#ala

Francisco Araya Pizarrofranciscoarayapizarro
2026-01-20

Lee esta interesante historia en la pagina 11 de la segunda edición de la revista literaria EUREKA!, solicitándola por mensaje privado de Facebook a Yamil Artigas (facebook.com/yamil.artigas). También se aceptan contribuciones voluntarias, nada obligatorio.

Goalimpactgoalimpact
2026-01-18

Fenerbahce favored over Alanyaspor in the Süper Lig; a tight draw is possible and the underdogs will push for a surprise. Kickoff 18:00 CET.

Multigroup Alanyaspor 15.6%
Draw 25.6%
Fenerbahce Istanbul 58.8%

Starting XIs

Multigroup Alanyaspor: Ertugrul Taskiran, Fidan Aliti, Nuno Lima, Ümit Akdag, Florent Hadergjonaj, Gaius Makouta, Maestro, Efecan Karaca, Ruan, Uchenna Ogundu, Ui-jo Hwang
Fenerbahce Istanbul: Ederson, Milan Škriniar, Jayden Oosterwolde, Nélson Semedo, Mert Müldür, Ismail Yüksek, Mattéo Guendouzi, Talisca, Kerem Aktürkoglu, Marco Asensio, Anthony Musaba

Multigroup Alanyaspor 15.6%, Draw 25.6%, Fenerbahce Istanbul 58.8%.
Goalimpactgoalimpact
2026-01-18

Atl Madrid favored to win a lively LaLiga duel vs Alavés at 16:15 CET; a draw could happen, and Alavés may spring a surprise.

Atlético Madrid 65.1%
Draw 22.8%
Deportivo Alavés 12.1%

Starting XIs

Atlético Madrid: Jan Oblak, Dávid Hancko, Marc Pubill, Johnny Cardoso, Marcos Llorente, Pablo Barrios, Matteo Ruggeri, Thiago Almada, Giuliano Simeone, Alexander Sørloth, Julián Álvarez
Deportivo Alavés: Antonio Sivera, Jon Pacheco, Jonny Otto, Victor Parada, Nahuel Tenaglia, Antonio Blanco, Carles Aleñá, Jon Guridi, Pablo Ibáñez, Carlos Vicente, Toni Martínez

Atlético Madrid 65.1%, Draw 22.8%, Deportivo Alavés 12.1%.
Project Animeanime@jforo.com
2026-01-18

project-anime.com/1320217/ 【ダーウィン事変】第2話「ALA」物語が動き出す…あらすじ&先行カット公開 #2026Winter #2026WinterAnime #2026年冬開始の新作アニメ #Anime #アニメ. #ダーウィン事変 #新作アニメ 【ダーウィン事変】第2話「ALA」物語が動き出す…あらすじ&先行カット公開 #ダーウィン事変 #DarwinIncident #アニメ #新作アニメ #アニメ最新情報 #第2話 #ALA #アニメあらすじ #先行カット

【ダーウィン事変】第2話「ALA」物語が動き出す…あらすじ&先行カット公開
🅱🅸🅶🅾🆁🆁🅴.🅾🆁🅶bigorre_org
2026-01-17

Aviation weather for Almaty airport (Kazakhstan) is “UAAA 170600Z 30003MPS 9999 SCT050 BKN100 M17/M20 Q1029 NOSIG” : See what it means on bigorre.org/aero/meteo/uaaa/en vl

Anime Los Angeles cosplayers at the League of Legends gathering outside of the Long Beach convention center. #ala #animelosangeles #cosplay #leagueoflegends #jinx #arcane

League of Legends gathering of about a dozen people in various cosplays related to Arcane.
ALA Editions | Neal-Schumanalaeditionsns@glammr.us
2026-01-14

As 2026 peeks over the horizon, we'd like to take a moment to reflect back on the past year, including the 20+ books we published: tinyurl.com/49d8vf8d

#ALA #AmericanLibraryAssociation #LIS #MLIS #libraries #librarianship #InformationScience #library

2026-01-10

Sag mir, dass du in #Dieburg wohnst ohne mir zu sagen, dass du in #Dieburg wohnst…

#fastnacht #äla #fasching #karneval #fußgängerzone

Zwei große Schaufenster in denen viele verschiedene Faschingskostüme ausgestellt sind. Dadurch sieht es sehr bunt und lebendig aus.

The American Library Association turns 150 – YouTube

American Library Association 11.1K subscribers

328 views Jan 8, 2026 #ForOurLibraries

2026 marks the 150th anniversary of the American Library Association. It’s a milestone that invites us to imagine the libraries of tomorrow, to advocate fiercely for open access to knowledge, and to invest in the infrastructure, both digital and human, that makes libraries a foundation of thriving communities. Celebrate, connect, and reflect with us all year at ALA150.org. #ForOurLibraries

Transcript, Follow along using the transcript.

The American Library Association turns 150

American Library Association

11.1K subscribers Videos About Visit our Facebook Check out our Instagram

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The American Library Association turns 150 – YouTube

#150Years #ALA #AmericanLibraryAssociation #Celebrate #Connect #ForOurLibraries #ForOurLibraries2026 #Librarians #Libraries #LibraryWorkers #OneHundredFiftyYears #Professional #Transcript #Turns150YearsOld
ala-logo

If you can afford ALA, you can afford the deodorant. #animelosangeles #ala #cosplay

Cosplayer Taco.Splay holding a sign that read "If you can afford ALA, you can afford the deodorant."

Our child is trans and StarSalts is one of their favorite vendors. We were so happy to buy a birthday present at Anime Los Angeles today. Only regret was not getting an autograph. @starsalts.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy #ala #animelosangeles #artist

The artists behind StarSalts.  Star*Salts is a small, independent shop based in Southern California.

We're a five-person team consisting of Jackie (our artist!) and her partner Ian (our manager!) We also employ the help of local friends to assist with inventory, packing orders, and operating at conventions.

It's thanks to all of you and your incredible support that we can continuing making the art we love and keep this little shop running!

https://starsalts.com/

@scruffyturtles.bsky.social at Anime Los Angeles. We love supporting artists and for this cute bucket hat from them. #ala #animelosangeles #artistalley #artist

Artists from Scruffy Turtles at their Anime Los Angeles boothBlack bucket hat with Scruffy Turtles art.

@scruffyturtles.bsky.social at Anime Los Angeles. We love supporting artists and for this cute bucket hat from them. #ala #animelosangeles #artistalley #artist

Artists from Scruffy Turtles at their Anime Los Angeles boothBlack bucket hat with Scruffy Turtles art.

Moving Beyond the Acronym – American Libraries Magazine

Illustration: Antonio Rodriguez / Adobe Stock

Moving Beyond the Acronym

Academic librarians talk about doubling down on DEI efforts and core values in an uncertain climate

January 2, 2026, Facebook Twitter Email Print

Illustration: Antonio Rodriguez/Adobe Stock

The world of college admissions drastically shifted in 2023, when the Supreme Court’s landmark rulings in two cases—Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) v. Harvard and SFFA v. University of North Carolina—rejected race-conscious affirmative action policies. Just two years later, as some schools report declining enrollment of students of color, a flurry of executive orders has threatened diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives at colleges and universities.

Last April, Choice, the publishing unit of the American Library Association’s Association of College and Research Libraries, convened the virtual panel “Affirmative Action and the Future of DEI.” Moderated by Fatima Mohie-Eldin, social sciences editor for Choice and editor of its Toward Inclusive Excellence blog, the panel explored how these coalescing issues are impacting academic librarians and information scholars.

The panelists were: Sean Burns, associate professor at University of Kentucky’s School of Information Science in Lexington; Renate Chancellor, associate professor and associate dean for access, ethics, and belonging at Syracuse (N.Y.) University’s School of Information Studies; and Jerome Offord Jr., associate university librarian for community development, belonging, and engagement at Harvard Library in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The following are edited excerpts of their discussion, which considered how institutions can pursue and reaffirm their commitments to DEI principles, the murky legal and political territory around education and information, and how collaboration can support access and inclusion. View the full program.

Higher education institutions are facing increasing pressure to restructure or even eliminate their DEI programs and offices. How can they continue to advance their commitments to DEI in this environment?

Jerome Offord Jr.

Jerome Offord Jr.: One of our biggest challenges around diversity, equity, and inclusion is that, over the years, we’ve talked about DEI in terms of business cases, like diversifying staff and hitting metrics, but we’ve failed to recognize that this is human-behavior work. It’s change work, and change doesn’t happen in a day, a year, or even a few years. It’s about relearning how we live and interact as human beings.

Whatever the acronym, the work itself isn’t going away, whether in academic or public libraries or in LIS programs. We’re still asking: How do you serve the community you’re hired to serve? And if you look at that community, its users bring diverse perspectives and needs, right? So how do we educate ourselves, examine our biases, and ensure that we’re collecting, purchasing, and producing information that meets those needs?

From that foundation, diversity work must always continue. It’s hard, especially when the acronyms become political targets. This administration’s actions have simply revealed what many people already felt about this work, and that just means we have more to do.

Sean Burns

Sean Burns: It’s important that any strategic response recognizes that these policies operate on two levels. First, there’s the attack on DEI programs under the claim that DEI itself is discriminatory. Then there’s the argument that people should be judged, hired, and promoted purely on “merit.” But decades of research show how systems of injustice and unequal distributions of capital and property have advantaged certain races and genders over others. This false, zero-sum narrative about merit ignores the reality that many have been rewarded because of their race, gender identity, or inherited wealth.

As for what libraries can do, we’re about access: access to knowledge, to multiple perspectives, to the understanding that no single knowledge domain is supreme. Whether we call it DEI or something else, that’s the core work libraries have always done.

Renate Chancellor

Renate Chancellor: Until something is actually passed into law, we should continue the work we’ve been doing. We still need to foster inclusion and a sense of belonging for everyone—those who work in libraries as well as across the university. Diversity, equity, and inclusion are for everyone. Universities can’t look away.

As for academic libraries, I’ve always found librarians to be wonderfully opinionated. We’re not afraid to express how we feel, and we should continue doing that. If you have the opportunity to serve on a committee or in a leadership role, take it. Once you’re in the room with deans, provosts, and chancellors, you have their ear and can speak up.

A February 2025 article in Bloomberg Law examined the legal ambiguity of these executive orders, noting that the administration does not define DEI or list any specific activities it considers illegal. What effect does this ambiguity have? Does this uncertainty create an opportunity to rethink or strengthen our DEI frameworks?

Burns: The article was fascinating. The authors make an important distinction between what they call “lifting DEI” and “leveling DEI.” They argue that lifting DEI, or efforts that give preference to underrepresented groups, is what these anti-DEI measures most directly target. Leveling DEI, by contrast, seeks to remove bias from evaluation processes, aiming for so-called meritocracy.

On the surface, that seems rational. The authors give the example of symphony orchestras. In 1970, women held less than 5% of symphony orchestra positions. Lifting DEI would mean giving women a hiring preference; leveling DEI meant holding blind auditions behind a screen.

While the distinction between lifting and leveling is interesting, it can also be a distraction. Real progress requires both. Sometimes we must lift, as in the example of ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act] accommodations for ergonomic chairs. Those don’t remove bias; they raise people up—sometimes literally!

Chancellor: The library profession has spent years trying to define diversity. There have been countless articles debating “What is diversity?” That fixation, I think, hurt us. We spent too much time defining it instead of simply recognizing that it exists.

Likewise, the people attacking DEI now don’t truly understand it. They don’t like the acronym or what they think it represents. Much of the backlash is really aimed at Black and Brown people, because that’s who they believe DEI is for, but diversity is far broader. It includes people with disabilities, those who are neurodivergent, and others whose experiences and trauma led to the very policies we now call DEI.

Even before the recent wave of executive orders targeting DEI, the 2023 Supreme Court decision upended affirmative action in admissions. How can the library profession strategize around these compounding challenges for diversity on campus?

Offord: I think these executive orders will give cover to those who were never truly committed to recruiting or supporting diverse populations. They’ll say, “See? We don’t have to do this anymore.” Unfortunately, that’s going to be the outcome in some places.

One of the hardest things I read after the ruling was an article where someone wrote, “See? I told you, these people only got in because they were Black or Brown.” But what those critics missed was that some students may have chosen not to apply to or attend these institutions because of what’s happening with DEI. Many are returning to minority-serving institutions, where they feel safer and more supported.

We have to recognize that this new generation of students grew up with DEI as part of their worldview. They’ve experienced it firsthand. Older generations—boomers, Gen X, even some millennials—see it differently. There’s a huge generational gap in understanding. But I think we’ll see younger people fighting for this work, as we’ve already seen on campuses. Students want this. As institutions and as a nation, we need to embrace a diversity of students to prepare for the future.

Chancellor: There’s overwhelming data showing that when classrooms are diverse, all students benefit. Each institution will now have to confront an uncomfortable question: Do we truly believe in diversity and inclusion or are we just going to go along with the current political tide?

I remember when college websites would show one Black student, one Asian student, one Latinx student, just enough to check a box. That always bothered me, because it wasn’t real representation. I worry we’ll move even further backward now to a point where we don’t even pretend to include everyone.

Do we truly believe in diversity and inclusion or are we just going to go along with the current political tide?—Renate Chancellor, associate professor and associate dean for access, ethics, and belonging at Syracuse (N.Y.) University’s School of Information Studies

There are still legal ways to recruit equitably. For instance, instead of targeting specific demographic groups, institutions can target certain ZIP codes, particularly those with more diverse populations. For graduate programs, they can establish a presence at historically Black colleges and universities.

There’s room for strategy and creativity here. The same applies to hiring faculty and staff. We can still pursue diversity within the bounds of the 2023 affirmative action ruling, but it requires intention and persistence.

Editor’s Note: The featured image at the top is from WP AI.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Moving Beyond the Acronym | American Libraries Magazine

Tags: ALA, American Libraries, American Libraries Magazine, American Library Association, Collaboration, Commitments to DEI, DEI, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Institutions, Pursue, Reaffirm
#ALA #AmericanLibraries #AmericanLibrariesMagazine #AmericanLibraryAssociation #Collaboration #CommitmentsToDEI #DEI #Diversity #Equity #Inclusion #Institutions #Pursue #Reaffirm
🅱🅸🅶🅾🆁🆁🅴.🅾🆁🅶bigorre_org
2026-01-02

Aviation weather for Almaty airport (Kazakhstan) is “UAAA 020530Z 01002MPS 330V040 4600 BR BKN007 OVC020 00/M01 Q1019 NOSIG” : See what it means on bigorre.org/aero/meteo/uaaa/en vl

2025-12-30
Cosplay: Dandadan - Aira Shiratori with the flowing Acrobat Silky.
Cosplayer: Picturemagicofficial
Con – Anime Los Angeles 2025
#cosplay #ala #animelosangeles #cosplayer #tokina #photography #canon #5div #dandadan #AiraShiratori #白鳥愛羅 #darktable
PictureMagicOfficial cosplaying as Aira Shiratori from Dandadan at Anime Los Angeles.  Posing with one leg up and one arm up.  Her hair is the flowing pink of Acrobat Silky.
2025-12-30
Love and Deepspace cosplay at Anime Los Angeles 2025
by Bail.Leaf and Misfa.Cos
#loveanddeepspace #cosplay #photography #animelosangeles #ala #demilente
Four cosplayers forming a circle with their arms while wearing Love and Deepspace cosplay.
aboveFRLaboveFRL
2025-12-28

ICAO: 4BB14E
Flt: THY6037 -
First seen: 2025-12-28 19:18:24 CET
Min Alt: 9132 m AGL
Min Dist: 21.7 km

globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=4

2025-12-26

My latest newsletter is out, with a section about the #tennnessee #bookban (i.e. the book purge), noting those groups against it, like the #ALA and @glaad, and those which have not said anything! historyhermann.substack.com/i/

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.07
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst