorset Library Service aims to hold items that local people want to borrow. Therefore if any stock gaps are identified by customers, these can be fed in as stock suggestions via the Dorset Council website
Each library aims to provide a varied stock relevant to community needs and on a level appropriate to its size and type (Library, Library Plus or Library Connect). However, every library is part of the wider network of Dorset Library Service and stock will be managed and utilised as a county-wide resource by:
Dorset Library Service is committed to maintaining and developing its collections to provide access to the widest and most up to date range of resources as possible, in order to meet the needs of its customers.
Dorset Library Service works with partners and can sometimes secure funding to provide additional services and/or resources that customers can borrow through their local library.
These can include (but are not limited to), iPads, Micro:Bits and STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) resources.
Use of these resources will be monitored to ensure that value for money is being achieved.
Due to the way these items are funded, there may be instances where use is limited to Dorset Library Service customers only and not made available to the wider Libraries West consortium.
The provision of library stock is carried out against a wide legislative framework:
Further Guidance is provided by:
In its guidelines on Managing safe and inclusive library services, The Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP) states that:
“Librarians and library staff have a core and ongoing commitment to freedom of expression and freedom of access to information. A library is not a place in which to hide from difficult ideas, but to equip our users with the critical literacy to engage productively with difficult ideas in their proper context.
In this context, librarians have both an ongoing duty to oppose censorship in all its forms and a proactive duty to develop collections, activities and services which properly reflect and celebrate the diversity of lived experience and identities in the communities we serve.
These professional commitments are central to the trusted role that libraries hold in our society and they should not be curtailed by any governing body or 3rd party for any reason other than that they are expressly proscribed by law.” (page 3)
And:
“[T]here may be circumstances in which the provision of access to information, events, activities or public spaces would bring the library into conflict with its other statutory duties including (but not limited to) the Equality Act 2010 and Public Sector Equality Duty (the specific duty of public authorities to consider how their decisions impact people with characteristics protected under the Equality Act).
There may be circumstances in which the library may place conditions on access to information, events, activities or public spaces, but only where obliged to do so by their responsibilities to safeguarding, public safety or their public duty under the Equality Act 2010 and related legislation”. (page 7)
Using this guidance, Dorset Library Service will make available the broadest range of material within its policy of freedom of access to all legally available information. It is acknowledged that on occasion individuals may find items in Dorset libraries offensive.
However, we do not label items to warn customers of potentially sensitive content and would only restrict access to material to protect it from damage or theft, not as a form of censorship.
In the interests of intellectual freedom material will not be rejected solely because it is considered controversial.
Controversial, potentially inflammatory or extremist material will be evaluated according to this collection development policy.
Decisions will be made on the assumption that the adult reader can make their own critical and reasoned evaluation of views expressed in the content of the item.
Where appropriate the assistance of relevant external agencies and advisory groups will be sought.
It is assumed that adults responsible for readers with junior membership will evaluate the appropriateness of the views and opinions expressed in an item item on their behalf. for their charges.
Dorset Library Service welcomes donations of stock that is less than five years old and in good condition.
This does not apply to local interest, where the content is the most important consideration.
There is a cost involved in cataloguing donated items and making them shelf ready (e.g. adding protective jackets, RFID tags etc).
Therefore, Dorset Library Service reserve the right to dispose of material as thought fit – this may include passing on to a third party for disposal or sale.
It is not guaranteed that donated items will be added to a particular library or to always keep it at that library.
Due to restrictions in licensing of some items and the inability to test the quality of items, donations of audio-visual material cannot be accepted.
Dorset Library Service is often asked to acquire, either by purchase or donation, books which have been self published.
The assumption is that these items will not have been through the rigorous editing and legal content checks undertaken by mainstream publishers.
Where Dorset Library Service agrees that such an item may be of use in their collection, it will fall to the author to prove the content is reliable, professionally presented, and does not contravene any laws.
Library service staff do not have the time to read items and make this judgement.
The only exceptions to this are items with a strong local interest. These will be judged by the relevant team member on a case-by-case basis.
Unsolicited Stock Some authors and publishers send items that have not been ordered, enclosing an invoice, in the hope that a library service will purchase them. These items will not be accepted.
Should the sender require their return, the cost of postage must be provided in advance, as per the Sale of Goods Act.
The following categories of stock fall outside the scope of our collections:
Dorset Library Service is a member of the Central Buying Consortium with regards the purchase of physical stock.
The purchase of recreational digital resources such as e-books, e-audiobooks, e-magazines and e-newspapers are purchased through the Libraries West consortium.
The majority of purchases are made through these consortium contracts, awarded to suppliers via a rigorous supply tender procedure, in line with legislation to ensure maximum value.
Supplier selection is used for a large proportion of Adult and Children’s children’s fiction.
The contracted main supplier selects new stock for all libraries using specific criteria in conjunction with this collection development policy.
Some reference materials and other specialist stock categories are supplied on standing order.
Supplier selection is supplemented by:
Items are selected for stock in response to known demand, as well as anticipated demand in light of reviews and media interest.
The primary objective is to provide an extensive range of titles. Multiple copies are purchased to meet demand only where it is possible to do so without compromising the range of titles bought.
The aim is to provide stock in appropriate formats, which is attractive, well-presented and constantly refreshed by purchase and circulation.
A range of factors influence the selection of stock including:
Reference material is now increasingly being rationalised and interfiled with non-fiction stock.
To provide wider access and to ensure currency, reference provision will increasingly be provided by digital access.
Dorset Library Service aims to select stock in the format most suitable for a given purpose and most likely to prove of greatest benefit to our communities.
A positive contribution to social inclusion will be made by providing other formats for users with individual needs.
Decisions on stock selection, whether printed or digital, consider a range of criteria including:
Fiction is considered an essential element of public library provision, serving not only recreational but also educational and social needs. In selecting stock, Dorset Library Service aims to provide titles which:
In building the collection, the primary objective is to provide a varied and balanced stock of all types of fiction, designed to satisfy all tastes.
Collections consist of popular ‘genre’ fiction of all types and support and promote new authors, English translations, classics, standard works and literary fiction.
A comprehensive non-fiction and reference collection is essential in order to encourage and assist community development and promote social inclusion. The collection aims to support:
The aim is to provide as comprehensive an information as possible within budget limitations.
Increasingly, reference materials are provided online in electronic formats to improve access and currency of information.
Physical reference materials are mostly available in larger branches but can be requested to a different library for customers to access. In most cases, this will be for use within the library only.
Every library within Dorset provides a range of resources for children and young people from birth.
The aim is to provide a wide range of materials in order to satisfy the recreational, educational and social needs of children and young people.
Dorset Library Service provides resources which promote literacy and encourage a lifelong love of books and reading for children and young people of all reading abilities.
Where possible, resources are also provided in appropriate formats for those with additional needs.
A young adult collection is also provided to form a bridge between the children’s and adult’s collections.
Books for children and young people are provided in a variety of formats including:
E-audiobooks and e-books
Music CDs and DVDs are complementary to other formats and not part of Dorset Library Service’s statutory provision.
The effectiveness of these collections will be assessed by issues and by income generated (compared with the cost of purchase).
Due to cost outweighing income, new music CDs are no longer available to hire. A small collection has been retained in the Headquarters stack and items can be requested from this.
A small collection of new DVDs is still purchased whilst the income generated surpasses the cost of purchase.
Performance is reviewed on an annual basis.
Dorset Library Service aims to provide a balanced, attractive and current stock relevant to the needs of the residents of Dorset.
First impressions are vital – the physical presentation of the stock makes a statement about the quality of service offered. The removal of unused, worn out and out of date stock makes it easier for customers to find good quality titles and creates space for new stock and promotions.
The whole workforce has a responsibility to ensure that stock is well maintained, assessing the condition of books whenever they are handled, for example at the point of return, when being shelved or during the undertaking of stock tasks.
Several criteria are used to assess stock.
These include the following:
Similar criteria apply to all items, although the physical condition of some out of print, classic works or the last copy held of titles which can be requested from the Headquarters stack, may not be to the same standard as stock which is browsable on a public library shelf.
The Headquarters stack is a storage area that enables Dorset Library Service to continue to provide access to some items which are not in good enough condition to be in public libraries, but where there is ongoing demand for access.
Most local history titles will continue to be relevant regardless of their age. An item may not be in good physical condition but may be retained because of its local interest.
Similarly, the level of expected issues would not be as high as that of a general non-fiction item.
Dorset Library Service currently subscribes to an Evidence Based Stock Management tool which helps to identify stock to consider for withdrawal or relocation to another library where evidence shows there may be demand.
Items removed from library stock are given to a third party company for them to sell, donate or recycle. Credit is given to Dorset Library Service for this.
Dorset Library Service makes use of an Evidence Based Stock Management tool to manage stock and maximise performance.
A regular schedule of tasks using the tools available help improve the choice of titles on shelves for customers and to increase the use made of titles.
This operates on a county-wide basis with stock moving between all branches.
The system suggests items suitable for transfer based on lack of issues in one direction and identified demand in another.
This enables funds to be focussed towards titles new to the service.
The stock with the greatest potential for transfer is:
Stock promotion is undertaken to:
The skills, knowledge, experience and enthusiasm of the workforce are essential to make the best use of stock to meet customer needs and attract new users.
Stock promoted must be in good condition and displays attractive and well presented.
Stock is promoted in a range of ways across the county depending on the priorities within each library and space and display furniture/resources available in individual libraries.
Digital means of promotion are increasingly used for example, features on the Dorset Council and/or Libraries West websites as well as social media accounts.
Depending on the nature of the promotion, displays will aim to:
This Collection Development Policy was last updated in April 2024 and will be reviewed in April 2025.
Any comments, questions and suggestions in relation to the Collection Development Policy can be sent to dorsetlibraries@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk