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Partnering for Social Infrastructure: Investigating the Co-Location of a Public Library in an Affordable Housing Building

Kaitlin Wynia Baluk (McMaster University, Canada)
Ali Solhi (McMaster University, Canada)
James Gillett (McMaster University, Canada)

How Public Libraries Build Sustainable Communities in the 21st Century

ISBN: 978-1-80382-436-9, eISBN: 978-1-80382-435-2

Publication date: 8 September 2023

Abstract

In 2021, a public library in Ontario, Canada established a branch in an affordable housing building. Using interviews with library and support workers who work in the building (n = 8) and an analysis of media that describes the partnership (n = 16), this chapter explores how their partnership may create social infrastructure for tenants. Social scientists have positioned strengthening social infrastructure, a community’s network of systems and spaces that facilitate social relationships, as an antidote to many of society’s most pressing social issues, such as social inequity. An understanding of this partnership, its purpose, and how it intends to serve neighborhood members provides insight into how public libraries and non-profit and community organizations together provide social infrastructure for those living in affordable housing. Strengthening a community’s social infrastructure may be a vital step toward building socially sustainable communities in the twenty-first century.

Keywords

Citation

Baluk, K.W., Solhi, A. and Gillett, J. (2023), "Partnering for Social Infrastructure: Investigating the Co-Location of a Public Library in an Affordable Housing Building", Williams-Cockfield, K.C. and Mehra, B. (Ed.) How Public Libraries Build Sustainable Communities in the 21st Century (Advances in Librarianship, Vol. 53), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 229-242. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0065-283020230000053021

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Kaitlin Wynia Baluk, Ali Solhi and James Gillett