Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries

This is a presentation from the ULA Conference on Knowledge for Development, Colombo, June 2007. Rural poor people particularly in developing countries do not get the knowledge and information which they need for their day to day living. Yet, there are no mechanisms for making this knowledge avail...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bhat, Ishwara
Language:en
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105694
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-105694
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1056942015-10-23T04:23:37Z Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries Bhat, Ishwara Academic Libraries This is a presentation from the ULA Conference on Knowledge for Development, Colombo, June 2007. Rural poor people particularly in developing countries do not get the knowledge and information which they need for their day to day living. Yet, there are no mechanisms for making this knowledge available. This marginalized sector includes small farmers, fishermen, micro-entrepreneurs, small businessmen, unemployed youth etc. They need information for day to day life, such as daily weather forecast, market prices of agricultural produce, how to treat a crop disease, where to get application for the policemenâ s vacancies, addresses of local masonry persons, etc. Local content is what is most important. Many times, such information is available freely, but the needy person does not get it because of lack of awareness. Such information has to be collected on daily basis from the right sources such as agricultural departments, meteorology offices, bank branches, primary health centers or wholesale markets. The information has to be disseminated through the fastest media such as Internet, community radio, loudspeakers, community newspapers or interactive meetings. Higher education libraries need to work closely with the various agencies, both in government and private sectors and the civil society in order to find out the knowledge requirements of the poor and research into how to package it and deliver efficiently. The paper gives examples of successful knowledge initiatives for the poor in five countries : Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Nepal, and Malawi. 2007-06 Presentation Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries 2007-06, http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105694 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Academic Libraries
spellingShingle Academic Libraries
Bhat, Ishwara
Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
description This is a presentation from the ULA Conference on Knowledge for Development, Colombo, June 2007. Rural poor people particularly in developing countries do not get the knowledge and information which they need for their day to day living. Yet, there are no mechanisms for making this knowledge available. This marginalized sector includes small farmers, fishermen, micro-entrepreneurs, small businessmen, unemployed youth etc. They need information for day to day life, such as daily weather forecast, market prices of agricultural produce, how to treat a crop disease, where to get application for the policemenâ s vacancies, addresses of local masonry persons, etc. Local content is what is most important. Many times, such information is available freely, but the needy person does not get it because of lack of awareness. Such information has to be collected on daily basis from the right sources such as agricultural departments, meteorology offices, bank branches, primary health centers or wholesale markets. The information has to be disseminated through the fastest media such as Internet, community radio, loudspeakers, community newspapers or interactive meetings. Higher education libraries need to work closely with the various agencies, both in government and private sectors and the civil society in order to find out the knowledge requirements of the poor and research into how to package it and deliver efficiently. The paper gives examples of successful knowledge initiatives for the poor in five countries : Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Nepal, and Malawi.
author Bhat, Ishwara
author_facet Bhat, Ishwara
author_sort Bhat, Ishwara
title Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
title_short Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
title_full Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
title_fullStr Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
title_full_unstemmed Work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
title_sort work closer with change agents : new role of higher education libraries
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105694
work_keys_str_mv AT bhatishwara workcloserwithchangeagentsnewroleofhighereducationlibraries
_version_ 1718096234256793600