Stevens, JenCalcagno, TheresaHolland, Claudia C.Putnam, Nathan2015-10-192015-10-192015-07-01Stevens, J., T. Calcagno, C. C. Holland, & N. Putnam. (2015, July 1) Revising Academic Library Governance Handbooks. In the Library with the Lead Pipe . Retrieved from http://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2015/revising-academic-library-governance-handbooks/. doi:10.13021/G87G6Whttps://hdl.handle.net/1920/9954Regardless of our status (tenure track, non-tenure track, staff, and/or union), academic librarians at colleges and universities may use a handbook or similar document as a framework for self-governance. These handbooks typically cover rank descriptions, promotion requirements, and grievance rights, among other topics. Unlike employee handbooks used in the corporate world, these documents may be written and maintained by academic librarians themselves1. In 2010, a group of academic librarians at George Mason University was charged with revising our Librarians' Handbook. Given the dearth of literature about academic librarians' handbooks and their revision, we anticipate our library colleagues in similar situations will benefit from our experience and recommendations.en-USAttribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United StatesProfessional facultyFaculty handbooksUniversity librariesGovernanceAcademic librariesGeorge Mason UniversityHandbooksRevising Academic Library Governance Handbooks.Peer-reviewed articlehttp://dx.doi.org/10.13021/G87G6W