The Library builds collections and consortial relationships in support of the curricular and research needs of the University's current academic departments, centers, and programs. The Library's research-level collecting is aligned with University goals for achieving national prominence in graduate education. It endeavors to provide ongoing support for established and recognized programs and to build, to the extent possible, retrospective collections for newly charted University-sponsored directions. In addition, the Library attempts to identify those collecting areas which closely reflect the undergraduate curriculum, class enrollments, intensity of use, new course offerings, and which must be supported by strong local holdings. A description of the Library's collecting policies in over 50 specific subject areas below.
» Definition of Collecting Levels
» Interdisciplinary Subjects
» Collecting Breakdown by LC Classification
If a collection development policy is not yet linked below, please contact the appropriate selector for further information.
- Africana Studies
- Africana Studies (Afro-Americana)
- American Studies
- Anthropology
- Applied Mathematics
- Archaeology and the Ancient World
- Biology
- Center for the Study of Race & Ethnicity
- Chemistry
- Classics
- Cognitive Sciences
- Comparative Literature
- Computer Science
- Early Cultures
- East Asian Studies
- Education
- Engineering
- English
- Environmental Studies
- French Studies
- Gender Studies
- Geological Sciences
- German Literature
- Hispanic Studies
- History (American)
- History (British)
- History (Eastern European/Balkans)
- History (Modern European)
- History of Art and Architecture
- International Relations
- Italian Studies
- Judaic Studies
- Language Studies
- Latin American Studies
- Linguistics
- Mathematics
- Medical Sciences
- Medieval Studies
- Middle Eastern Studies
- Modern Culture and Media
- Modern Greek Studies
- Music
- Philosophy
- Physics
- Political Science
- Portuguese and Brazilian Studies
- Psychology
- Public Humanities
- Religious Studies
- Renaissance & Early Modern Studies
- Slavic Languages
- Sociology
- Theatre Arts and Performance Studies
- Visual Art
Interdisciplinary & Broad Disciplines
Recognizing the potential for fragmentation in a department-by-department approach, the Library has always set aside funds for interdisciplinary needs. As recent scholarship has shown an increasing tendency to cross traditional boundaries and as new technologies have made possible scholarly products that serve a wide range of scholarly interests and purposes, there is a need to formally recognize these trends in the Library's collecting practices. In addition there is a growing recognition that the differences that distinguish scholarship within broad disciplines - use of different primary materials, research approaches, vocabularies, and methodologies - are reflected in differing needs for monographic vs. serial literature, historical vs. current materials, new vs. traditional formats, access vs. local ownership of materials.



