Belgrade City Library is divided into these organisational units: • Belgrade City Library; • Thirteen libraries in urban municipalities and their branch libraries.
Special Collections Department Special collections department comprises the Periodicals Collection, the Old and Rare Books and Books about Belgrade Collection and the Children's Collection. Presently, the Department for Old and Rare Books and Books on Belgrade holds more than 20.000 titles.
Children's Department Children's Department has been in existence since the foundation of Belgrade City Library in 1931. Today, there is one operational children's department, namely "Čika Jova Zmaj" ("
Uncle Jova Zmaj", named after a children's poet
Jovan Jovanović Zmaj), with holdings comprising around 30,000 items. The department enrolled approximately 3,000 users last year. Neven Children's Department is expected to reopen in the near future, although that is not known for certain. The Department has been implementing a variety of programmes and actively working with children. "Secret" was the title of a project run by "Čika Jova Zmaj" Children's Department that was awarded first prize at the 2009
Biblionet as the best library project in Serbia 2006–2009. Another project, "Book is a Picture Gallery", was presented at the 75th
IFLA Congress in
Milan as a poster session. In addition, two municipal libraries ("Đorđe Jovanović" in
Stari Grad and "Ilija Garašanin" in
Grocka) have their own special children's departments and implement a variety of programmes.
Municipal libraries in the Belgrade City Library network • "Jovan Dučić" Library,
Barajevo (named after a
poet-diplomat Jovan Dučić) • "Dositej Obradović" Library,
Voždovac (named after a writer,
philosopher, and the first minister of education of
Serbia Dositej Obradović) • "Petar Kočić" Library,
Vračar (named after a writer
Petar Kočić) • "Ilija Garašanin" Library,
Grocka (named after a statesman
Ilija Garašanin) • "Vuk Karadžić" Library,
Zvezdara (named after a major reformer of the
Serbian language Vuk Karadžić) • "Sveti Sava" Library,
Zemun (named a
Serbian prince and
Orthodox monk, the first
Archbishop of the
autocephalous Serbian Church Saint Sava) • "Despot Stefan Lazarevic" Library,
Mladenovac (named after Serbian Prince
Stefan Lazarević) • "Vuk Karadžić" Library,
New Belgrade • "Miodrag Bulatović" Library,
Rakovica (named after a writer
Miodrag Bulatović) • "Isidora Sekulić" Library,
Savski Venac (named after a writer
Isidora Sekulić) • "Milovan Vidaković" Library,
Sopot (named after a novelist
Milovan Vidaković) • "Đorđe Jovanović" Library,
Stari Grad (named after a writer
Đorđe Jovanović) • "Laza Kostić" Library,
Čukarica (named after a poet
Laza Kostić) == History ==