Library consortia perform a variety of functions, typically focused on a few key activities, intended to serve their members and the wider community.
Licensing and content negotiation The most traditional function of a library consortium is content negotiation. As publishers increasingly offer digital packages of content, such as scholarly databases, ebooks, electronic journals, streaming video, and other digital content, library consortia provide negotiation power to ensure better licensing agreements for their members. When negotiating with publishers, consortia staff focus both on obtaining a better price for their content and better licensing terms that are agreeable to the libraries. Libraries choose to work through consortia because they receive more resources for their money while expending less staff time in vendor negotiations. Publishers are incentivized to work with consortia because they receive more guaranteed income from increased participation. In recent years, a major focus of consortial content negotiation is
Open Access (OA). Many national consortia set and/or enforce national mandates for open scholarship, which dictate what types of scholarship must be published as OA. This is often done through licensing negotiations with major publishers. For example, the
Danish National Library Authority’s licensing negotiations "include price, conditions of use, open access in accordance with the support of the National Strategy For Open Access." Many of the agreements consortia make on behalf of institutions and researchers are called "transformative agreements," meaning that they are transforming formerly paywalled content into open content. In the U.S., for example, the
California Digital Library negotiated a deal with scientific publisher
Elsevier in 2021 to ensure that all research produced by scholars working in the
University of California system would be published as OA over a four-year period.
Shared technology infrastructure A shared technological infrastructure is a newer, but no less important, function of library consortia. For some consortia, this means centralized hosting of shared information systems. For example, consortia often host
integrated library systems on behalf of networks of libraries, so that no single institution is responsible for the technical demands of the software. Other consortia host centralized repositories of digital materials, which could be themed around geographic regions (such as the Kentucky Digital Library devoted to digital archives from the Commonwealth of Kentucky) or subject matter (such as the
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, a self-publishing repository for social, behavioral, and health sciences research data). Some consortia are hubs for software development, working with their library constituents to identify technological gaps in their institutions. These projects are often community-led and/or
open source. For example,
Jisc, based in the UK, developed IRUS, an Institutional Repository Usage Statistics software service, which calculates standards-based usage statistics for institutional repositories of university publishing. In an example of cross-consortial work in the U.S., the (PALCI) partnered with the Private Academic Library Network of Indiana (PALNI) to develop and pilot an open-source, multi-tenant institutional repository specifically for consortia (Hyku for Consortia). Other shared technology infrastructure initiatives might include open source software hosting, joint digitization services, and digital content accessibility testing.
Professional development Increasingly, library consortia provide professional development opportunities for their member libraries. Different consortia provide paid or free opportunities for librarians to learn new skills, introduce new technologies, and learn about trends in the field. Many consortia internally develop in person or online programming and often host their own regular meetings and/or conferences to encourage networking and skill sharing amongst their members. The Professional Development Alliance is an effort to share professional development content amongst consortia.
Shared print programs Library consortia help coordinate
shared print programs, allowing institutions within certain geographic regions to maintain a practical number of copies of scholarly monographs. These programs "protect against the loss of resources as pressure grows to reduce and repurpose space in library buildings." Shared print programs can be regional or national in scale. Library consortia often cover many different activities not mentioned above, including, but not limited to consulting services, grant funding, and industry research. == History in the United States ==