With holdings of over three million volumes, the Rutgers
University Libraries rank among the nation's top research libraries.
Comprised of more than two dozen libraries, centers, and reading rooms
located on Rutgers' campuses in Camden, Newark, and New
Brunswick/Piscataway, and RU-Online, a digital library, the libraries
provide the resources and services necessary to support the
university`s mission of teaching, research, and service.
There are two large research libraries on the New Brunswick/Piscataway
campuses: the Library of Science and Medicine, which houses the primary
collections in behavioral, biological, earth, and pharmaceutical
sciences, and engineering; and the Archibald S. Alexander Library,
which provides extensive humanities and social sciences collections.
The Mabel Smith Douglass Library supports undergraduate education and
houses the primary collections for women's studies and the performing
arts. The Kilmer Library is the primary business library in New
Brunswick and provides support for undergraduate instruction. There
also are several specialized libraries and collections in the New
Brunswick/Piscataway area including Alcohol Studies, Art, Stephen and
Lucy Chang Science Library, Chemistry, East Asian, Mathematical
Sciences, Music, Physics, Special Collections, University Archives, and
the James Carey Library at SMLR.
The Scholarly
Communication Center supports the development and integration of
scholarly/scientific/educational information into the mainstream
through a wide range of innovative digital services. The Marjory Somers
Fosters Center is a resource center and digital archive on women,
scholarship, and leadership. A reading room for graduate students is
located in the Alexander Library. In addition to study space, the
Graduate Reading Room includes graduate reserve materials, a
noncirculating collection of standard works in the social sciences and
humanities, and locked carrels for students working on their
dissertations.
The John Cotton Dana Library in Newark
(which also houses the Institute of Jazz Studies) supports all
undergraduate and graduate programs offered on the Newark campus with
an emphasis on business, management, and nursing. The Robeson Library
houses a broad liberal arts collection, which supports all
undergraduate and graduate programs offered on the Camden campus. Law
libraries also are located on both the Camden and Newark campuses and
have separate policies and online catalogs. The law library at Newark
also houses an extensive criminal justice library.
Of
interest to faculty and graduate students are Rutgers' memberships in
the Research Libraries Group, the Center for Research Libraries, the
Pennsylvania Academic Library Consortium, Inc., and other academic
library consortia. These consortia give members of the university
community access to the collections of the most distinguished research
libraries in the country, including those at California (Berkeley,
UCLA, and others), Stanford, Yale, and the New York Public Library, and
timely delivery of research materials. Shared catalogs may be searched
and items requested online.
The libraries provide numerous
electronic resources to the Rutgers community. Library users can search
IRIS, the online catalog, through the libraries' web site at http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu. IRIS
identifies materials owned by Rutgers libraries in Camden, Newark, and
New Brunswick/Piscataway, and contains records for most items acquired
since 1972. Students, faculty, and staff also can access a variety of
electronic indexes and abstracts, full-text electronic journals,
research guides, and library services online, both on campus and
remotely. The libraries provide hundreds of CD-ROM titles in addition
to online resources.
Rutgers students, faculty, staff, and
alumni are entitled to borrow materials from any of the Rutgers
University Libraries. The Rutgers Delivery Service, Interlibrary Loan
Service, and E-Z Borrow allow library users to request books and
journal articles located at distant Rutgers libraries or outside the
university. The loan period for faculty, staff, and graduate students
is one full term. All other borrowers, including undergraduate
students, may keep materials for 28 days. All materials, regardless of
loan period or borrower`s privileges, are subject to recall.
Librarians, many with advanced subject knowledge, are available at all
of the major libraries to assist with research projects, classroom
instruction, and research strategies. In addition to individual
instruction at the reference desk, librarians also provide in-class
teaching at instructors' requests. Librarians are available to help
with both computerized and noncomputerized reference searches.
The libraries are committed to providing equal access to services and
collections for all library patrons. Users with disabilities may
request special services through the circulation or reference
department in each library.