Monday, 16 January 2017

Economic well-being and social justice through pleasure reading

an article by Pauline Dewan (Wilfrid Laurier University, Brantford, Canada) published in New Library World Volume 117 Issue 9/10 (2016)

Abstract

Purpose
Librarians planning for the future and unsure about the place of books in an age dominated by technology and media need evidence to make sound decisions. Library and information science researchers have studied the impact of pleasure reading on individuals but not on society. The purpose of this paper is to raise awareness about the benefits of recreational reading for societies and to consider the implications of these findings for libraries.

Design/methodology/approach
Examining a wide range of studies by government bodies, intergovernmental agencies and academics, this paper addresses a gap in the library literature by critically evaluating the combined implications of sources not hitherto viewed together.

Findings
The more leisure books people read, the more literate they become, and the more prosperous and equitable the society they inhabit.

Practical implications
Librarians should create a more robust culture of reading and play a stronger advocacy role for books in libraries.

Originality/value
No one has yet examined government reports about literacy in relation to studies on the impact of pleasure reading. The implications of this combined research highlight the fact that pleasure reading benefits societies as well as individuals, a finding that has significant implications for the future direction of libraries. Decision-makers who need a robust mandate for book-focused resources and services will find supportive statistical evidence in this paper.


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