University of Michigan Library
The University of Michigan Library is the academic library system serving the University of Michigan, with a mission to support, enhance, and collaborate in the instructional, research, and service activities of the university's faculty, students, and staff.[1] As of recent assessments, its collections encompass over 14.6 million physical volumes, more than 386,000 current serials, and substantial digital holdings including 165,000 items in the Deep Blue institutional repository, positioning it among the largest research library systems in North America.[2] The system operates multiple facilities, including the flagship Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library and the Shapiro Undergraduate Library, alongside specialized units such as the William L. Clements Library for rare Americana materials and the Bentley Historical Library for Michigan-focused archives.[3] Notable achievements include pioneering digital preservation efforts and broad access to government documents as a U.S. Federal Depository Library, selecting approximately 85% of available federal publications.[4] While the library's collections policy emphasizes long-term building and scholarly sharing dating back over 150 years, it has navigated institutional challenges in resource allocation amid evolving academic demands.[5]History
Founding and Early Years (1838–1900)
The University of Michigan Library traces its origins to 1837, coinciding with the university's relocation to Ann Arbor, though the first documented acquisition occurred in 1838 when a single book was purchased to form the initial collection.[6][7] Early holdings were modest, comprising a nucleus of volumes acquired between 1837 and 1845 through targeted purchases and donations, primarily supporting the university's nascent academic programs in classical studies, law, and medicine.[8] These materials were initially managed informally by faculty members without a dedicated librarian, reflecting the library's embryonic status amid the university's growth from a territorial institution to a state university post-Michigan's 1837 statehood.[9] Prior to the construction of a dedicated facility, the library's collections were housed in temporary university spaces, including Mason Hall and later the Tappan Hall building starting in 1863, where it shared quarters with the Law School and chapel until overcrowding necessitated relocation.[10] In 1856, Henry P. Tappan, son of university president Henry Philip Tappan, assumed responsibility as the de facto first librarian, overseeing cataloging and access under rudimentary systems.[11] Andrew Ten Brook succeeded in 1864, serving until 1877 and implementing the library's inaugural card catalog for books and periodicals, which marked a shift toward more systematic organization amid expanding student and faculty demands.[6] The late 19th century saw infrastructural advancements, culminating in the opening of the first purpose-built library in 1883, designed by architects Ware and Van Brunt at a cost of $100,000 and constructed by contractor James Appleyard.[12] This structure initially served dual purposes as a library and art gallery, housing growing collections that by the 1890s required expansions, including a 1898 bookstack addition to accommodate increased volumes driven by curricular diversification and state appropriations.[13] Through the period, the library evolved from a peripheral resource to a central academic asset, though constrained by limited funding and staffing compared to later developments.[9]20th-Century Expansion and Key Milestones
The General Library building, later renamed the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, was constructed between 1916 and 1920 on the site of the previous library, incorporating its 1898 fireproof stacks to accommodate expanding collections amid rising university enrollment. Designed by architect Albert Kahn in consultation with library staff, the structure provided significantly greater space for books and readers, marking a pivotal upgrade in facilities during the early 20th century.[14][15] In 1920, University of Michigan Regent William L. Clements pledged his personal collection of over 50,000 volumes and 30,000 manuscripts—primarily on colonial and revolutionary America—along with $175,000 for a specialized building and additional funds for operations. The William L. Clements Library opened with a dedication ceremony on June 15, 1923, establishing a distinct rare materials repository that complemented the general collections and supported advanced historical research.[16][17][18] The Undergraduate Library, intended to serve lower-division students, was built and opened in 1958 as part of broader campus infrastructure development following World War II enrollment surges. This addition diversified the library system's offerings by emphasizing accessible study spaces and undergraduate-oriented resources.[19] Later milestones included the 1968 renaming of the General Library to honor former university president Harlan Hatcher, recognizing his contributions to academic growth, and the completion of the South Stacks addition in 1970, which expanded storage capacity for the burgeoning holdings. These developments reflected the library's adaptation to a research university's demands, with collections growing from approximately 24,000 volumes in the late 19th century to millions by mid-century through acquisitions, gifts, and interlibrary cooperation.[15][20][21]Post-2000 Developments and Digitization Shift
In the early 2000s, the University of Michigan Library initiated large-scale digitization efforts in response to escalating costs of physical collections and advancements in scanning technology. Discussions with Google began in 2002, with UM serving as the primary testing site for non-destructive book scanning.[22] By December 2004, the library formally partnered with Google under the Michigan Digitization Project to digitize its entire print collection, becoming the first public university to join the initiative.[23][24] This effort scanned millions of volumes over subsequent years, enabling full-text searchability and broader access while preserving originals.[22] To steward the resulting digital corpus, the library co-founded HathiTrust in October 2008 as a nonprofit collaborative with other Committee on Institutional Cooperation universities, establishing it as the largest digital preservation repository in library history.[25] Hosted at UM, HathiTrust has preserved over 17 million digitized items, including books, journals, and government documents from global libraries, with UM contributing more than 4.8 million volumes from its own scans.[26][27] The platform supports scholarly access, long-term preservation, and legal compliance for public-domain works, addressing challenges like copyright restrictions through controlled digital lending.[25] By 2023, HathiTrust secured a $1 million Mellon Foundation grant to bolster core operations, underscoring sustained investment in digital infrastructure.[28] Complementing these projects, the library expanded its institutional repository capabilities through Deep Blue, which archives and disseminates UM-affiliated research outputs, datasets, and documents to promote open access and reproducibility.[29] Deep Blue Data specifically preserves research datasets, facilitating compliance with funder mandates for data sharing.[30] These initiatives reflected a broader pivot from physical expansion to digital scalability, enabling cost efficiencies amid stagnant public funding; for instance, the 2016 renovation of the William L. Clements Library incorporated a dedicated digitization lab to support ongoing scanning of rare materials.[31][32] This shift has positioned the library as a leader in hybrid collections, balancing analog holdings with robust online resources exceeding traditional stacks in accessibility.[29]Governance and Administration
Organizational Structure and Leadership
The University of Michigan Library is headed by the University Librarian and Dean of Libraries, a role currently held by Lisa R. Carter, who assumed the position on May 1, 2023.[33][34] In this capacity, Carter oversees the library system's strategic vision, operations across 20 libraries and units, and integration with university-wide academic missions, reporting within the provost's structure as one of the university's deans.[35] Prior to Carter, Donna Hayward served as interim dean starting July 1, 2022.[36] The library's leadership team, coordinated under the dean, includes Associate University Librarians managing core functional areas—Collections, Learning and Teaching, Library Information Technology, Operations, Publishing, and Research—as well as the Executive Director of HathiTrust.[37] This group conducts high-level strategic planning to anticipate campus needs, allocates resources amid evolving demands such as digital transformation, and ensures alignment with university priorities like research support and scholarly communication.[37][38] Supporting this is the Deans' Office, functioning as the administrative hub and led by Associate Dean of Libraries Donna Hayward.[39] It handles resource and space management, staff support, and specialized functions including assessment, communications, development, diversity and inclusion efforts, facilities oversight, finance, human resources, and project management, often in collaboration with the broader administration.[39] The office maintains an internal staff directory and coordinates with division heads to implement directives from the dean.[39] Organizationally, the library operates through a divisional framework beneath the leadership tier, encompassing units such as Access and Fulfillment (managing circulation and distributed libraries), Collections (including preservation), Learning and Teaching, Research, and Library Information Technology, with additional specialized roles like Senior Director of Development and Director of Communications and Marketing reporting variably under the associate dean or functional leads.[40][38] This structure, detailed in university standard practice guides and internal charts, emphasizes functional expertise over rigid silos, enabling adaptability to priorities like digital collections and user services across the Ann Arbor campus and affiliates.[38]Funding Sources and Fiscal Management
The University of Michigan Library receives its primary funding through allocations from the university's General Fund, which aggregates revenues from student tuition and fees, state appropriations, indirect cost recoveries from sponsored research projects, and distributed investment income.[41] These allocations are managed under the Provost's discretionary budget category, alongside units such as Rackham Graduate School and university museums, reflecting a centralized approach to resource distribution for academic support functions.[42] While state appropriations have historically formed a portion of the General Fund—totaling about 17% of university operating revenues in recent years—the library's budget has increasingly relied on diversified sources amid declining per-student state support, a trend common in public higher education due to fiscal pressures on state budgets.[42] For fiscal year 2025, the library's General Fund allocation totals $69.5 million, marking a $3.1 million increase from $66.4 million in FY 2024, with $39.1 million designated for compensation and $30.3 million for non-salary expenses including collections acquisitions.[42] Acquisitions budgets receive annual adjustments to counteract inflation in scholarly materials costs, such as books, journals, and electronic resources, ensuring sustained purchasing power despite rising expenses in these areas.[42] In FY 2023, the overall budget stood at approximately $64.0 million, comprising $26.6 million for collections, $33.8 million for dean's administration (including $33.0 million in salaries and benefits), and smaller outlays for operations and Michigan Publishing.[43] That year also included a 1% across-the-board reduction of $0.6 million, alongside targeted increases like $0.35 million for acquisitions and $1.4 million in general operations, demonstrating responsive adjustments to economic constraints.[43] Fiscal management is overseen by the library's Finance division within the Dean's Office, which develops and executes short- and long-term budget strategies, policies, and plans to align expenditures with institutional priorities such as collection preservation, digital infrastructure, and staff support.[44] This includes monitoring inflation impacts on fixed costs and reallocating resources—evidenced by a prior transfer of funding from the library to establish the Duderstadt Center as a standalone unit in FY 2021—while adhering to university-wide policies on cost containment and revenue optimization.[43] Supplemental revenues from grants, endowments, and donations support targeted initiatives, such as special collections or digitization projects, but constitute a minor fraction compared to General Fund reliance, with no comprehensive breakdown publicly detailed beyond operational budgets.[42]Collections
Physical Holdings and Scope
The University of Michigan Library's physical holdings consist primarily of print materials, including monographs, bound serials, government documents, and maps, totaling approximately 14.7 million volumes across its core facilities. When including specialized campus libraries, the aggregate physical volume count exceeds 16 million.[2] These collections are maintained in accessible stacks and high-density storage, with nearly 8 million individual physical items—encompassing books, journals, and related formats—housed in facilities such as the Hatcher Graduate Library, Shapiro Undergraduate Library, Buhr Remote Shelving Facility, and offsite repositories.[45] The scope of these holdings supports comprehensive research and instruction across the university's disciplines, providing depth in humanities (e.g., literature, history, and philosophy), social sciences, natural sciences, engineering, public health, and professional fields like law and medicine. This breadth aligns with the library's role in serving a top-tier research institution, where physical materials complement digital resources for primary source access and specialized scholarship. Collections emphasize retrospective depth, with significant pre-20th-century imprints and serial runs dating to the 19th century, enabling historical and interdisciplinary analysis.[2] Physical access prioritizes high-use items in open stacks at central libraries, while lower-circulation volumes are retrieved from remote storage upon request, reflecting resource management strategies to balance preservation and usability amid space constraints.[45]Special and Rare Collections
The Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) oversees the University of Michigan Library's holdings of unique, rare, and primary source materials, encompassing manuscripts, early printed books, ephemera, and archival documents across multiple disciplines. Established to acquire, preserve, and promote these resources, the SCRC facilitates access via dedicated reading rooms, exhibitions, instructional sessions, and digital surrogates where feasible.[46][47] Prominent collections within the SCRC include the Papyrology Collection, the largest assemblage of ancient papyri in North America, featuring texts and documents from approximately 1000 BCE to 1000 CE that illuminate Greco-Roman, Egyptian, and early Christian history.[48] The Joseph A. Labadie Collection documents anarchism, labor movements, and social protest movements, holding books, pamphlets, periodicals, posters, photographs, and ephemera as one of the oldest and most comprehensive repositories of radical literature.[49] Other specialized areas encompass medieval and Renaissance manuscripts from the 6th to 16th centuries, Islamic manuscripts on Qur'anic sciences and hadith, and the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive with American cookbooks, menus, and ephemera.[50] The SCRC's scope extends to subject-specific holdings such as early printed books, European history pamphlets and bibles, literature spanning centuries with emphasis on 20th-century poets' archives, and music library special collections of scores, papers, and recordings.[50] Additional niches include children's literature with pop-up and movable books, theatre history materials, and transportation history imprints. Complementing these, the William L. Clements Library, an autonomous unit on the University of Michigan campus established in 1923 via donation, maintains rare books and manuscripts focused on 18th- and 19th-century Americas, including approximately 80,000 volumes in its book collection.[51][17]Digital and Open Access Resources
The University of Michigan Library provides access to a wide array of digital collections through its Quod portal at quod.lib.umich.edu, encompassing over 100 digitized sets of texts, images, audio, moving images, newspapers, and archival materials derived from campus libraries and regional museums.[52] These resources support teaching, learning, research, and scholarship, with search capabilities allowing filtering by format, discipline, or keyword, though full-text search is limited to collection descriptions.[52] Prominent examples include the Making of America collection, featuring more than 10,000 volumes of 19th-century books and 13 journal titles, alongside the Advanced Papyrological Information System (APIS UM) with images of ancient papyri, and regional holdings like Michigan County Histories (pre-1923) and the Pictorial History of Ann Arbor (over 400 images from 1824–1974).[52] The majority of Quod collections are publicly available without restrictions, aligning with open access principles for non-commercial reuse.[52] Complementing these are the Deep Blue repositories, which serve as institutional platforms for preserving and disseminating University of Michigan-affiliated scholarly output.[53] Deep Blue Documents hosts articles, book chapters, dissertations, conference papers, and multimedia created by U-M faculty, students, and staff, while Deep Blue Data focuses on digital research datasets generated in support of U-M projects.[29] Both are openly accessible worldwide, with documents enabling public search and viewing (subject to author-imposed restrictions) and data available for free download without barriers, promoting transparency in research reproducibility.[29] Deposits are open to the U-M community via self-service processes, ensuring long-term preservation managed by library staff.[53] Users also benefit from the HathiTrust Digital Library, a collaborative digital archive to which the University of Michigan Library has contributed over 4.8 million scanned items since the project's inception in 2008.[27] This repository aggregates millions of digitized books, journals, and government documents spanning from 1500 to the present, sourced from member libraries, Google Books, and the Internet Archive, covering standard research subjects.[27] Public domain materials—comprising over one-third of the collection—are fully open access for viewing and downloading by all users, while U-M affiliates gain enhanced privileges, including full-text search across copyrighted works and access for print-disabled individuals via specialized services.[27] The library further advances open access through dedicated guides and support services that inform scholars on policies, publishing options, and compliance, framing open access as a mechanism for unrestricted online availability and reuse to broaden scholarly impact.[54] These efforts integrate with broader digitization initiatives, prioritizing empirical preservation of primary sources while facilitating causal analysis in historical and scientific inquiry.[54]Facilities and Infrastructure
Central Campus Libraries
![Hatcher Graduate Library, University of Michigan, University Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI.jpg][float-right] The Central Campus Libraries encompass the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library and the Shapiro Undergraduate Library, serving as the primary general-purpose facilities for the University of Michigan's central campus in Ann Arbor. Located adjacent to each other along South University Avenue, these libraries support undergraduate, graduate, and faculty research with extensive print and digital resources, study spaces, and specialized services.[55] The Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, the university's largest library building, consists of a north wing dedicated on January 7, 1920, and designed by architect Albert Kahn, paired with a south addition constructed from 1967 to 1970. Named after Harlan Hatcher, university president from 1951 to 1967, it functions as the core repository for general collections exceeding millions of volumes, alongside housing the Special Collections Research Center, Asia Library, and other specialized units. Facilities include multiple entrances, computing resources, and areas for quiet study, with access restricted to those with university ID after certain hours.[14][56] The Shapiro Undergraduate Library, originally constructed in 1958 as the Undergraduate Library, was renamed in recognition of donors Harold T. and Vivian B. Shapiro and underwent expansions including a 1995 renovation adding internet access and multimedia capabilities. Oriented toward undergraduates, it features the Askwith Media Library with films and TV materials, a Computer and Video Game Archive spanning from the 1970s onward, and the Shapiro Design Lab equipped with 3D printers and engraving tools. The building offers 24-hour access during select periods requiring an MCard from midnight to 8 a.m., bookable study rooms across five levels, Bert's Café, and adaptive technology support via the Knox Center.[57][19][58]Specialized and Satellite Facilities
The University of Michigan Library maintains several specialized facilities on its Ann Arbor campus, each focused on distinct subject areas to support targeted research and instruction, distinct from the central Hatcher and Shapiro libraries. These include the Taubman Health Sciences Library, which serves the needs of health sciences programs and Michigan Medicine by providing clinical research resources, evidence-based practice tools, and spaces for medical education; it is located at 1135 Catherine Street and emphasizes interdisciplinary health information access.[59][60] The Art, Architecture, and Engineering Library, situated in the Duderstadt Center on North Campus at 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard, curates collections in art history, design, engineering disciplines, architecture, and urban planning, including specialized equipment loans and digital fabrication support for creative and technical projects.[61][62] Archival specialized units include the William L. Clements Library at 909 South University Avenue, which houses over 70,000 printed items and 30,000 linear feet of manuscripts documenting American history and culture from the 15th to early 20th centuries, with strengths in exploration, revolution, and early republic eras; access requires appointments for rare materials preservation.[51] The Bentley Historical Library functions as the official repository for university records and Michigan state history, holding millions of photographs, personal papers, and institutional archives to facilitate historical scholarship on regional and institutional developments.[63] The Ross School of Business Library caters to commerce and management studies with targeted business databases, market analytics, and collaborative spaces integrated into the Kresge Hall facility.[63] Satellite facilities extend library services to the university's regional campuses. The Mardigian Library at UM-Dearborn supports undergraduate and graduate programs there with physical collections, interlibrary loans, and research consultations tailored to local curricula in sciences, humanities, and engineering.[63] Similarly, the Frances Willson Thompson Library at UM-Flint provides access to over 200,000 volumes and digital resources for its teaching-focused environment, emphasizing student support in liberal arts, health professions, and education fields.[63] These outlying units integrate with the central system for shared cataloging and resource delivery while addressing campus-specific demands.[64]Recent Construction and Renovations
In 2023, the University of Michigan completed a major renovation of the third floor of the Harold T. and Vivian B. Shapiro Library, transforming the 37,500-square-foot space into the Stephen S. Clark Commons, a collaborative hub designed to connect researchers and scholars with library resources.[65][66] The project, approved by the Board of Regents in July 2021, cost $6 million and was funded through University Library gifts, resources, and Office of the Provost allocations.[67] This renovation emphasized modern study and collaboration areas, including digital scholarship spaces, while preserving the building's undergraduate library function on lower floors.[68][69] Earlier, the A. Alfred Taubman Health Sciences Library underwent a renovation as part of completed capital projects, enhancing facilities for medical and health sciences research, though specific completion dates post-2015 are not detailed in public records.[70] In 2025, the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library completed a window and door replacement initiative, addressing maintenance needs in the historic structure while minimizing disruptions to operations.[71] These efforts reflect ongoing investments in updating infrastructure to support scholarly activities across the library system.[72]Services and Programs
Research Support and User Services
The University of Michigan Library offers research support services across the full research lifecycle, including assistance with discovering and engaging resources, conducting literature searches such as systematic or scoping reviews, data management and preservation, digital tool usage for analysis and visualization, identifying publication venues, addressing copyright and intellectual property issues, and evaluating scholarly impact.[73] These services partner with university researchers to advance efforts from project inception through dissemination.[73] Consultations provide one-on-one guidance from subject specialists or digital scholarship experts, covering research question formulation, source identification, and specialized methodologies.[74] Users access these via the specialist directory or initial triage through Ask a Librarian, which connects inquiries to appropriate expertise.[74] In health sciences, Taubman Library delivers tailored consultations on expert searches, funding strategies, data management, and research impact metrics like citation analysis.[60] Business researchers at Kresge Library receive reference support, data access, and plotting assistance.[75] The Ask a Librarian service, a cross-divisional reference team, handles user questions through chat, email, phone, text, or in-person desks, fostering ethical connections to collections and methods while referring complex needs library-wide.[76] [77] Subject-specific research guides supplement this, offering step-by-step navigation for disciplines.[74] Instructional support includes workshops and course-integrated sessions on resource use, citation practices, and assignment research, with adaptations to virtual formats like Zoom during the COVID-19 pandemic to maintain large-scale consultations.[74] [78] Data services via Deep Blue Repository involve consultations on archiving, metadata, and sharing research outputs.[79] Specialized units like the Art, Architecture, and Engineering Library provide domain-focused reference and plotting tools.[80]Scholarly Publishing Initiatives
Michigan Publishing, a division of the University of Michigan Library, oversees the production and dissemination of scholarly monographs, journals, and digital materials, integrating traditional university press functions with library-led open access strategies.[81] This initiative includes the University of Michigan Press, which focuses on advancing research in humanities, social sciences, and English language teaching through peer-reviewed publications.[82] In 2022, the University committed $1.2 million over five years to subsidize open access book publishing, enabling authors to forgo paywalls without compromising quality or peer review.[83] The library supports institutional repositories via Deep Blue, which preserves and provides open access to over 100,000 scholarly documents, datasets, and multimedia outputs from University affiliates as of 2024.[84] Deep Blue Documents hosts theses, dissertations, conference papers, and faculty articles, while Deep Blue Data manages research datasets compliant with funder mandates like those from the NIH.[30] These services emphasize perpetual preservation and discoverability, with self-deposit options for creators and metadata curation by library staff.[29] Additional initiatives include negotiated discounts on article processing charges with select publishers, reducing open access fees for University authors by up to 50% in some cases.[85] The library's Scholarly Publishing Toolkit offers guidance on rights retention, predatory publishing avoidance, and funding opportunities, drawing from empirical analyses of publishing economics to prioritize author control and sustainability.[86] These efforts align with broader library goals of countering commercial enclosures in academia by fostering academy-owned models.[87]Educational and Outreach Programs
The University of Michigan Library's Learning and Teaching division delivers course-integrated information literacy instruction, emphasizing critical thinking, source discovery and evaluation, and academic integrity through in-person and online sessions, assignment scaffolding, and customized learning support.[88] These programs target undergraduate and graduate students across disciplines, with librarians collaborating on faculty consultations for assignment design and learning outcomes assessment.[89] In the 2017-2018 academic year, librarians conducted 808 such sessions reaching 20,780 students, demonstrating scale in embedding library expertise into curricula.[90] Workshops form a core component, covering research methodologies, technology tools, data literacy, and scholarly publishing, and are accessible to the broader University of Michigan campus community via coordinated schedules.[88] Complementary offerings include credit-bearing library courses through the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (LSA), digital instructional modules on platforms like Canvas for asynchronous information literacy training, and competitive awards such as the annual Undergraduate Research Award to incentivize student projects utilizing library resources.[88] Engaged learning initiatives, including the Peer Information Consulting program and Michigan Library Scholars, foster student-led peer support and advanced research partnerships.[88] Outreach efforts extend beyond campus instruction to K-12 and community engagement, supporting university-wide programs for local middle and high school students by granting on-site access to library spaces, physical collections, and electronic resources during visits or summer programs.[91] These activities promote early exposure to research skills and college-level tools, though off-campus electronic access requires a university account and is unavailable via standalone K-12 library cards.[91] The Outreach and Engagement Team further collaborates with student organizations, campus units like the Sweetland Writing Center, and event partners to host activities, manage audiovisual technology in study rooms and event spaces, and promote library services through digital signage and custom collaborations.[92] Such initiatives include orientations for international and transfer students, as well as support for learning communities, aiming to integrate library resources into diverse campus and external educational ecosystems.[88]Partnerships and Collaborations
Major Digital Partnerships (HathiTrust, Google Books)
The University of Michigan Library entered into a pioneering partnership with Google in 2004 to digitize its extensive print collections, marking U-M as the first public university to join Google's book scanning initiative.[23] This agreement targeted the library's approximately 7 million volumes, with Google ultimately scanning about 4.7 million books—totaling 1.4 billion pages—over six years, a pace that vastly exceeded the library's previous manual digitization rate of roughly 7,000 volumes annually.[23] The resulting digital corpus became searchable through Google Books, with full-text access provided for public domain works, while copyrighted materials were limited to snippets to respect intellectual property laws; the project faced lawsuits from publishers and authors alleging infringement, but these were resolved through settlements that preserved the digitized copies for library partners without enabling broad public access to in-copyright content.[23] This digitization effort directly seeded the creation of HathiTrust in 2008, a nonprofit digital preservation repository founded collaboratively by the University of Michigan—as a core member of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (now Big Ten Academic Alliance)—alongside the 11 University of California libraries and other research institutions.[93] U-M's library assumed a central operational role, hosting HathiTrust's staff for daily management and contributing infrastructure for long-term preservation of the amassed digital holdings, which now exceed 17 million items drawn largely from Google scans and similar mass-digitization projects.[26] HathiTrust enables affiliated users to access public domain materials in full and supports advanced scholarly functions like text and data mining for all holdings under U.S. copyright fair use provisions, ensuring redundancy and durability against data loss while prioritizing institutional control over commercial platforms.[26] Through this partnership, U-M has advanced collective stewardship of digitized cultural records, mitigating risks of technological obsolescence and facilitating research across partner libraries without relying solely on for-profit entities like Google.[93]Consortia and Inter-Institutional Efforts
The University of Michigan Library participates in the Big Ten Academic Alliance (BTAA), a consortium originally established in 1958 as the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) among Midwestern research universities, which expanded to include the University of Chicago and now encompasses 14 member institutions focused on shared academic resources. Through BTAA, the library enables reciprocal borrowing privileges via the UBorrow service, allowing eligible U-M patrons—faculty, students, and staff—to search and request physical materials directly from participating libraries' catalogs, streamlining access to over 100 million volumes across the alliance without traditional interlibrary loan delays.[94][95][96] BTAA collaborations extend to collective initiatives like Big Ten Open Books, launched on August 2, 2023, which involves the libraries of BTAA members partnering with six university presses to publish open-access scholarly monographs, funded through subventions to support authors and reduce barriers to dissemination. Additionally, BTAA negotiates agreements for article processing charge (APC) discounts, enabling U-M authors to publish open-access articles in hybrid journals from major publishers at reduced rates, as implemented through recent deals covering thousands of titles. These efforts leverage economies of scale for licensing, preservation, and innovation, treating member collections as a unified, networked resource to enhance research efficiency.[97][98][96] As a member of the Center for Research Libraries (CRL), an international consortium founded in 1949 comprising over 250 North American research institutions, the U-M Library gains access to specialized collections exceeding 5 million pages of rare newspapers, foreign dissertations, and archival materials not duplicated in standard holdings, with materials retrievable via expedited interlibrary loan or digital scans. CRL membership facilitates shared governance and funding for global resource acquisition, including area studies archives, supporting U-M researchers in fields requiring primary sources from underrepresented regions.[99][100][101]Rankings and Scholarly Impact
Association of Research Libraries (ARL) Metrics
The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) collects annual statistics from its member institutions, encompassing metrics on collections (such as volumes held), expenditures (including materials and salaries), staffing (full-time equivalents or FTE), and service activities (like reference transactions and interlibrary loans).[102] These data enable benchmarking among large research libraries, though ARL does not publish aggregate rankings; individual institutions often highlight their reported figures relative to peers.[103] For the University of Michigan Library, the ARL Statistics for the 2023-2024 fiscal year (covering all campus libraries) include 16,010,662 volumes held, reflecting substantial physical collections.[2] Materials expenditures totaled $32,511,703, supporting acquisitions and access to resources.[2] Staffing comprised 219 professional FTE, 323 support staff FTE, and 61 student assistant FTE, with salaries and wages at $40,758,199.[2] Service metrics indicate active user engagement, with 32,248 reference transactions and 1,860,893 visitors.[2] Interlibrary loan activities showed the library providing 41,466 items to other institutions while receiving 17,185, underscoring its role in resource sharing.[2] These figures position the University of Michigan Library among leading ARL members in scale, though direct peer comparisons require access to full datasets not publicly detailed beyond institutional reports.[104]| Metric Category | Key Figures (2023-2024 FY, All Campus Libraries) |
|---|---|
| Volumes Held | 16,010,662 |
| Materials Expenditures | $32,511,703 |
| Salaries & Wages | $40,758,199 |
| Professional Staff FTE | 219 |
| Support Staff FTE | 323 |
| Student Assistants FTE | 61 |
| Reference Transactions | 32,248 |
| Visitors | 1,860,893 |
| ILL Provided | 41,466 |
| ILL Received | 17,185 |