Footnotes · 165 NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 1.b, 1.b.i, 3, 5.a- 5.a.ii, 24.a Budget reduction. 1.b.ii Material condition. 16.b, 17 Budget change. 27 Library re-organization. 30-31 Program changes. 35-36 Demand change. SMITHSONIAN All figures are as of 09/30/2011. Library branches included: Smithsonian Institution Libraries has a total of 20 libraries located throughout the museums and research institutes of the Smithsonian Institution: 1. National Air and Space Museum Library, Washington, DC 2. National Museum of American History, Washington, DC 3. National Museum of Natural History Library, Washington, DC 4. National Postal Museum Library, Washington, DC 5. National Zoological Park Library, Washington, DC 6. Smithsonian American Art Museum, National Portrait Gallery Library, Washington, DC 7. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Library, Edgewater, Maryland 8. Anacostia Museum and Center for African American History and Culture Library, Washington, DC 9. Botany and Horticulture Library, Washington, DC 10. Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum Library, New York, New York 11. Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, Washington, DC 12. Earl S. Tupper Library Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Republic of Panama 13. Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Library, Washington, DC 14. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Library, Washington, DC 15. John Wesley Powell Library of Anthropology, Washington, DC 16. Joseph F. Cullman, 3rd Library of Natural History, Washington, DC 17. Museum Studies and Reference Library, Washington, DC 18. Museum Support Center Library, Suitland, Maryland 19. Vine Deloria Jr. Library, National Museum of the American Indian, Suitland, Maryland 20. Warren M. Robbins Library, National Museum of African Art, Washington DC. 1.b, 1.b.ii Withdrawals increased due to concerted effort to cull collections due to lack of space in most branches. 3, 5.a.ii More non-Federal funds were made available and spent in 2010-2011. 4 In 2007-2008, SI Libraries' senior management approved changing the method of counting number of physical volumes held to include all items that have barcodes and item records, not title-level. This includes all serials (bound &unbound) that have a barcode attached, and anything else that we barcode. We consider this a physical count as barcodes have been physically applied to each volume. 5.b Increase due to first time reporting of 5.b.ii. 5.b.ii This is SIL's first time reporting this count. 8 Monographs -count from SIRIS. 11 Cartographic record count from SIRIS catalog in 2010-2011 rather than old cumulative counting method. 16.a More non-Fed funds made available in 2010-2011. Dibner Librarian also spending more of her Special Collections funds. Galileo purchase. 20 Received new internal Federal grant for support of Biodiversity digitizing in 2010-2011. Also Internal grants received for Collections Care projects largely spent out in 2010-2011 rather than 2009-2010 when they were received. Regular Fed funding is now two-year money, so the carryover from 2009-2010 was also spent out 2010-2011. 24.a Cost of Illiad system increased for 2010-2011. 26, 32, 35 ILL costs down due to closure of NH Library for renovation.
ARL Member Libraries as of January 1, 2012 · 167 ARL Member Libraries as of January 1, 2012 The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) represents the interests of 126 libraries that serve major North American research institutions. The ARL Statistics and Measurement program is organized around identifying, collecting, analyzing, and distributing quantifiable information describing the characteristics of research libraries. Institution Category Full Name of Institution Location Alabama S University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama Alberta C University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Arizona S University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona Arizona State S Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona Auburn S Auburn University Auburn, Alabama Boston P Boston University Boston, Massachusetts Boston College P Boston College Boston, Massachusetts Brigham Young P Brigham Young University Provo, Utah British Columbia C University of British Columbia Vancouver, British Columbia Brown P Brown University Providence, Rhode Island Berkeley, California S University of California, Berkeley California, Berkeley Calgary C University of Calgary Calgary, Alberta California, Davis S University of California, Davis Davis, California California, Irvine S University of California, Irvine Irvine, California California, Los Angeles S University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, California California, Riverside S University of California, Riverside Riverside, California California, San Diego S University of California, San Diego La Jolla, California California, Santa Barbara S University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, California Case Western Reserve P Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio Chicago P University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois Cincinnati S University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio Colorado S University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado Colorado State S Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado Columbia P Columbia University New York, New York Connecticut S University of Connecticut Storrs, Connecticut Cornell P Cornell University Ithaca, New York Dartmouth P Dartmouth College Hanover, New Hampshire Delaware S University of Delaware Newark, Delaware Duke P Duke University Durham, North Carolina Emory P Emory University Atlanta, Georgia Florida S University of Florida Gainesville, Florida Florida State S Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida George Washington P George Washington University Washington, DC Georgetown P Georgetown University Washington, DC Georgia S University of Georgia Athens, Georgia Georgia Tech S Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, Georgia Guelph C University of Guelph Guelph, Ontario Harvard P Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts Hawaii S University of Hawaii Honolulu, Hawaii