Who Benefits? Unionization and Academic Libraries and Librarians

Advocates of unions frequently argue that unionization results in benefits for libraries in general and for librarians. Previous data to support this position have been scattered, incomplete, and inconclusive. This study analyzes data on 1,904 academic libraries, 334 unionized, to explore whether there is a relationship between a librarian‐union presence and several quantitative values: student‐librarian ratios, percentage of institutional budget devoted to libraries, average spending on salaries per librarian, percentage of library budget devoted to librarians, percentage of library staff who are librarians, and percentage of library budget devoted to staff salaries. Across institution degree levels (associates, baccalaureate, masters, doctoral, and Association of Research Libraries members), results show that compared to librarians at either private or nonunionized public colleges and universities, librarians at unionized public institutions are somewhat better off. Librarians at public institutions are generally better paid but have worse working conditions—higher student‐to‐librarian ratios and fewer resources for collections. All institutions except associates‐level institutions receive roughly the same percentage of institutional budgets.

[1]  Mara F Rosenthal The Impact of Unions on Salaries in Public Libraries , 1985, The Library Quarterly.

[2]  Mark Ginsburg,et al.  Organizing University Faculty for Collective Action in the U.S.: Corporatization, a Divided Professoriate, and the Possibility of Community. , 1998 .

[3]  Molly Garfin Directory of faculty contracts and bargaining agents in insitutions of higher education , 1980 .

[4]  J. Heywood,et al.  Public Sector Earnings and the Extent of Unionization , 1997 .

[5]  Theodore Lewis Guyton Unionization: the viewpoint of librarians , 1975 .

[6]  Tina Maragou Hovekamp Organizational Commitment of Professional Employees in Union and Nonunion Research Libraries. , 1994 .

[7]  J. Kusack Unions for Academic Library Support Staff: Impact on Workers and the Workplace , 1986 .

[8]  Rachel Applegate,et al.  Charting academic library staffing : Data from national surveys , 2007 .

[9]  Ron Gilmour,et al.  Assessing collections using brief tests and WorldCat Collection Analysis , 2007 .

[10]  Rajinder Garcha,et al.  US academic librarians: their involvement in union activities , 2001 .

[11]  Howard D. White Better Than Brief Tests: Coverage Power Tests of Collection Strength , 2008 .

[12]  Tina Maragou Hovekamp Unionization and Job Satisfaction among Professional Library Employees in Academic Research Institutions , 1995 .

[13]  Rachel Applegate,et al.  Whose Decline? Which Academic Libraries Are "Deserted" in Terms of Reference Transactions? , 2008 .

[14]  C. Wiley The Effect Of Unionization On Community College Faculty Remuneration: An Overview , 1993 .

[15]  John H. Schuh The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System , 2002 .

[16]  Martha Kyrillidou,et al.  Library Users’ Service Desires: A LibQUAL+ Study , 2008, The Library Quarterly.

[17]  Charles E. Finley The Relationship Between Unionization and Job Satisfaction Among Two-Year College Faculty , 1991 .