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What Is a Library? What Do Libraries Do?

A description of library types, services, and select histories.

What is a Library?

Libraries have served many roles in different places and times

One way to think about libraries is that they gather and provide access to collections.

  • These may be collections of knowledge and information, such as are found in books, media, and even people.
  • These may be collections of other kinds of resources and things—such as technological devices, the sharing of information in different forms, and creative and material resources (games, puzzles, kits, etc).
  • Libraries also frequently provide collections of services for their community, including technological and workforce support, events in service of community engagement and knowledge, and educational and informational outreach. 
  • Libraries may also be understood to provide the resource of space—for gathering, studying, and being. 

There are different types of libraries

Ultimately, Libraries of all types may collect, preserve, and make materials, resources, spaces, and stories available to their communities. One reason for doing this is to enable library users to engage with information, knowledge, and resources that may help us to understand our histories, ourselves, and others. 

For a very brief introduction to libraries in general, including (but not limited to)  public libraries, see this excerpt from The Henry Ford's Innovation Nation with Mo Rocca on YouTube. 

  • Public Libraries

    • Sometimes also called "lending libraries" or "free libraries." These libraries are open to the public and to patrons of all backgrounds and ages, so access and borrowing options typically span wide demographic ranges, interests, and needs. Services, spaces, and events may be designed to meet the needs and interests of local communities of wide audiences. 
    • Here's a visual story depicting how public libraries have come to be, with connections made to funding sources, activism, and extension of services to all.
    • Here's information on a documentary film via PBS: Free for All: The Public Library. It is currently available in full via YouTube.
  • School Libraries

    • As the title suggests, these are libraries within and for K-12 schools. They often have instructional and curricular aims, may emphasize digital literacy, and, where possible, may provide spaces to support student well-being. They may also coordinate with other learning or outreach services, such as in support of individual student learning needs and research projects. 
    • You can take a look at an Infographic from the American Association of School Librarians: "Strong School Libraries Build Strong Students." 

  • ​​​​​Special Libraries

    • These libraries may hold highly specific collections, serve very specialized groups (such as legal or museum collection's researchers, or those in other highly unique settings), and may or may not be "open" to external visitors. Medical libraries, for example, may aim to have a wide reach of access, while corporate libraries with a lot of proprietary information may not. 
    • The School of Information Studies at McGill provides a list from the Special Libraries Association of 26 different types of emphases in special librarianship.
  • Academic Libraries

    • The Jim Dan Hill Library at the University of Wisconsin-Superior is an academic library, featuring subject liaison librarians, reference services, and information literacy instruction
    • Academic libraries serve the various communities of their academic institution. They may also engage with additional communities, such as local residents or specialized researchers. They may facilitate or otherwise provide support in publishing, bibliometrics, and open educational resources. They may offer additional supportive services in coordination with other offices, such as in facilitating the study of teaching and learning, test proctoring, or maintaining institutional data, records and/or archives
    • In 2021, EveryLibrary published a short primer on Academic and Public Libraries.
    • San José State University goes even further, breaking out subtypes of Academic Libraries.

Libraries Services and Spaces

Libraries Offer Services to The Members of Their Community

Broadly, Libraries exist as part of and in service to their community. A report issued in 2018 from The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) asserts that: "Libraries form an important part of the public service infrastructure . . . They frequently have an explicit mission to serve all members of the community, in particular the vulnerable, and are associated with educational opportunity."

Preservation

Within an international and historical context, libraries of various types may be broadly understood to support the preservation of knowledge, of expression, and of cultural heritage.

Access

Libraries take accessibility—literally the ability for library community members to access spaces and materials—seriously. 

  • A cohort of Canadian academic and public libraries has compiled resources to support accessible libraries. 
  • The United Nations News features a profile from 2024 of library outreach in prisons in the Philippines with an objective of reducing prison overcrowding. This initiative is supported by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. 
  • The Biblioburro, or Donkey Libraries, of Colombia, are an example of a library service for rural patrons, as featured in a short video from the British Broadcasting Corporation
  • In the United States during the years of the Great Depression, Librarians in Kentucky rode horses into rural areas to provide access to books, as featured in Smithsonian Magazine. This outreach was supported by federal U.S. dollars dispersed as part of the Works Progress Administration. (UW-Superior patrons can access a fictional depiction of this history in ebook and audiobook format)
  • Restrictions such as book bans and other forms of censorship can be of concern to libraries. Such actions may be understood to impede access and to impose on the freedoms of thought and of expression.
    • Academic libraries, according to an Ithaka report, are not immune from some of the broader conversations around censorship. 
    • However, given the nature of their support of academic inquiry, critical thinking, and intellectual freedom, academic libraries have generally seen far fewer direct impacts than have public and school libraries, with some examples of the latter provided by PBS News and Harvard Ed. magazine, respectively.

Space

Libraries provide communities with places to be, to study, to gather, and to share. In the 2018 IFLA report cited above, it is also noted that in some settings the library may provide "the only public indoor space in the community."

  • In school settings, an Australian librarian has noted that libraries can support student well being, in part by offering a kind of a space of refuge.
  • In public settings, the importance of space can be seen, for example, in times of civil unrest and under extreme weather conditions: 
    • In 2014 the importance of library spaces was illustrated in Ferguson, MO, with ABC News noting: "The Ferguson Library Becomes Refuge for Adults and Children Amid Strife," while NBC News featured an article on the same topic entitled: "'In This Together': Ferguson Library Stays Open Amid Violence."
    • Following tornado damage and affiliate issues in 2024, a public library in Ohio was a community resource for air conditioning, electricity, and Wi-Fi, per ABC News, Cleveland. Previously, in 2019, an article in Library Journal noted an increase in public libraries serving as cooling centers. In Wisconsin, meanwhile, public libraries are listed amongst those public resources available for warming during conditions of extreme cold. 
  • This emphasis on the library as space has also had an impact on academic libraries and even library architecture, in service of academic community needs and developments, as noted in an article for the Council on Library & Information Resources

Libraries, Collaborations, and Funding for Services

Libraries Collaborate and Integrate Resources to Serve Their Users

To serve their communities, Libraries of all types may engage with publishers, vendors, and different technologies to offer services and resources to their patrons for low or no cost to the users. For example: 

  • Libraries may provide access to technologies and digital tools.
    • This may include tools designed to aid users in locating materials, including computer stations.
    • It may include provision of tools for users to use at low or no cost in order to access or create their own content (e.g. document and spreadsheet softwares, printing services, etc.). 
  • Libraries may subscribe to content through digital platforms for their users to access.
    • Subscriptions may be a result of a direct relationship with a publisher.
    • Subscriptions may be a result of working with a vendor that provides materials from multiple publishers and content owners.
    • Subscriptions may provide a way for the library to offer a particular "kind" of resource (such as ebook, audiobook, film, etc.).  

Libraries also collaborate with one another to extend their ability to serve their communities. This kind of "crowdsourcing" can help to expand library services and may reduce expenditures on individual library budgets. 

  • For example, while some subscriptions to content may be independent (and available only to or through one library), other subscriptions may be achieved and shared through a consortium or collective of libraries (such as in a given region, or in affiliation with a given institution). 
  • In addition to digital resources, Libraries may also use something called "resource sharing" or participate in interlibrary loan services, so that patrons in one location can obtain physical materials on loan from another.

Libraries Rely on Private and Public Funding

Libraries provide services and resources to their communities. While some users in some settings may see low fees for select library services (such as printing, copying, resource sharing, mail services, etc.), many public-serving libraries in the U.S. endeavor to provide most services to their communities as a public service. To further their reach and to stretch often very limited budgets, Libraries often rely on external funding.

Private Philanthropy

  • A fall 2024 article in the Chronicle of Philanthropy  noted that the Carnegie Corporation pledged $4 million to New York City area libraries in order to "provide English language and work-force training classes for adults as well as civics and college- and career-prep courses for teenagers." The article notes that in this action, "Carnegie Returns to its Roots." 
  • Allowing for communities to access the library and borrow library materials for free is an idea that took hold strongly in the middle of the 19th century. Aims for public libraries in the United States at this time included teaching English to new Americans, supporting an informed and educated society (and voting public), and providing secular public spaces aimed at a social good. 
    • In line with these aims, private philanthropic funds, especially from Carnegie, have helped to shape libraries as many think of them today, as is demonstrated in this lesson plan from the National Park Service.
    • National Public Radio associates 1,689 public libraries across the United States with Carnegie's support. The Wisconsin Historical Society has some historic photos of the Superior Public Library Carnegie building on Hammond Ave. 

Friends Groups

Some libraries may have private "friends" groups that serve as a fundraising wing. Such groups may host used book sales, for instance, or support specific needs—including through volunteer work. Examples include: 

Public Funding

Libraries provide public services, including but not limited to information resources. Thus, city, state, and federal monies provide key supports for library initiatives. For some historical overview, consider the following:

  • City Departments: A 2022 blog post from a school librarian in New York—the first librarian at the school in ten years—notes that this library was able to grow their book collections and to serve students who had never before encountered or used a library, in part due to grant funding support from the city's Department of Education. 
  • State Initiatives: In Wisconsin, the Common School Fund has been an important (and in some cases, possibly only) source of support for material purchases by school libraries, according to a 2019 article in The Superior Telegram (UW-Superior patrons can access through U.S. Newsstream). These materials may include physical books as well as library research database subscriptions for student use. 
  • Federal Services: In a 2020 blog post, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) featured a description of IMLS federal grant programs designed to bring Wi-Fi to underserved communities through partnerships with public libraries.