Welcome to Your Library Connecting public libraries and refugee communities

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Transcription:

Welcome to Your Library Connecting public libraries and refugee What is Welcome To Your Library? Welcome To Your Library is a national project connecting public libraries with refugees and asylum seekers. By increasing opportunities for participation, Welcome To Your Library aims to improve access to and quality of public library services for everyone. Our vision and aims We will connect public libraries and refugee/asylum seeker to nurture learning, well being and a sense of belonging for all. We will achieve this through: PARTICIPATION of refugee throughout the work PARTNERSHIPS to raise awareness and increase public library use CONFIDENT, TRAINED library staff SHARING GOOD PRACTICE based on evidence ADVOCACY for public library work with refugees and asylum seekers What s the background to the project? Funded by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation and co-ordinated through the London Libraries Development Agency, the Welcome To Your Library pilot project took place in the London boroughs of Brent, Camden, Enfield, Merton and Newham in 200-4. In 2005, a further 250,000 from the Paul Hamlyn Foundation enabled Welcome To Your Library to extend the project nationally to the end of 2007. By this time we expect activities to have become an integral part of public library work. After a competitive selection process, five additional public library partners are participating in the national project: London Borough of Hillingdon working with Healthy Hillingdon and HOPE (Health Opportunities, Promotion and Education) Leicester City Council Liverpool City Council London Borough of Southwark Tyne & Wear (a consortium comprising councils in Newcastle, Gateshead, North and South Tyneside and Sunderland) For more background information about Welcome to Your Library visit the LLDA website: www.llda.org.uk/cms/contentpage/wtyl Southwark Council and Libraries The refugee and asylum seeker population is estimated to be 6,000 representing 6% of the total population. The Council has a Refugee and Asylum Seekers Strategy with a key aim of providing better service to the refugee and asylum seekers resident in Southwark by identifying and linking the various services that are currently being provided. Work with asylum seekers and refugees, including developing partnerships with service providers, is part of the library s Social Inclusion Action Plan.

Context Southwark Libraries mission is to meet Government and Council objectives in relation to lifelong learning, social inclusion, and modernising government. Much of this mission is derived from national policies that guide the Council s and Libraries priorities and are positioned within the Council's own policies on equality, diversity and community engagement. Southwark has a single coherent framework outlined in the Vision for Equality within which equality, diversity and social cohesion are addressed across the Council. In includes an Equalities Scheme for 2005-2008 and an Equality and Diversity Panel providing the council with expertise and scrutiny in policy and service development. The Panel is just one method of consultation and includes representatives from black and minority ethnic, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender, traveller, age related and disabled people s groups. For more background information you can visit Southwark's Equality and Diversity pages: http://www.southwark.gov.uk/yourcouncil/equalities/equalitiesatsouthwark/. Much of Southwark's equalities, race relations, social cohesion, and consultation policy is based on recommendations from the Lord Ouseley Review which was commissioned by the Council and begun in October 2004 following unsubstantiated allegations that it had discriminated unfairly against BME businesses. Table: The following table maps aims of key policy documents showing links with and interdependence of the Welcome to Your Library project locally and nationally. Shared Priorities Every Child Matters Southwark's Vision for Equalities Southwark Council Refugee & Asylum Seeker Strategy Welcome to Your Library 2 4 5 Promoting Healthier Be Healthy Communities Creating Safer and stronger Stay Safe Raising standards in schools and Enjoy and Improving quality achieve of life for children and young people Creating Safer and stronger Make a positive contribution Promoting the Enjoy economic economic vitality of well-being To improve the quality of life by improving access to services and by reducing gaps in health, employment, education attainment and community safety, particularly with those most affected To improve social cohesion by promoting positive relationships and a sense of community and belonging, by reducing fear and tensions, particularly around race issues, and by promoting a vision in which individuals, groups and are properly valued To promote citizenship rights and responsibilities. Access the public services to which they are entitled Refugees and asylum seekers aware of and access sources of information in libraries including health information Increase confidence of refugees and asylum seekers in use of library and other council services Achieve their Increased use of library services full potential as by refugees and asylum seekers members of including formal and informal British society learning facilities Contribute fully to the community Achieve their full potential as members of British society Refugees and asylum seekers participate in improving library services Refugees and asylum seekers access employment and education information, and opportunities to further their potential. The Shared Priorities statement identifies issues where central government, local councils and other organisations must work together to improve the quality of people s lives. The key component of the national children s agenda is Every Child Matters. It identifies five outcomes set within a whole system reform so services can be brought together around the needs of children and their families. Key local guidelines come from Southwark Council s Vision for Equalities and Refugee and Asylum Seeker Strategy, which use a holistic approach to support the integration and contribution of refugees into life in the borough. Not listed here but sharing many common aims is the

national library agenda, Framework for the Future, which maps out a a shared sense of purpose for public libraries by concentrating on developing reading and learning, digital skills and services, community cohesion and civic values. Southwark Project Plan Objectives In an ongoing process of partnership and consultation, Southwark Libraries will:. Eliminate barriers to the use of libraries by refugees and asylum seekers. 2. Increase awareness of the library service amongst the refugee and asylum seeking population through outreach work, partnerships with local RCO s, and publicity.. Provide relevant materials, resources, and activities to meet needs as defined by refugees and asylum seekers. 4. Library staff aware of, committed to, and confident in meeting the needs of refugees and asylum seekers The project will also have related benefits. It will raise the awareness of the wider community regarding issues concerning refugees and asylum seekers. It will expand on our consultation work with young people, paving the way for community involvement in all aspects of library services by all. It will provide us with examples of good practice in working with hard to reach and at risk. And it will remove barriers that also inhibit the use of libraries by many individuals in other. We will use the experiences from the change process that Welcome to Your Library represents as a blueprint for Southwark Libraries' overall approach to change. Key components of Welcome to Your Library staff training, community consultation and participation, creative partnerships, national and local initiatives, and the use of technology are also essential to our overall approach to change. Southwark libraries must partake in an ongoing change process in order to continue to meet the needs of current and future residents. Action Plan The following charts highlight our action plan for the project based on Southwark s four objectives. It sets out tasks to be achieved and links them to the outcomes mapped in the Table above. Though setting specific, measurable tasks, the action plan is not an inflexible, unchanging document. It must change, grow, and be continuously revised in order to promote full consultation and participation by refugees and asylum seekers, make use of all potential partnerships, learn from and share good practice, and make good use of opportunities for advocacy as and when they arise.

Action plan Key Objective : Barriers to use of libraries by refugees and asylum seekers eliminated. Evaluation method Risks Resource implications Who Status Timescale Outputs and impact Task Document: Potential barriers noted and potential solutions defined Aug-06 Senior Librarians at meetings too cautious approach, staff resistance new policies and procedures documents Review policies and procedures Review findings with members of three or more RCO's 4 Oct-06 Julian Heather finding interested RAS, conflicts with financial or statutory requirements evaluation form, presentation to Equality and Diversity panel following EIA procedure, Equalities and Impact Assessment Form advisory panel of refugees and asylum seekers Recruit 5 to 7 members to meet quarterly to review barriers and other activities 2 4 5 in place Dec-2006, ongoing Dean Smith time, difficulty of getting broad representation regular meetings, minutes, actions completed see also: Objectives 2 and 4

Key Objective 2: Increasing awareness of the library service amongst the refugee and asylum seeking population through outreach work, partnerships with local RCO s, and publicity. Evaluation method Risks Resource implications Who Status Timescale Outputs and impact Task Attend local RCO meeting and events Visit at least 0 RCO's, issue cards, talk, promote services Dean Smith and Dec-06 staff from local library conflicting time priorities tracking number of active users, number of resulting activities Booth at Southwark RAS week Issue cards, promote services, consultation on needs for library 4 resources/ services Jun-06 other staff cost of booth consultation not prepared or inappropriate tracking number of active users, number consulted Host RCO and other related meetings in libraries At least groups use library space for meetings 2 Dec-06, local library staff refreshments staff resistance, lack of group interest number of meetings, number of resulting activities Publicise project work (as appropriate) in local press At least articles about Welcome to Your Library Sep-06 work in local press Emily Crowther lack of interest/ competinginformal verbal feedback, stories questionnaire Translate library information Basic library literature/ main website page in to 7 languages 4 Feb-07 Emily Crother, translators, translation costs, printing costs changing and moving questionnaire, data Key Objective : Relevant materials, resources, and activities available to meet needs as defined by refugee and asylum seekers.

Evaluation method Risks Resource implications Who Status Timescale Outputs and impact Task ICT Tasters ICT Taster sessions for 2 RCO's Dec-06 Jafer Sharif transport difficulties for RAS evaluation forms and attendance Organise learning opportunities in libraries ESOL or basic literacy course held in a library 5 Apr-07 Adult Learning Services, other providers costs of course budgets, finding partners numbers attending, course evalution forms Resources list for RAS Several potential formats: brochure, web page, resource finder 2 Dec-06 reference staff, all time, printing & graphics cost, lack of awareness by staff/ RAS resource produced and maintained Special events events organised to celebrate and recognise milestones such as new collections, publications, Dec-06 Sandra Agard or initiatives in consultation with RCO members, performer fees, food budget, weather comments book, attendance, evaluation forms Stock purchase stock with at least groups of RAS directly involved in purchase 4 Feb-07 Stock Services Librarian 0,000 for year 06-07 allocated from Southwark Libraries stock fund changing and moving interviews with participants, use of stock Key Objective 4: Confident library staff aware of and committed to meeting the needs of refugee and asylum seekers.

Evaluation method Risks Resource implications Who Status Timescale Outputs and impact Task Assess staff awareness and attitude all staff surveyed for present attitudes/ follow 2 Oct-06 up after training consultant, consultant costs budget, time evaluation of surveys before and after Create a training programme for staff *all staff half day basic awareness training about RAS issues *key members of staff 2 trained as 'champions,' minimum of one each 4 library, training on RAS, consultation, leadership, change ( to 2 days) Sep-06 to Apr-07 training organisation, refugees/ asylum seekers training costs, staff time staff risistance, budget, time evaluation form, mystery shopping reports working with refugees Create a 'mystery and asylum seekers test 4 shopping' programme libraries before and after training Sep-06 to nov-07 consultant, refugees and asylum seekers consultant costs, staff staff resistance, lack of time, mystery interest or RAS burnout shopper expenses use feedback to rework training, procedures, and services as appropriate, then monitor impact Create component of staff induction develop with refugees and asylum seekers, perhaps an online/ powerpoint induction unit 2 4 Sep-06 to Nov-07 training organisation, refugees/ asylum seekers training costs, staff time information either too vague or specific and becomes dated evaluation forms, mystery shopping reports Compile data on RAS in Southwark facts and figures from national and local sources, formal and informal, who and where are RAS Sep-06 all staff changing and moving population information collected and maintained

Our intention is that our service becomes much more accessible to refugees and asylum seekers and that successful work with these groups will create advocates for libraries within these. We are committed to providing staffing and stock fund resources from existing budgets and will consider re-directing other monies if we feel this is appropriate. We have already forged links with key refugee and asylum seeker groups such as the Southwark Refugee Community Forum and the Southwark Day Centre for Asylum Seekers. We intend to further develop this work with community groups such as the Vietnamese Refugee Council, Somali Youth Action Forum, and Southwark Refugee Artists Network. This will enable us to more fully engage with these groups, harness their expertise in service design and potentially engender a feeling of ownership of the library service. There is widespread support for this project within the council and key partners in Education, Corporate Policy, Sure Start, and Regeneration have indicated an interest in being involved. We look forward to working with individuals, Refugee Community Organisations, Southwark Council departments, and others to connect Southwark Libraries with the refugee and asylum seeking. Dean Smith Development Officer Southwark Libraries