Library policies and procedures which effectively deny
minors equal access to all library resources available
to other users violate the Library Bill of Rights. The
American Library Association opposes all attempts to
restrict access to library services, materials, and facilities
based on the age of library users.
Article V of the Library Bill of Rights
states, “A
person’s right to use a library should not be denied
or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views.” The “right
to use a library” includes free access to, and
unrestricted use of, all the services, materials, and
facilities the library has to offer. Every restriction
on access to, and us of, library resources, based solely
on the chronological age, educational level, or legal
emancipation of users violates Article V.
Libraries are charged with the mission of developing
resources to meet the diverse information needs and interests
of the communities they serve. Services, materials, and
facilities which fulfill the needs and interests of library
users at different stages in their personal development
are a necessary part of library resources. The needs
and interests of each library user, and resources appropriate
to meet those needs and interests, must be determined
on an individual basis. Librarians cannot predict what
resources will best fulfill the needs and interests of
any individual user based on a single criterion such
as chronological age, level of education, or legal emancipation.
The selection and development of library resources should
not be diluted because of minors having the same access
to library resources as adult users. Institutional self-censorship
diminishes the credibility of the library in the community,
and restricts access for all library users.
Librarians and governing bodies should
not resort to age restrictions on access to library
resources in an
effort to avoid actual or anticipated objections from
parents or anyone else. The mission, goals, and objectives
of libraries do not authorize librarians or governing
bodies to assume, abrogate, or overrule the rights and
responsibilities of parents or legal guardians. Librarians
and governing bodies should maintain that parents – and
only parents – have the right and the responsibility
to restrict the access of their children – and
only their children – to library resources. Parents
or legal guardians who do not want their children to
have access to certain library services, materials or
facilities, should so advise their children. Librarians
and governing bodies cannot assume the role of parents
or the functions of parental authority in the private
relationship between parent and child. Librarians and
governing bodies have a public and professional obligation
to provide equal access to all library resources for
all library users.
Librarians have a professional commitment to ensure
that all members of the community they serve have free
and equal access to the entire range of library resources
regardless of content, approach, format, or amount of
detail. This principle of library service applies equally
to all users, minors as well as adults. Librarians and
governing bodies must uphold this principle in order
to provide adequate and effective service to minors.
Adopted 6/30/72; amended 7/1/81; 7/3/91, by the ALA
Council.
Adopted: 6/12/02 |