The University Libraries 2022 Visiting Scholar, Yolanda Cooper, Vice Provost and Lindseth Family University Librarian, at Case Western Reserve University will talk about her work as co-chair of the Task Force on Untold Stories and Disenfranchised Populations at Emory University in a virtual fireside chat with the Libraries Dean Claire Stewart on Friday, April 15 at 2 p.m.
The main topics of discussion will be Dean Cooper's work on Emory's reckoning with slavery and dispossession including her leadership of the task force and developing a symposium. The program includes the conversation with the dean and a question-and-answer session moderated by the Libraries Associate Dean Charlene Maxey-Harris.
Event is free and open to the campus, registration is required: https://unl.libcal.com/event/9027623
The Task Force on Untold Stories and Disenfranchised Populations at Emory University was one of two presidential advisory committees. According to the executive summary of the final report, the group’s charge was to “review opportunities for recognizing and memorializing the contributions made to the university by enslaved persons whose labor helped build the Emory campus, and their descendants, as well as the Indigenous nations and peoples on whose lands Emory’s campus was erected.”
The task force was subdivided into four working groups that corresponded to its charge.
• Honoring the labor of enslaved people;
• Defining criteria for a descendants’ scholarship;
• Acknowledging the contributions of Indigenous peoples;
• Developing educational and experiential opportunities.
Kiyomi Deards, a member of the Libraries Faculty Academic Activities committee, said that they selected Vice Provost Cooper as visiting scholar because of our own Libraries work on inclusive excellence and diversity, equity, and inclusion and the inspiration that Cooper can provide us through her experience and leadership of the Emory University task force.
“Yolanda Cooper’s story was unique and inspiring and the leadership of this task force was a different type of project than we have learned about in the past,” said Deards. “We are looking forward to this conversation and program.”
Yolanda Cooper serves as the Vice Provost & Lindseth Family University Librarian at Case Western Reserve. Prior to this appointment, Cooper was the Dean and University Librarian at Emory University, where she provided leadership and direction for the Emory Libraries including the Robert W. Woodruff Library, the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library, the Woodruff Health Sciences Center Library, the Goizueta Business Library, Academic Technology, and the Library Service Center, a facility operated in collaboration with Georgia Institute of Technology. Her responsibilities focused on articulating ways in which library services, digital scholarship, and informational technology can better support Emory’s mission and vision; implementing annual operational plans for Emory Libraries; chairing the Libraries Cabinet; and working with key library governance groups. She was also deeply engaged in campus DEI efforts at the university which resulted in chairing a Task Force on Untold Stories and Disenfranchised Populations and developing a two-day hybrid symposium on Slavery and Dispossession.
Cooper joined Emory from the University of Miami, where she served as librarian associate professor, deputy university librarian, and acting dean and university librarian. At the University of Miami, she was responsible for services, programming, and operations of all libraries on the Coral Gables and Virginia Key campuses. Her background also includes work with research library systems at Indiana University Bloomington, the University of Virginia, the University of Northern Colorado, and the University of Illinois, Urbana.
Cooper’s professional library experience has touched upon many operational areas in both public and private institutions, including organizational development; technical services; digital library programs; diversity, equity, and inclusion; access services; special collections; and research, teaching, and learning technologies. She earned an undergraduate degree in psychology and an MLS, Information Science, from Indiana University Bloomington.
More details at: https://unl.libcal.com/event/9027623