糖心Vlog

Oxford libraries in disrepair

Published on
May 21, 2015
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Like any loyal graduate of the University of Oxford, I was delighted to see that its current big fundraising drive has been so successful (鈥Oxford hits 拢2 billion in fundraising campaign鈥, 12 May). I was even more delighted to see that it intends to spend some of the money on 鈥渋nfrastructure鈥. Benefactions have a way of going to vanity projects 鈥 any head of house will tell you that it is never easy to get a donation to repair the guttering.

A section of Oxford鈥檚 guttering in desperate need of extra funding is its libraries. Any long-term user will notice that Oxford has for some years been reducing both the number and the level of expertise of its library staff. An establishment review of 2005 began by arguing that the integration of the libraries had resulted in too many 鈥渙ver-graded鈥 academic librarians. It is now difficult for students and researchers to find a librarian with the relevant expert knowledge in a given field. Nevertheless, a series of highly paid management roles have been advertised and filled with professional 鈥渕anagers鈥 who conspicuously do not spend time in the libraries. There are also fewer libraries, dramatically so in comparison with the University of Cambridge, because Oxford has had a policy for some years of amalgamating or 鈥渋ntegrating鈥 its separate libraries. This has happened in the face of repeated student and academic protest.

鈥淩esource allocation鈥 in Oxford includes an 鈥渋nfrastructure charge鈥. This is 鈥渢he mechanism by which the academic departments fund the services provided centrally鈥, including the libraries. Alas, the would-be donor cannot read about this in detail because the online information can be seen only by someone with 鈥渋nternal access鈥. But it is to be hoped that the availability of all this newly gifted 鈥渋nfrastructure鈥 money will prompt more transparency and a radical rethink of priorities in Oxford. Otherwise potential donors may begin to think again.

G. R. Evans
Oxford

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