Ross Atkinson
Ross W. Atkinson was an American librarian and scholar.
Life and career
Atkinson worked at Northwestern University from 1977 until 1983 when he left to become an assistant university librarian for collection development at the University of Iowa. In 1988, he moved to Cornell University where he worked until his death, serving as associate librarian for collections and later deputy university librarian. At Cornell, he was notable for developing digital online collections and advocating for new paradigms of open access scholarly publishing, helping to convene the influential 2005 Janus Conference on Research Library Collections. He was active in the American Library Association and its divisions, the Coalition for Networked Information, the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, the Research Libraries Group, and the Digital Library Federation.Atkinson was named the 2003 Academic/Research Librarian of the Year by the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association. Per Sarah Thomas, "his body of scholarly and theoretical writing on collection management and scholarly communication is among the most influential and thought-provoking appearing in this field."
The Ross Atkinson Lifetime Achievement Award was established in 2007 by the Association for Library Collections and Technical Services, another division of the ALA.
Literature
- Alan, Robert; MacEwan, Bonnie, Community, Collaboration, and Collections: The Writings of Ross Atkinson,