An Interpretation of the Library Bill of Rights
Expurgating library materials is a
violation of the Library Bill of Rights. Expurgation
as defined by this
interpretation
includes any deletion, excision, alteration, or editing,
or obliteration of any part(s) of books or other library
resources by the library, its agent, or its parent
institution (if any). By such expurgation, the library
is in effect denying access to the complete work and
the entire spectrum of ideas that the work intended
to express; such action stands in violation of articles
1, 2, and 3 of the Library Bill of Rights, which state
the “Materials should not be excluded because
of the origin, background, or views of those contributing
to their creation,” that “Materials should
not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or
doctrinal disapproval,” and that “Libraries
should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their
responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.”
The act of expurgation has serious implications. It
involves a determination that it is necessary to restrict
access to the complete work. This is censorship. When
a work is expurgated, under the assumption that certain
portions of that work would be harmful to minors, the
situation is no less serious.
Expurgation of any books or other library resources
imposes a restriction, without regard to the rights and
desires of all library users, by limiting access to ideas
and information.
Further, expurgation without written permission from
the holder of the copyright on the material may violate
the copyright provisions of the United States code.
Adopted 2/2/73; amended 7/1/81; amended 1/10/90, by
the ALA Council.
Approved: 2/10/82
Reviewed: 1/24/90
Reviewed: 6/12/02
|