1. Origin,
scope and objectives of the report
1. On 27 January 2014, the Parliamentary
Assembly referred to the Committee on Culture, Science, Education
and Media for report the motion for a resolution (
Doc. 13342) which I had presented with 40 other members of the
Assembly on 21 October 2013. The committee appointed me rapporteur
on 28 January 2014.
2. During 2014, I participated in two important events – the
European Museum of the Year Award (EMYA 2014) ceremony in Tallinn
(Estonia) and the International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions (IFLA) Conference in Birmingham – which provided
me with an opportunity to discuss a number of relevant issues with
library and museum professionals across Europe. I would also like
to thank library and museum professionals in the United Kingdom,
whom I have directly consulted, for their valuable advice and guidance. Finally,
I wish to particularly thank Dr Mikhail Gnedovsky
and Ms Ilona
Kish
for
their help with expertise and research in the preparation of this
report.
3. In line with the motion, the present report emphasises that
“[a]s key stewards of our culture and heritage, libraries and museums
have traditionally enjoyed a unique role and special responsibility
within societies around the world. But as economic changes and rapid
technological innovation have brought about dramatic societal changes,
roles and responsibilities of libraries and museums need to be revised
creatively and strategically to respond to the emerging societal
needs”.
4. The report will therefore be structured in three main sections:
first, looking at new and expanding roles for libraries and museums
at the start of 21st century; second, considering economic pressures
and challenges for both sectors in the current climate of austerity;
and finally looking positively at the future, how to make libraries
and museums resilient and sustainable in times of change.
5. Notwithstanding the importance and relevance of the big national
and regional libraries and museums, I am concentrating on smaller
public institutions which play a crucial role in their local community
and are under pressure today to reduce their public service or even
to close. These smaller institutions may also lack resources and
expertise to engage in the process of change, in order to transform
the institution’s performance and bring it up-to-date. I hope that
the report will provide some ideas and guidance to help this sector.
We also recognise the importance of archives in both sectors. However
we do not have the space in this report to do full justice to the
subject.
6. Collections of books and of significant objects have existed
since ancient times, but the modern public library and museum originated
in the European Enlightenment’s belief in the liberating power of
knowledge combined with the emergence of mass democracy. The opening
up of scholarly Cabinets of Curiosity and royal collections was
followed by the creation of new museums by local and national government.
These were designed to educate people who were more and more thought
of as citizens, to express civic or national pride and, in some
cases, to record ways of life which were disappearing as a result
of the great social changes. At the same time, a growing awareness
of the importance of reading as an essential practice for what we
would now call human development and for the economy, led to public
funding of libraries.
7. This report sets out how museums and libraries have responded
to the major social, economic and technological changes in European
society, and what they need to do to continue to contribute to its development.
While the process of adaptation is continuous, libraries and museums
retain a fundamental role in supporting civil society. Both are
civic spaces, separate from home, work or shops, where people can
explore the worlds of culture and nature through self-directed learning.
They are safe social spaces which people, whether they are alone
or with family or friends, experience in the presence of strangers.
Museums and libraries thus reflect an ideal of civility, community
and mutual respect which is now more than ever necessary for a resilient
democracy. Their unique combination of inspiring content and civic
space means that they are rich sources of hope, meaning and social
connection. The most dynamic museums and libraries are not just responding
to social and demographic change, they are making a positive contribution
to the continuous task of remaking European civil society.
8. Although it was difficult to collect comprehensive data for
the 47 member States of the Council of Europe, I have managed to
assemble the following statistics: The European Group on Museum
Statistics (EGMUS)
reports that there are about 18 700
museums in the 28 European Union countries with 566 million visitors annually.
The average number of museums in these countries amounts to five
institutions per 100 000 inhabitants. There are 65 000 public libraries
in the European Union with 100 million visitors every year. It is
of interest to note that 24 million adults participate annually
in non-formal learning activities at their public library and 14 million
Europeans use public access computing services. According to Eurostat,
the number of library and museum
employees within the cultural sector varies from 10% to 40% for
27 European Union countries.
9. Libraries and museums have experienced numerous challenges
and opportunities over recent years. The end of the 20th century
saw an unprecedented breakthrough in the field of communication
but even earlier, the arrival of cinema and television had challenged
the monopoly of museums in visual communication. Libraries were
able to hold their position a bit longer, since paper remained the
main medium for the written or printed word. However, with the arrival
of digital technology and the rapid advance of telecommunications
at the turn of the century, both museums and libraries faced what
could be described as an identity crisis. Last year, the United
Kingdom Government commissioned William Sieghart, with the help
of a distinguished panel, to investigate how the public library
system in England could best work in the future, and produce a report.
Much of that report has relevance
to libraries in times of change. It is to be recommended for its
research, ideas and suggestions which would be useful across the
sector.
10. One of the recent developments in libraries and museums was
discovering the importance of their audience. This has meant an
increasing dialogue with different groups of people in response
to their specific perceptions and needs. Knowledge of and understanding
their users and visitors has become part of the library and museum
profession; as important as the knowledge of their collections.
11. The Council of Europe Framework Convention on the Value of
Cultural Heritage for Society (CETS No. 199, “Faro Convention”)
underlines the need for heritage
institutions, including libraries and museums, to serve their communities
and society. The convention presents heritage as a resource for
human development, the enhancement of cultural diversity, the promotion
of intercultural dialogue, as well as part of an economic development
model based on the principle of the use of sustainable resources.
2. New and expanding roles
for libraries and museums
“If museums were to fail
to respond to social change and to reflect it, they would indeed
cease to justify public support.” Kenneth Hudson
“For libraries and their communities the pace of change
requires them to develop their own skills constantly, be that to
access knowledge for life’s essentials, for enrichment, or for pleasure.
Those who lack these skills or find it hard to keep up, are increasingly
at a disadvantage socially and economically.” Shared Intelligence
12. Focusing on the audience has
brought a fundamental change to the philosophy and methodology of museums.
It has created openness to the needs of society. Public libraries
always had a strong dialogue with their users, collecting material
around local interests and responding to requests for specific titles.
However in recent years there has been an emphasis on consultation
with users in designing services and even sharing services. This
enhanced focus on users’ needs has come at a time when libraries
and museums are in a position to respond to the cultural, technological
and economic challenges posed by the rapidly changing world.
2.1. Interpretation of collections
13. Libraries and museums are encouraging
new ways of interacting with, adding to and interpreting their collections.
They aim at providing inspiration and deeper insight for their users
and visitors, creating conditions for people to be able to take
an active role in discussing their heritage and linking it to contemporary
agendas. Dialogue and interaction with audiences has improved. People
are encouraged to raise questions and engage in debates exploring
various issues together with cultural professionals.
14. In reaching broader audiences, libraries and museums have
discovered the importance of storytelling. Narratives combining
images, objects and texts, conveying an overarching plot and reflecting
different points of view can serve as an entertaining instrument
for communicating and informing. The First Library of City Stories
in Moscow (Russia), opened in 2014, offers a programme of lectures,
debates, master classes, etc. focused on different issues of life
in a big city. Its team is convinced that interest in storytelling
will attract a new audience to the library. Similarly, the Juozas
Urbsys Centre at the Panevėžys Public Library in Lithuania,
has developed the “Nevezis” project,
a platform for children’s creativity. The library staff encourage
young people to write stories or opinions which are later published
in the local newspaper and in the library’s annual almanac. Many
museums now think in terms of stories when designing their exhibitions.
15. Rautenstrauch – Joest Museum (Museum of World Cultures) in
Cologne (Germany) (Council of Europe Prize 2012) has reinterpreted
its excellent ethnological collection with the intention of moving
away from the traditional Eurocentric approach. The museum’s new
exhibitions tell the story of how different cultures have been interacting,
how they see and understand (or misunderstand) each other. There
is a separate exhibition for small children in the museum where
workshops are held which focus on various aspects of cultural differences.
The museum involves minority ethnic communities living in the city
in various projects and activities.
16. The permanent exhibition at the Estonian History Museum in
Tallinn,
opened in 2011 and is housed in the
medieval Great Guild Hall. It discloses the story of Estonian past
and individuality of the people who lived in Estonia through eight
key questions under the title “Spirit of survival”. This innovative
and experimental exhibition is one-of-a-kind in Estonia. Visitors
can find a captivating overview of history, one that will inspire new
stories. It cleverly shows that the persistent and at times even
stubborn work of the Estonian people has resulted in an exceptional
environment with a unique culture.
2.2. Vibrant and dynamic meeting
places
17. Libraries and museums have
become vibrant and dynamic meeting places. They are transforming themselves
from “temples” into “forums”.
Such institutions
are placed at the hub of their communities becoming centres of local
life and sometimes engines for social and economic development.
18. Many public libraries are changing the way they use the library
space. Community groups are invited to organise for themselves events
and activities in the library space and in some places library services
are jointly designed and managed by the local community. Some libraries
are entering into partnerships with local public services, such
as public health, employment and adult education to offer a “one-stop-shop”
that is also an attractive meeting place for the community. In this
way, the public library acts as an information hub for its local authority.
In other locations, libraries are in partnership and co-locating
with local arts organisations, such as cinemas and theatres to offer
a cultural hub where citizens can enjoy and participate in a wide
range of arts and cultural activities.
19. The Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations (MuCEM)
in Marseilles (France), winner of the
2015 Council of Europe Museum Prize, emerges as the great French
National Museum with a new and innovative concept. Besides being
an outstanding museum, it functions also as a contemporary Agora. MuCEM
has an impressive programme of activities (educational activities,
debates with artists and writers, seminars, conferences, cinema
festivals, contemporary theatre performances, concerts, etc.) which
are very popular, are made widely accessible with modest fees and
which treat a vast array of contemporary and often very controversial
issues surrounding the Mediterranean.
20. The Marpod Library in Romania was created in conjunction with
the local community. The idea was to transform dusty places into
modern knowledge centres where everyone from the community is welcome
to share and learn. People share local knowledge and wisdom by exchanging
personal stories and experiences. Local farmers for example receive
information and are assisted in applying for European Union subsidies.
It is a place where young people can help the elderly to become
familiar with computers and the Internet. The library premises are
also used by the local community to hold meetings.
21. Deptford Lounge in Lewisham (United Kingdom) is an interesting
example of this. Jointly run by Lewisham libraries and the Albany
Theatre, it is involved in arts programming in the library space.
The library also shares premises with a local primary school. This
allows the education and cultural sectors to work together in the
library space.
2.3. Embedding libraries and
museums in their community
22. Libraries and museums develop
links locally with their communities, in addition to diversifying
their services. Many institutions are offering active roles to members
of the community, including volunteering opportunities and community
consultations on service developments.
23. Libraries and museums have become highly sensitive to their
audiences and aware of cultural diversity in contemporary European
society. By engaging visitors in dialogue, they are taking into
account cultural differences. Sometimes they act as intermediaries
in debate between cultural groups present in their communities.
In this way, they encourage closer relationships between different
communities.
24. A collection of 30 case studies from Italy, Hungary, the Netherlands
and Spain, published in 2009, illustrates a shift in the contemporary
methodology of museums, as heritage institutions.
Some of the cases were devoted to
helping immigrant communities to become more closely involved and
familiar with the history and culture of their new home. Others
offered examples of how immigrants and other minorities can use
these same resources to teach their host communities something about
their own culture of origin.
25. The Old Village Museum in Sirogojno in Serbia
is an open-air museum or “ethno-village”.
The local community is involved in the preservation and presentation
of its cultural heritage: restoration of traditional houses and
log cabins, preserving local crafts and traditional ways of life
in the region. Visitors can discover local products, homemade food,
handicrafts and folk costumes.
26. Public libraries are well placed to respond to the changing
communities they serve. Public library material has evolved to include
literature in many languages and with material designed to appeal
to new communities. With the voluntary support of members of the
community, they provide language learning for new arrivals through
formal and informal lessons. They also help children to learn about
their parents’ language and culture.
27. San Giorgio Library in Pistoia (Italy)
is a new library, conceived as an
indoor meeting place for the local community. It includes a large
central atrium and café, where people can meet and spend time together
in library spaces specially designed and created for adults and
children alike. It is run on a small operational budget and all
learning activities are delivered in partnership with the local
community and academic institutions.
2.4. Educational activities
28. Over recent years, libraries
and museums have considerably expanded the scope of their activities
as centres of education. They continue to collaborate with schools
and universities but also target new audiences, such as families,
including small children and elderly people. Some libraries and
museums also work with hospital patients, prisoners, recent immigrants,
people with learning and other disabilities and troubled teenagers.
In this way, they are able to provide a vast range of educational
services based on their unique resources, thus becoming centres
for lifelong learning for many audiences. Public libraries and museums
have in some cases redesigned their space to incorporate new educational
facilities, such as
makerlabs, recording studios and other learning
resources that provide ways in which people can extend their knowledge
and skills.
29. Opened in April 2012, the Maritime Culture Centre is the latest
department of the National Maritime Museum of Gdansk in Poland
. It promotes information on maritime
subjects in a comprehensive and interactive way by employing multimedia
techniques. Educational activities include conservation and underwater
archaeology workshops. As a result, visitors are fully involved
in the day-to-day activities of the museum. Emphasis is given to
making access to culture easier for people with disabilities.
30. MUSE, the Science Museum in Trento (Italy),
represents innovation and creativity
in all its functions. The museum interprets the themes of evolution,
environment, biodiversity and research using modern communication
methods and cross-disciplinary activities. Its educational activities
promote an entertaining and informal encounter with science and
its applications.
31. Frysklab is a Fabrication Laboratory (FabLab) provided by
Fryslân Public Library in the Netherlands
. This library has implemented a mobile
FabLab: a truck full of scientific, technological and innovative
tools to teach children in the rural province of Friesland the basics
of science.
32. Kista Library in Stockholm in Sweden
focuses on lifelong learning through
formal and informal education. The library provides ICT classes
and language cafés for seniors but also promotes dialogue between
generations and the sharing of experiences, knowledge and skills.
33. In the United Kingdom, nearly 840 000 children participated
in the Reading Agency’s Summer Reading Challenge over the 2014 summer
holidays, an educational initiative designed to maintain children’s
reading standards over the long summer break.
2.5. Economic contribution of
libraries and museums
34. Libraries and museums are often
considered an attraction for visitors to the city or region, thus contributing
to the development of the tourist economy. Generally, they can be
instrumental in creating jobs, attracting businesses and encouraging
the overall investment climate. Museums can have a direct and indirect influence
on spending and employment in the region. Therefore public funding
in this sector can be regarded not as avoidable spending but as
an investment that can generate return in a form of social benefits
and economic growth.
35. The Guggenheim Museum
helped to transform the city of Bilbao
into a cultural landmark. Thanks to this architectural and artistic
project, 45 000 jobs have been created in the region. Another great
national museum offers interesting examples of the scale of economic
impact that can be achieved. In 2014, the European University in
St Petersburg carried out research into the economic and social
impact of the State Hermitage in the city.
This research estimated the museum’s
annual direct and indirect economic impact on the city economy at
US$1.1 billion per annum, which is about 10 times more than the
annual running costs of the museum.
36. It is important to note that libraries and museums act as
a catalyst to stimulate positive changes which cause the regional
economy to grow. The Museums of Hrvatsko zagorje
form a legal entity of five museums of
the Krapina-Zagorje County in Croatia. The museums attract important
cultural and tourist activity to the region and also have a strong
impact on the local economy. However, the benefits of such co-operation
and partnerships usually go elsewhere. In response, the Association
of Independent Museums (United Kingdom) offers their members a special
Toolkit designed to estimate their economic impact in the region.
The Toolkit is structured in three levels: tourism impacts, employment
impacts and impacts of spending on goods and services. Data collected
with the aid of the Toolkit can be used by museums in their advocacy
work at local and regional levels.
There are also examples of this
in the library sector.
37. There are many examples where libraries and local government
work closely together to the benefit of both. When Umeå was selected
to be the 2014 European Capital of Culture, the municipality decided
to create the Väven Cultural Center.
The city library is at the heart
of this project and is surrounded by two hotels, restaurants and
cafés; it became a tourist and cultural hub in the city.
38. Another example, Warwickshire libraries,
provide services for approximately
5.5 million people living in towns and villages across an area of
760 square miles. They are branded “Warwickshire Direct” as part
of the council’s “one front door” policy, providing seamless local
services under one roof. This partnership has allowed sharing of
premises, overheads and even staff for a more cost-effective service
delivery and customer convenience. The libraries provide commissioned
services for a range of partners including police, health and education
services, and other councils. In Warwick, people can borrow or return
a book, register a birth, apply for welfare benefits or concessionary
travel, post a parcel, or book a wedding – all in one place.
2.6. Traditional roles
39. While actively exploring new
possibilities, libraries and museums also have to continue with
their traditional roles. Preserving and expanding their collections
is still a crucial task, although this field has also been subject
to change. On the one hand, new technology now offers highly efficient
tools for storing and researching information, equipping storerooms
and conserving objects and books. The rapidly changing environment
makes many traditional methods of collecting difficult to apply.
Libraries are reshaping their collections to include digital resources
and museums are facing the problem of contemporary collecting, having to
decide what and according to which criteria they should select and
preserve for posterity. Further expansion of the notion of cultural
heritage, which now includes intangible heritage
and digital heritage, opens new opportunities
for libraries and museums. This also demands radical changes in
the methodology of collecting and documenting. Careful planning
using modern technology will be needed by libraries and museums
when dealing with the growing number of digitised items in their
institutions.
40. Normally, only a small part of a museum’s collections are
displayed, the rest stays in storage. That is why many European
museums have taken the “open storage” approach, providing public
access to the formerly closed spaces in the museum. Some museums
install plasma screens or windows providing a view for the visitor
of storerooms and conservation laboratories. Others organise guided
tours to areas where the visitors can see the work that curators
do “behind the scenes”. In the Museum of Madinat-al-Zahra in Cordoba (Spain),
built next to the remains of the 10th-century medieval Muslim city,
currently being excavated, visitors can look through a glass wall
into a vast storage space and see how archaeologists clean and conserve
their recent finds.
41. Another example is the Madeira Whale Museum in Portugal
where biological scientific research
is carried out by its own scientific team. The continuous process
of research, collecting and cataloguing enables the museum to show
visitors a wider collection of objects and to point out the ecological
issues of whale hunting.
3. Economic pressures and challenges
for libraries and museums
42. Over the last few years, the
entire cultural sector, including libraries and museums, has been
seriously affected by economic austerity in Europe. Many institutions
have faced reductions in public funding, due to this pressure, and
there have been reductions in staffing and opening hours. In addition,
sites have been reduced or closed.
43. Libraries and museums have become an early target. Decision
makers on all levels can argue that cultural institutions are not
a priority. Recently, a European heritage alliance was established
led by Europa Nostra. This alliance has brought together many different
organisations whose aim is to prove the value of heritage for the
future development of Europe. The EU-funded project “Cultural Heritage
for Europe” presents convincing arguments for persuading policy
and decision makers of the impact and multiple benefits of investing
in European cultural heritage.
3.1. Shrinking public service
44. Small municipal institutions
serving the population of remote and economically underdeveloped
areas can be badly affected by budget cuts. Closure of such institutions
which serve as meeting places for the local people is damaging not
only to heritage and education but also to the social climate, local
pride and communities’ sense of identity. It is especially important
that libraries and museums remain safe places for people to meet
and interact in times of economic or political instability.
3.2. Vulnerability of collections
45. The need to preserve, conserve,
research, expand and interpret collections that embed knowledge
and memory of the society provides a huge workload for libraries
and museums. Some institutions tend to spend their scarce resources
on the maintenance, conservation and storage of their collections.
Other institutions are so short of funds that they are unable to
maintain even minimum standards. It has also been known for valuable parts
of collections to be sold, thus depriving their communities of the
legacy of past generations and of an important asset in promoting
the city or region.
46. Some countries have complicated legislation covering technical
standards for collections that are difficult to implement. In Croatia,
for example, as well as the national Museum Law, there are also
by-laws regulating the care and management of collections.
3.3. Maintaining premises
47. Many institutions have to spend
a high proportion of their revenue on the maintenance of their buildings, some
of which may even be redundant. This leaves few resources for the
development of their activities. A proper balance between maintenance
and operational costs could be achieved through the efficient use
of space, creation of multi-functional zones, development of collaborative
projects and adjusting opening hours.
3.4. Staffing implications
48. One of the consequences of
economic austerity in Europe has been reductions in staff and their
salaries in libraries and museums. Many professionals have had to
resign from their jobs or switch to part-time positions. As in many
other areas, graduates and young professionals have difficulty in
finding jobs in the sector and can only get professional work experience
as volunteers.
49. There has been an increase in the number of volunteers working
in the sector. While it can mean a saving on staff salaries, there
is a cost in recruiting, training and supervising volunteers. Also
they cannot replace the expertise of professional staff, which is
important to ensure the scope of service that the sector provides.
Some public libraries are now being staffed only by volunteers.
In some instances this has resulted in a much more limited service,
reducing the library service to book sharing and borrowing.
3.5. Government policy in times
of austerity
50. A policy of centralisation
has always existed in some European countries. However, in recent
years, this policy has been introduced in other countries in order
to create savings. This can extend to separate institutions merging
into one legal entity, which, while making savings in administration,
can lead to an inflexible management structure. The result can be
the inability of libraries and museums to directly manage their
staff and budgets, develop partnership projects, directly receive
money from sponsors, quote entrance ticket prices and make concessions.
3.6. Hopeful signs
51. European libraries and museums
are now better prepared to face the crisis created by shortage of
funds than they would have been 20 or 30 years ago. When similar
events occurred in the cultural sector in the countries of both
western and eastern Europe in the 80s and 90s, public funding was
the only source of support for most libraries and museums, so budget
cuts had been highly damaging. However, that crisis made cultural institutions
stronger: in attempting to overcome it, they improved their management,
reached out to new audiences and, most importantly, learned to diversify
sources of funding.
52. In a recent survey, the Museums Association (United Kingdom)
indicates that many of their respondents
believe that the quality of service provided by their museum will
increase over the next year. This is a higher level of confidence
than reported in any previous survey. Also, they are going to achieve
a higher quality of service by an increased focus on new ways of
working.
4. The future: making libraries
and museums resilient and sustainable
“Twenty years ago museums
were not in such a good shape during the last major round of cuts.
Now they are better led, better managed and determined to keep museums
open. They have to raise more money and it may be some museums survive
because they have learned to diversify their income.” Mark Taylor,
former Director, Museums Association, United Kingdom
53. Financial insecurity can actually
have the effect of stimulating effectiveness, efficiency and economy
in resource management and the ability to generate additional income,
thus leading to increased resilience in response to new and expanding
roles.
54. It is important that institutions, while remaining accountable
for public funding, can preserve their entitlement to raise and
allocate financial resources and hence a certain autonomy in decision
making. They are in a better position to develop their own strategy
and manage available resources. They can look for better solutions
in financial and staff management, engage in new partnerships, benefit
from sponsorship including in-kind contributions, reach for new
audiences, offer new services, work with volunteers and develop
outreach and community projects.
4.1. Leadership, vision and skills
55. Leadership and vision are essential
for libraries and museums to be able to adjust and develop in times of
change. They must be free to give rein to innovation, imagination
and enterprise.
56. This requires a new style of leadership. Previously, an institution’s
directors tended to be professionals in a particular academic field.
Today they must have additional qualities necessary to formulate
the institution’s mission, to develop and implement its strategy
and to manage available resources. They need to be aware of a much
broader picture than their predecessors were. They also need to
consider cultural, social, economic and political dimensions of
the institution’s performance; and at the same time be capable of
addressing the institutions’ various stakeholders, inspiring them
with their vision and securing their support.
57. Consequently, library and museum professional teams are facing
a number of challenges which mean that, alongside traditional skills,
an array of newly emerging skills have become necessary. Involving
and giving key roles to young professionals will facilitate change.
Familiar with contemporary management and communication, young specialists
can complement the older members of the staff. Such teamwork, combined with
advanced professional training, can transform the institution’s
performance while bringing it up-to-date.
58. As the result of a sharp drop in visitors in 1998, Tower Hamlets
(one of the most deprived London Boroughs) developed a strategy
to improve the quality of local library services. After two years
of close collaboration with the local authority and public involvement,
a new concept “the Idea Store”
was born. The concept is based on
widening participation in the library and in lifelong learning,
as well as access to information. Five local libraries have been
successfully redesigned with a whole range of new services, including
council services. Over 800 courses for adults and families were
introduced. The libraries were relocated in shopping centres, functioning
like a store with extended opening hours (71 hours a week, about 357
days a year). Strong emphasis was given to staff recruitment. Job
descriptions have been redefined and a flat hierarchical structure
introduced. Staff are now engaged with the public and act as facilitators
rather than custodians of book collections. They are versatile and
creative, have strong motivation and broadly reflect the diversity
of the local community. Staff recruitment and in-house training
was the key to success. The number of annual visits has risen from
550 000 in 1998 to over 2.1 million today.
59. Another example, the Aarhus Library in Denmark
has been at the centre of public
service innovation in the local community. Library staff is encouraged
to offer new service ideas to senior management. If selected, their
idea is given a small amount of funding, to which they need to match
additional funding. For example, one such idea was to develop a
“Digital ABC” curriculum through partnership between libraries and schools
across Denmark, in order to improve young people’s digital literacy
and awareness of online safety.
60. National and European networks of libraries and museums have
an important role in supporting professional staff in the process
of change.
61. For example, the Finnish Museums Association offers a wide
range of educational services to the employees of its 385 member
institutions. Over the past few years, the Association focused its
programmes on training museum staff in the skills needed in the
modern information society. The Association regularly organises
eLearning courses, with some 20 training sessions arranged each
year.
62. At European level, one of the most successful network projects
for professionals in the museum field has been the Learning Museum
Network (LEM) operating since 2010. Its aim is to explore how museums
are “learning from the communities, from the public, from their
stakeholders, and also from other agencies with whom they build
alliances, to accomplish the ambitious objectives set by policies
at national and European level and meet the challenges of the future
decades”.
63. In addition, volunteer programmes led by professional staff
have become an important and valuable way of sustaining libraries
and museums. Use of volunteers, while saving on operational costs,
helps to embed the institution in the community. Volunteers will
value the institution and be ready to support and promote it in
the community. However, European countries have very different traditions
and legislation concerning volunteers’ participation in the work
of cultural institutions.
64. A rather unusual example of volunteering is the Saurer Museum
in Switzerland
which used to be a vehicle factory
that closed in 1987. After losing their jobs, a dedicated group
of former workers decided to save this heritage factory by transforming
it into a museum. A fundraising campaign pooled over €400 000 and
the new museum opened in 2010. The museum is entirely run by volunteers,
former factory workers.
4.2. Expanding sources of funding
65. Libraries and Museums are publicly
funded bodies accountable to their public funders. Therefore they have
a dual accountability to the State and to all other non-public sources
of income. In many European countries, public libraries and museums
have relied entirely on State funding. For some time now, there
has been a movement away from reliance on public funds and towards
independent sources of income. However, some institutions fear that
as their self-generated income grows their public funds will be
reduced.
66. There are many ways of generating income to complement public
funding. Some are traditional and can be built on; there are many
that are new. For some, the potential has already existed, for others
there are new opportunities resulting from advanced technology and
also from the contribution of enthusiastic entrepreneurs. The advent
of digital technology has created many opportunities for generating
income and making economies in expenditure. Digital developments
have enabled museums to reach audiences in a number of ways and online
giving is today an important part of fundraising. For example, crowdfunding
uses social media and other digital communications to share in fundraising
campaigns which will fund creative projects. Building a crowd of supporters
is as important as raising the funds.
67. The Bowes Museum in the United Kingdom launched a crowdfunding
campaign which raised £21 000 in 61 days.
This has allowed the museum to restore
and place back in the galleries a C15 Flemish Altarpiece. Earlier
in 2014, the museum had used a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign
to install a Gavin Turk neon light display on the façade of the
museum.
68. The Staffordshire Hoard acquisition fundraising is an interesting
example of institutional and crowdfunding.
After the hoard was declared a national
treasure and valued at about £3 million, an international fundraising
campaign to save the hoard was mounted by the Art Fund on behalf
of local, regional and national partners. The Art Fund kick-started
the campaign with an initial grant of £300 000 and enabled them
to raise contributions towards the acquisition, display, care, conservation
and research, and also towards innovative learning and outreach
programmes. As a result, the Staffordshire Hoard has been restored
and kept in the area where it was originally discovered.
69. In 2012, the Libraries of the County of Suffolk
suffered from cuts in council funding.
To save the libraries from closure an
Industrial
and Provident Society was created in August 2012. This new structure is an independent
body formed as a co-operative with grass-roots governance and professional
management. The Society has a contract with Suffolk County Council
to deliver its statutory library duties, providing more for less, with
a smaller budget, but greater freedom to be creative and innovative.
70. The commercial potential of libraries’ and museums’ assets
can increasingly be tapped for income. Even the familiar practices
such as entrance charges, subscription charges for certain services
and guided tours can be developed. Cafes and shops can expand their
appeal by offering more attractive food and drink, and displaying
imaginatively designed merchandise based on their collections. There
are many more ways of putting assets to good use. For example, providing
educational and information services – some institutions receive
income from training courses designed for the interested layman
– or hiring out space for functions, offering subscriptions to recording
studios, etc.
71. Philanthropy is an important source of income. Approaching
the corporate sector, private sector and charities requires good
entrepreneurial and negotiating skills by staff. The interests of
cultural institutions and the expectations of their partners need
to be compatible. However, it should be remembered that a cultural institution
should not be diverted from its mission or sacrifice its integrity
or quality of its products or services for the sake of such collaboration.
72. In response to 50% cuts in public funding over six years,
the Devon libraries developed a new concept of enterprising library
service, in order to bring in new audiences, stronger partnerships
and more diverse sources of income. A close partnership was established
with the Economy and Enterprise service of the council, focusing
on digital inclusion, work hubs (incubation spaces), and business
advice and information. Partnerships with the private sector have
also been forged. For example, the first Fab Lab was created in
the Exeter library to support pre start-ups and help people explore
their potential in enterprise and job creation.
73. Sponsorship and in-kind contribution can be of great financial
support and make exhibitions and other more permanent projects possible.
However, libraries tend to be less attractive to sponsors as their
work is mostly under the radar of press and publicity. Some libraries
are entering into contracts with local authorities and delivering
many of their services which fall within the library’s scope. Sponsorship
can also be driven by corporate social responsibility whereby a
company assists in creating a cultural environment for its employees and
for the local community in the area where it operates.
74. Museums have an opportunity to use their collections wisely
and improve standards of management. They have inalienable collections
and many of historic importance to the local population which will
always attract people to museums. However, museums will have to
rationalise their collections and decide what to do with objects
they may not wish to keep in store. The policy of deaccessioning
helps them to improve the quality and relevance of their collections.
After an object has been deaccessioned, disposal may occur by sale, exchange
or gift, or any other method decided by the museum. Care needs to
be taken to ensure that unscrupulous public funders do not “asset-strip”
from museum storerooms.
75. Partnerships can relate to economies of scale, sharing expertise,
etc. For example, in Finland, it is quite common for several museums
to share a building thus reducing the maintenance costs and saving
on infrastructure and staff. A recent example is the WeeGee cultural
centre in Tapiola, Espoo (Finland), based in the converted building
of a former printing factory and housing five museums. The central
administration maintains the building, which allows the museums
to have fewer staff and share in running a shop and cafeteria; they
otherwise retain their independence. Consortia can also be created
to negotiate deals in areas like energy, transport and storage.
4.3. Developing partnerships
and networks
76. Partnerships, within and outside
the sector, enable libraries and museums to reach objectives on
a scale that they cannot achieve on their own. In many European
cities and regions, museums develop joint projects, such as temporary
exhibitions, but also engage together in marketing or construction
of storage facilities. For example, 10 museums located in the city
of Utrecht (Netherlands) have developed a joint marketing programme.
77. At the local level, libraries and museums can work together,
as well as with other cultural institutions, such as theatres and
cinemas, but they can also collaborate with the media, educational
institutions and business enterprises. Partners from outside the
sector bring additional knowledge and resources enhancing the quality
and scale of the projects.
78. Thus, the Chekhov Museum in Melikhovo, housed on the estate
near Moscow (Russia), where the writer lived and worked, has become
a venue for the international Chekhov theatre festival and a meeting
place for theatre people. In collaboration with the regional health
service, the museum has recreated a surgery where Chekhov, being
also a doctor of medicine, received patients from the nearby villages;
a contemporary doctor receives local patients there now.
79. The Portimao Museum,
a local museum in Portugal and winner
of the Council of Europe Museum Prize in 2010, has established a
rather unusual win-win partnership with the Ministry of Defence
of Portugal since 2014. By organising awareness-raising events and
initial recruitment contacts for young people in the museum rather
than in army barracks, the Ministry relates the army through the
region’s identity, its cultural heritage and future development.
80. In co-operation with the Department of Health, the Museum
of Liverpool has developed an innovative and award-winning programme
for people living with dementia. House of Memories
is centred on the fantastic objects,
archives and stories at the Museum of Liverpool and is delivered
with a lively interpretation. The activities include borrowing memory
suitcases, going on memory walks and sharing memories between generations.
The programme demonstrates how a museum (or another cultural institution
such as a library, arts centre or theatre) can provide the health
and social care sector with practical skills and knowledge to support
vulnerable people and help them access untapped cultural resources.
81. As an alternative to a legal merger between cultural institutions,
the BiMus
in Roskilde (Denmark) offers a new
form of co-operation between archives, library and museum, sharing
a common board of directors, staff and finances. The partnership
started at the management level considering common purposes, combined resources,
and strengths of each institution. In time, it fully involved staff
who now generate together new ideas and projects. The communication
departments developed a monthly newspaper for all staff to build
synergies between institutions. It was essential to create an opportunity
for all staff to comment frequently on the partnership, helping
to secure a positive momentum. The result was an improved quality
of cultural services, events and experiences for visitors.
82. When national, regional and local libraries and museums work
together this can be of benefit to smaller institutions. It can
include sharing of collections through digital technology and exchange
of information on subjects such as advocacy and vocational training.
The Netherlands Museums Association, in co-operation with the Association
of National Museums, has produced a report, Tried-and-tested partnerships
(2013), on the lessons learned about inter-museum co-operation in
the Netherlands.
83. Museums and libraries also have access to European and wider
international networks. Examples of these networks are given in
the footnote.
4.4. Making the most of digital
technology and creative media
84. Digital technology is having
a profound influence on how libraries and museums maintain their collections
and provide their services. The world wide web gives access through
the Internet to all those able to use it. Libraries offer training
to support their community members in learning to access information
on the Internet.
85. The museum sector has embraced digital technologies in the
recording and preservation of collections. They are also used to
display and interpret collections. Many libraries and museums participate
in the Europeana project, digitising collections and making them
available for research via the Europeana portal.
However, only 10% of Europe’s cultural
heritage is currently digitised, including assets with intangible
value. Since very large numbers of artefacts need to be digitised
in a proper way according to the agreed standards at national and
international level, this process requires additional human resources
and financing. In response, many countries have established national
agencies whose main tasks are to plan and implement digitisation
projects in museums, and to manage electronic records.
86. Implementing the Lithuanian Cultural Heritage Digitisation
Strategy, the Museum board of the Ministry of Culture recommended
establishing the Lithuanian Museums' Centre for Information, Digitisation
and LIMIS (LIMIS – Lithuanian Integral Museum Information System).
The Centre was established in 2009
as a branch at the Lithuanian Art Museum which had experience with
digitisation of museum objects. The Centre looks after the main
portal “Museums of Lithuania” and organises the digitisation of
museums’ collections. It also co-ordinates educational programmes
for museum specialists working with digitisation.
87. Information and communications technology is therefore increasingly
being used to provide interaction with users and visitors, for example
to create virtual reality for scientific, educational and entertainment applications
(apps); interactive games based on collections; to provide translation
into many languages; for digital story telling; for interdisciplinary
research and many more uses. It must be remembered that libraries
and museums provide a wide range of services to a varied audience
with very different demands.
88. For example, the Riverside Museum
takes advantage of the creation of
a Digital and New Media Department which has established a common
navigator for digital collections of the Glasgow museums.
The Riverside Museum also displays
90 large touchscreen panels full of images, memories and films that
tell the stories behind the objects and over 20 interactive hands-on
displays.
89. For several years, libraries have offered access to e-books
and online resources alongside their physical book collections.
For the “born digital” population (those born post 2000), there
is little distinction between “online” and “offline” functions,
they combine the two. Developing and improving digital literacy
has become very important for users of all ages. Digitisation has
made it possible to develop innovative learning in libraries and
museums. The provision of free Wi-Fi and access to the Internet
is a fundamental part of the service provided by a modern library.
It has become an essential component of library services, not only
for the library itself, but also for users to connect their own
equipment. It is important for public libraries to take advantage
of modern technologies and join up their digital collections and
activities, such as inter-library lending. However, there are often
institutional, legal and technical barriers to this kind of digital
co-operation.
90. If libraries and museums are to be at the cutting edge of
digital service delivery to their local community, they need to
make sure that services are both appropriate and of high quality.
In order to do this they need support and guidance to find the most
cost-effective ways to provide the technical infrastructure, including networks,
equipment and licences for content and software. Most important
will be the training and development of staff. As the eCultValue
project
demonstrates, it is becoming more
common to leave behind custom-made, expensive and ad hoc solutions,
and move towards generic platforms and applications. These can be
shared among institutions regionally and nationally, where each
institution can easily access and manage its own content. In the
future, harmonised systems will be needed at European level.
91. Substantial costs of large-scale projects expose a major problem
which faces the future of European digital heritage. Research shows
that data volumes are increasing at the rate of 60% per year; data
storage increasing by 25% while data budgets are increasing by a
mere 2%.
92. It is therefore interesting to note the progress of the sector
outside Europe
. For example,
BiblioTech in Bexar County
is the first all-digital paperless
public library in the United States. Bexar County Judge Nerlson Wolff,
the visionary behind BiblioTech, wanted to accomplish two main goals:
to break down the barriers to reading; and to provide library services
to disadvantaged people. The library opened in 2013 and is equipped with
600 e-readers, 200 enhanced e-readers pre-loaded for children, e-reader
accommodation for the visually impaired, 48 desktop computer stations,
9 laptops, 40 tablets, and 4 interactive touchscreen tables. BiblioTech had
over 83 000 on-site visitors in the first 10 months after it opened.
Current programming includes Robotics, Coding for Kids, Music Theory
using digital technology, Tiny Techolotes Story Time, Fighting the
Summer Slide and technology classes in English and Spanish. The
library also developed a reading programme for mothers in prison.
93. In Europe, DOKLAB
in Delft (Netherlands) has developed
a new approach to delivering library services based on “connecting
people with stories”. It uses a range of new and existing technologies
to enable the public to share, read and create their own stories
and the stories of others.
5. Conclusions
94. Libraries and museums appeal
to people’s imagination, inspire thoughts and ideas and impart information;
they preserve the collective memory and bridge generations; they
connect the past with the present and make us think about the future.
Libraries and museums attract both local people and visitors from elsewhere;
they provide not only an important public service, but they also
enrich the quality of life, put places on a cultural map and reinforce
their identity, making them recognisable. Libraries and museums
are key elements in our cultural environment, which is so vital
to any ambition for economic development (growth or recovery) a
territory might have.
95. I therefore want to emphasise that libraries and museums should
be seen in a long-term perspective. They represent the body of knowledge
accumulated by humanity and are a valuable resource for generations to
come. By contrast, economic austerity and decisions to reduce public
funding allocated to cultural institutions are short term. Even
in difficult times, libraries and museums remain places where people
can broaden their knowledge and experience, where they can meet
and interact. They also attract inward investment and tourism. This
is why the value of libraries and museums needs much stronger recognition
in the media and political discourse.
96. I believe that, in the future, financial insecurity will actually
have the effect of increasing these institutions’ resilience and
ability to generate additional income. At the same time it will
make their performance more creative and open to the contemporary
needs of the society. Moreover, the remarkable advent of digital technology
is transforming communications and treatment of collections. However,
this transition will not happen overnight. Leadership and vision
are essential for libraries and museums to be able to adjust and develop
in times of change. They also need more independence in decision-making
to look for better solutions in financial and staff management,
to engage in new partnerships and to benefit from corporate, charitable
and individual philanthropy. Libraries and museums will need to
diversify funding sources so that they can expand their activities,
for example to reach new audiences, offer new services, work with
volunteers and develop community and outreach projects.
97. This transition will need changes in management and professional
performance. Governments and other stakeholders therefore have an
important role to play to support this process of change with necessary
reforms and assistance. Even in difficult economic circumstances,
relationships between governments and cultural institutions should
have a firm base in mutual understanding and trust. One of the principles
underlying such trust is guaranteeing the institutions’ freedom
to take strategic decisions, to define priorities and to choose
how they operate, while remaining accountable for public funding.