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Mission and History Emphasizing collaboration between libraries and community groups, LFF links professionals across disciplines—such as health and literacy, or early childhood and architecture—to help participants devise new solutions to shared challenges. Through dynamic library programs, inspiring trainings, targeted grants, interdisciplinary forums, and useful research projects, LFF transforms libraries into 21st century community centers for information and education.
LFF began as a small group of library supporters and funders protesting the deep funding cuts of the 1990s. With library survival at stake, LFF mobilized a national network of community leaders and advocates. LFF has since expanded its role to put ideas like “civic library” and the “lifelong library” into practice, developing and overseeing national programs to help libraries not only survive, but thrive. From 2004–2007, LFF operated as the program arm of Americans for Libraries Council (ALC). On September 17, 2007, the organization reunited as “Libraries for the Future,” a name that best captures the energy, resources, and opportunities that today’s public libraries bring to their communities. The Council continues to advise the LFF board of directors, drawing upon the expertise of civic leaders in many fields—including business, education, library and philanthropy—to keep libraries at the top of the national agenda and the center of our communities. Find out more about joining Libraries for the Future today to strengthen one of the cornerstones of American democracy: the free public library. |
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