ALA’s governance activities are shaped and guided by a series of governance and policy documents.
The Association’s first official document was the Charter of 1897, which was revised in 1942.
ALA’s Constitution and Bylaws are approved by the ALA Council and voted by the membership.
The ALA Constitution is a brief but basic ALA governance document: Article VI defines the roles and responsibilities of Council; Article VII relates to the Executive Board; and Article VIII deals with the ALA Officers and Committees:
Section VI, Council. Section 1.a.-b. of the ALA Constitution relating to Council reads:
- The Council of the American Library Association shall be the governing body of the Association. The Council shall delegate to the several divisions of the Association authority to plan and carry out programs and activities within assigned fields of responsibility and in accord with general Council policy.
- The Council shall determine all policies of the Association, and its decisions shall be binding upon the Association, except as provided in Section 4.c. of this Article.
The twelve articles of the ALA By-Laws cover these areas: Membership; Meeting; Nominations and Elections; Council; Chapters; Divisions; Round Tables; Committees; Finances; Notices by Mail; Voting by Mail; and Parliamentary Authority.
The ALA Policy Manual provides statements of policies, arranged by topic, adopted by the ALA Council:
The ALA Policy Reference File (PRF) contains the full text of policies deemed too long to be in the Policy Manual. The Policy Reference File contains interpretations, process documents, the original Council Document that presented the Policy, and other policy-related miscellany. Many policies in the Policy Manual contain explicit reference to material in the Policy Reference File, but many do not. The digitalization of the paper Policy Reference File was completed by ALA staff in the spring of 2009. Here is the link to the Policy Reference File at the ALA Institutional Repository.