The past year was not what anyone expected, but instead of acceding to the challenges that faced the University of Texas Libraries, we embraced them as an opportunity to show our mettle. 2019 ended auspiciously enough, with major gifts from supportive donors, and notable grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Mellon Foundation. We also bolstered work to materialize the library as platform, an ambitious plan to move beyond the traditional position of being primarily a storehouse for books and information, and into a space where we play an active role in the production of innovation and the expansion of new understanding of our world. When confronted with crises beyond our control that demanded agility in response, our staff and leaders brought the full force of their skills, knowledge, talent and fortitude to bear and produced exceptional solutions to problems we never imagined.
Here's the year in review.
ExpertiseAILLA Opens Unique Amazonian CollectionWith support from an NEH grant, the Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America (AILLA) opened the Baniwa of the Aiary and Içana Collection of Robin M. Wright. |
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ExpertiseLibraries Transition to Remote Services and ResourcesLibraries' staff showed great agility in responding to the immediate needs for the campus shift to online learning in response to the health crisis. |
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ExpertiseJackson Alum Honors Trombatore with EndowmentThe Jackson School of Geosciences announced in December the creation of a new endowment fund honoring longtime Geology Librarian Dennis Trombatore, funded by Dr. Carlotta Chernoff. |
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ExpertiseLLILAS Benson Launches Curriculum SiteLLILAS Benson Latin American Studies and Collections partnered with the Urban Teachers Program at the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in the College of Education to develop and provide free, online access to high school lesson plans. |
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CollectionsBenson Acquires Archive of Nobel Laureate Miguel Ángel AsturiasThe Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection announced the acquisition of the Miguel Ángel Asturias Papers. Asturias, the 1967 Nobel Laureate in Literature from Guatemala, was an instrumental precursor to the Latin American Boom. |
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CollectionsEmbroidered Testimonies of Salvadoran Refugees Made AccessibleStaff at the Benson have expanded on a relationship with the Museum of the Word and Image in El Salvador to digitally preserve unique embroidered testimonials created by refugees of the Honduran civil war. |
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CollectionsLatin American Digital Repository Expands CollectionsMore than 60 thousand scanned images from seven archival collections throughout Latin America are now available online in the updated Latin American Digital Initiatives (LADI) repository (ladi.lib.utexas.edu). |
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PlatformLibraries Launches New Comprehensive Services PlatformThe University of Texas Libraries launched a new library services platform from vendor Ex Libris this January that will make organizing and accessing library resources easier than ever before. |
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CollectionsNEH Grant to Fund Development for Multilingual TranscriptionA grant of over $300,000 from the National Endowment for the Humanities will contribute to the customization of a Wikipedia-like platform for the collaborative transcription, translation and indexing of archival texts in non-English languages. |
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StrategicUT Collections Initiate Cultural Partnership with Mellon GrantThe Libraries, the Blanton Museum of Art and the Harry Ransom Center received a $500,000 grant from The Mellon Foundation to establish a collective digital infrastructure that will provide expanded digital access to the university's rich cultural resources. |
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Lebermann Foundation Establishes Technology EndowmentThe Lebermann Foundation contributed $250,000 to enable the Libraries to provide funding for modifying spaces and services to the changing natures of learning and pedagogy, and to help to support, preserve and disseminate unique research and scholarship on the Forty Acres. |
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StrategicTocker Foundation Gift Funds Development of Textbook AlternativesThe University of Texas Libraries received a generous gift from the Austin-area Tocker Foundation that will support the development of digital teaching and learning resources through a partnership with Austin Community College and the Austin Public Library. |
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PlatformLibraries Launch Digital Collections PortalA new access point on the Libraries’ website – the Collections portal – allows users to undertake remote research and study utilizing rich resources that have previously only been available in person or through more time-intensive digitization on demand processes. |
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PlatformLibraries Launch Texas GeoData PortalThe Libraries leveraged technological advances in geographic information systems (GIS) to enhance the value of map collections at the university with the launch of a new portal designed to facilitate use of GIS software for mapmaking and analysis. |
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ExpertiseIn Memoriam: Dennis TrombatoreDennis Trombatore became a historical figure of UT Libraries lore during his 40+ year tenure. We remember his life and impact on libraries after his passing in summer 2020. |
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StrategicReport of the Task Force on the Future of UT Libraries ReleasedA long-awaited report from the Task Force on the Future of UT Libraries launched by Provost Maurie McInnis in the fall of 2018 was released and immediately put into action. |
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ExpertiseLLILAS Benson Collaborates to Translate Colonial DocumentsA joint crowd-sourcing effort between the Benson and the New Orleans Jazz Museum yielded transcriptions for a cache of colonial documents held by the two institutions. |