18 Jul 2025

Experiencing the Erasmus Library Staff Mobility Week 2025 in Dublin


This guest post is by Anne Charlotte Danhiez who is the Head of User Training in the Robert de Sorbon Library, France. Anne Charlotte took part in the sixth Irish Erasmus Library Staff Mobility week hosted by CONUL Libraries from the 23rd-27th June 2025. This week is targeted at European professional library staff working in universities or other research orientated libraries with an interest in visiting Ireland. It gives participants the opportunity to engage with Irish librarians and visit many of Ireland's CONUL Libraries. Find out more about the Erasmus programme on the CONUL website

An Erasmus Library Staff Week can be boiled down to a few ingredients:

  • librarians from the receiving institution organising presentations and facilitating discussions around various topics
  • participants from different European countries presenting their libraries, and contributing to talks
  • several visits to libraries
  • a few local and touristic activities, including an evening all together


Mix all these ingredients, shake them well, and you’ll get an opportunity for everyone to share ideas and get inspiration from all around Europe – an invitation to take what’s best and integrate it in your own library, after enjoying a week abroad.


The 2025 Conul Erasmus Library Staff Mobility Week revolved around “Future-proofing libraries”, and every day or half-day was organised around visiting a library and listening to different presentations, on a specific “topic of the day” from the librarians working there, and from the Staff Week’s participants.


As Monday started with our first visit, to the library of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI), I was immediately faced with a massive cultural difference. The library’s furniture was modern, colourful, organised in various, smaller spaces catering to the students’ needs – everything we librarians strive for, everything I wish I could copy and paste in all the academic libraries of my country, except for one small, tiny problem: budget. And here was the first cultural difference: every now and again, on a door, you’d see a small plaque indicating the name of the person who had financed that space, something unthinkable (for now?) where I live and work. In the meantime, I took pictures to get some inspiration. The day went by, including presentations on the library’s staff and organisation, which also interested me deeply as my own library will create new departments in the next coming months, and will need to adapt its organisation. The day ended with a different kind of visit: a walking tour of Dublin, useful for any newcomer in need of some orientation.

A large illuminated globe suspended between wooden rows of bookshelves
Gaia artwork, Old Library, Trinity College. Picture credit Anne Charlotte Danhiez, 2025.

Tuesday started bright and early at Trinity College Dublin, where we attended different presentations, and it included a visit to the Old Library and the Book of Kells which, as we learnt, is the second most visited attraction in Dublin (can you guess the first one? I couldn’t: the Guinness storehouse). If some of us were impressed that a library and a book could be the first attraction of the city, having already seen them a decade ago I was more surprised by what was new. In lieu of the books, the Old Library has a new resident in this period of transition: Gaia was centre stage, reminding us of the week’s theme by inviting us to look to the future. 


The day concluded with an evening in MoLI, the Museum of Literature in Ireland, which offered us a private tour of the museum, looking at the first printed copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses and all its different translations, all while drinking wine, eating canapés, and talking to our Irish hosts in a beautiful rose garden: that’s an evening I’ll remember.

Four people looking up at pages suspended over their heads. Yes I will is written on the wall behind them.
Exhibition in MoLI, The Museum of Literature Ireland. Picture credit: Sanja Posthumus 2025.

Wednesday was a busy day, as we visited two different libraries: DCU’s Cregan Library in the morning and TU Dublin in the afternoon, which gave us the opportunity to enjoy a sunny walk outside during lunch, as well as listening to different presentations, two of which were on AI – a topic I was keen on, as a librarian who spends most of her time teaching students. Thursday also saw us visiting two libraries: UCD’s James Joyce Library and the National Library of Ireland, where we had a presentation on born digital collections and its pilot project which focused on Marian Keyes, something which was entirely new to me and utterly fascinating.

UCD’s James Joyce library was thought-provoking for me, as the building dates back to the late 1960s (like many academic universities in my country) and it is currently being reorganised and refurbished to better cater to the students’ needs, something we’re also actively working on in my library. As the library offers different cosy spaces, with wood and plants, I found myself sending multiple pictures to my colleagues who love them. What struck me the most, however, were the new sensory rooms, with different furniture, lighting that can be adapted to everyone’s needs, and the sensory, soothing wall, which I would love for my library to adopt.

Seventeen people looking at the camera, some are standing, some are sitting.
The Erasmus Group in The James Joyce Library, UCD. Picture credit: Catherine Wilsdon 2025. 

I mentioned cultural differences earlier on: as I heard someone mention multi-faith rooms in their library, I gasped, and quickly, comically realised I was the only one who was so surprised. I’m French – religion is banned in all public spaces, but during this Erasmus Library Staff Mobility Week, this was just another avenue of possibility. Another cultural difference I encountered followed me throughout this week in Ireland and was even more striking to me. Not only did most librarians wear a badge with the LGBTQIA+ colours (June is of course Pride month), there were also “all gender” toilets in several libraries and universities, and a desire to create spaces suited to everyone. We were shown or told about fantastic spaces to come which aim to adapt to new uses (podcast cabins, donor rooms, event spaces…), but more inclusive rooms already exist. Everyone, everywhere, and everything in Ireland felt geared towards inclusivity in all its aspects, welcoming everyone – more than anything else, I think that that’s the feeling I’ll take back with me.


So, did the Erasmus Library Staff Week recipe work on that week of June 23rd to 27th? Dear reader, it certainly did. As my plane landed home, in a heatwave reaching 38°C, I immediately found myself thinking of the nice and cool libraries I visited in the Irish weather – certainly colder, more unpredictable than in my home country, but made all the more special by the warm Irish welcome I received everywhere I went that week: that was truly the magic ingredient. 


Thank you very much to everyone who was involved in this Library Staff Week’s organisation!


Posted on Friday, July 18, 2025 | Categories:

6 Jul 2025

Libfocus Link-out for July 2025

Welcome to the July edition of the Libfocus link-out, an assemblage of library-related things we have found informative, educational, thought-provoking and insightful on the Web over the past while.

Five image clockwise from top left: Graphic of a man reading from a page, Two people seated at a table looking at an open book, graphic of giant hands over a man who is standing between the walls of a control panel with attached wires, a woman pointing to a map on a large screen, graphic of an older woman smiling while reading a book
Images taken from this month's link-out articles

How Language Bias Persists in Scientific Publishing Despite AI Tools.

In this article for Stanford HAI Scott Hadly explains that there’s no such thing as a quick fix for mitigating against language bias in scholarly publishing: “so if you have a subconscious bias against people from China, for example, that bias will emerge in other ways, even as language is adjusted [with LLMs].”

AI literacy essentials for academic libraries.
A free-of-charge eight-week AI microcourse from Clarivate and Choice's LibTech insights starting in mid-July. Sign up on the Choice website

The course includes:

  • Core AI literacy concepts written by academic library workers for academic library workers.  
  • Self-paced material includes readings and multimedia content, case studies and interviews with thought leaders. 
  • Optional discussion questions and quizzes to build community and test your knowledge.  
  • At the end of the micro-course, participants will be awarded a certificate of completion.

The more books per capita, the fewer residents require nursing care: Japan study.
In this Mainichi article, Ayako Oguni looks at the Japanese study that finds the more public library books a municipality has, the fewer residents require long-term nursing care. The study also found that living in a municipality with many library books may extend healthy life expectancy, even for those who don't read.

Roles in higher education libraries: An explainer.
Chris Chan explores how libraries are changing with the times in the digital era in this Times Higher Education article. He examines five roles that have emerged in response to the skills and expertise required of librarians as they evolve to meet the changing needs of their institutions.

How One College Library Plans to Cut Through the AI Hype.
Kathryn Palmer for Inside Higher Ed speaks to Nicholas Johnson, the inaugural director of AI at Stony Brook University Library, New York about his new position and how the library is going to engage with AI.

Pioneering project releases more lost Irish records spanning 700 years.
Rory Carroll for The Guardian on the 2025 release of 175,000 more records and increased searchability on The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland.

The modern library: technology-enhanced library spaces.
This SCONUL report provides a collection of case studies showcasing technology-enabled library spaces across the UK and Ireland. It helps to answer the question of what a modern academic library looks like.

Public Libraries Deserve a LibKey Nomad Too, Dammit.
Imagine hitting a paywall on The Irish Times or The Telegraph, and a little popup says "Available through [Your Public Library] - Click to access" and takes you there. Academic libraries have this with browser extensions like LibKey and Lean Library. Blogger Hannah Shelley wonders if it's a thing for public libraries.