Alan Ball winners 2023 announced

Logo for Alan Ball Award

CILIP Local Studies Group and the Library Services Trust are pleased to announce the winners of the Alan Ball Awards for the best local history publications that were published in 2023. Once again, we had a good number of high-quality publications that made judging very difficult. The winners are:

Hardcopy joint winners

Glasgow Life Museums, Scotland’s Lascar Heritage: Investigating the lives of South Asian Mariners (Glasgow Museums Publishing in Association with the Bangladesh Association Glasgow, 2023). Available here: https://shop.glasgowlife.org.uk/products/scotland-s-lascar-heritage-investigating-the-lives-of-south-asian-mariners

Paula Stevens, Lavenham House Histories (Self-Published, 2023). Available here: https://paula-stevens.sumupstore.com/

Hardcopy highly commended

Kevin Crangle, Ardglass and Dunsford County Down Biographies (Self-Published, 2023). Available here: https://ulsterhistoricalfoundation.com/shop/products/ardglass

Lancashire Archives, Archives: Lancashire History Magazine (issues 2 & 3, 2023). More information here: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/libraries-and-archives/archives-and-record-office/archives-magazine/

E-publication winner

Harlaxton History Society website 2023; www.harlaxtonhistory.co.uk

Community Project publication winner

Newport History Group, Lest We Forget: Poppy Project 2022 (Newport on Tay, Fife, 2023). Available here: https://www.newportontayhistory.org.uk/shop/Lest-We-Forget-p601784795

Congratulations to all the winners and to everyone who submitted their publications. An online presentation event will take place in July 2024.

Nominations are open for hard copy and e-publications published in 2024, closing date end of January 2025.

Local Studies Toolkit…. watch this space

Need some advice or top tips on all things local studies? Over the last two years a band of local studies librarians and associated hangers-on have been working away to produce the Local Studies Toolkit.

The aim of these pages is to produce a freely accessible online guide that will help and inspire local studies professionals and para-professionals to provide an excellent local studies service within their authority. 

Over the next week or two we will releasing the first versions of different sections of the guidance as blog posts. More will then follow in the coming months.

As of this moment, the only page published is a very boring introduction, but you can see the project unfold by following us on Twitter and Facebook, or just keeping an eye on our Toolkit homepage.

The toolkit will be a collection working documents for the entire community, so we need your help. If you have any questions, comments, suggestions, examples of best practice that you wish to share or, even better, completely disagree with points in this guide, please let us know. Put a comment at the foot of the appropriate page or send us a comment. This guide will only be as good as the contributions you make.

Accessing local history journals

One of the great strengths of local history is that it is one the few subjects where amateurs and professionals can produce work of equal value. Other subject areas are trying to involve more people, like the various citizen science projects, but in local history we already have ordinary people making valuable contributions. Many of the long standing local history and antiquarian societies celebrate this mix by publishing work by amateurs and professionals side by side in their journals. And new projects from universities attempt to draw in non professionals – particularly through the Unofficial History conferences and through teaching Public History. Many of the older generation regret their lack of schooling and opportunities to go to university and use local history to compensate. It is true informal learning where the student decides on the subject, the method, the time they will devote to it. Often local studies librarians are the people guiding these students and teaching them research standards – and how to analyse and present their findings.

But informal learners need access to good quality academic journals to understand how their subjects are developing and see what other research is being done, as well as for book reviews. Yet journals no longer seem to be available in public libraries. They seem to be one of the first areas of stock to feel the axe! Some libraries are providing electronic access through Access to Research, but so far I haven’t found it covers many of the print journals I used to rely on to keep up to date in the subject areas relevant to my town. Journals are usually a reference librarian’s problem but reduced access to journals has an effect on users of local studies libraries.

I’m hoping somebody knows a (free) way to browse academic journals online!

Alice Lock