Looking for information about future Forums? Sign up for the DLF Forum Newsletter!
The Virtual Call for Proposals Is Now Closed
The submission deadline was Wednesday, May 15, 11:59pm ET USA.
Please feel free to reach out with any questions: forum@diglib.org.
Looking for the now closed CFP released earlier this year for our in-person event at Michigan State University? You can find it here.
CLIR’s Digital Library Federation (DLF) invites proposals for the virtual 2024 DLF Forum, which will be held online, October 22-23, 2024. Learn more about who we are and who attends the DLF Forum.
Please note: This Call for Proposals (CFP) is for the October virtual event only. The CFP for our in-person event in July at Michigan State University opened and closed earlier this year, and the program is forthcoming.
The submission deadline is Wednesday, May 15 at 11:59pm ET.
We invite proposals for live virtual presentations on all topics related to digital libraries, encompassing case studies, “show and fails,” practical application, methods, projects, ethics, research, and learning in any area, including, but not limited to:
All sessions will take place live in a meeting-style or webinar-style Zoom room, and breakout rooms will be available upon request for all formats except lightning talks. Sessions are invited in the following lengths and formats:
Based on community feedback and the work of our Program Committee, we welcome submissions geared toward a practitioner audience that:
All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Reviewers will use this rubric to rate each proposal based on the values listed above. They may also recommend the proposal for a different format. Broader DLF community input will also be solicited through an open community voting process, which will inform the Program Committee’s final decisions.
We especially welcome proposals from individuals who bring diverse professional and life experiences to the conference, including those from underrepresented or historically excluded racial, ethnic, or religious backgrounds, immigrants, veterans, those with disabilities, and people of all sexual orientations or gender identities. As we have done in the past, the Program Committee will prioritize submissions from individuals who identify as Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), individuals working at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs), and other libraries, archives, museums, and organizations that center BIPOC to promote inclusivity to the greatest extent possible. Self-identification options will be provided in the proposal submission form but are not required.
Read more about the DLF Forum.
Please feel free to reach out with any questions: forum@diglib.org.
DLF programs stretch year-round, but we are perhaps best known for our signature event, the DLF Forum.
For 2024, in addition to hosting a smaller in-person event held this summer in partnership with member organization Michigan State University (MSU) Libraries and the College of Arts and Letters (CAL), we are excited to expand our conference to include a larger virtual audience. Read more about the changes to the DLF Forum in 2024 here.
The DLF Forum welcomes digital library, archives, and museum practitioners from member institutions and beyond—for whom it serves as a meeting place, marketplace, and congress. As a meeting place, the DLF Forum provides an opportunity for our working groups and community members to conduct their business and present their work. As a marketplace, the Forum provides an opportunity for community members to share experiences and practices with one another and support a broader level of information sharing among professional staff. As a congress, the Forum provides an opportunity for the DLF to continually review and assess its programs and its progress with input from the community at large.
Here, the DLF community celebrates successes, learns from mistakes, sets grassroots agendas, and organizes for action.
We encourage proposals from:
All submissions will be peer reviewed. Reviewers will use this rubric to rate each proposal. They may also recommend the proposal for a different format. Broader DLF community input will also be solicited through an open community voting process, which will inform the Program Committee’s final decisions.
Each session type has a maximum number of presenters per submission:
There is no limit to the number of non-presenting authors listed on a proposal.
The DLF Forum attendees are a multi-disciplinary cross-sector audience of people who work in the digital library, museum, archives, and cultural heritage fields, from librarians, project managers, curators, technologists, and developers to administrators and service providers. The Forum welcomes practitioners from academic, art and cultural heritage, and non-profit organizations, government agencies, and more. They come from all over the country and world and represent all levels of professional experience. Forum attendees are inquisitive, engaged, and action-oriented with a focus on learning new skills and solving problems together. When offered in a virtual format, the DLF Forum may reach a wider and larger audience than in-person events.
Based on community feedback and the work of our Program Committee, we welcome submissions geared toward a practitioner audience that:
We strongly encourage prospective presenters to review our Resources for Forum Presenters page, rubric, and past DLF Forum programs (from 2023 and 2022) to understand what makes a successful DLF Forum proposal. Strong proposals will demonstrate how presenters intend to design their proposed sessions to be interactive, inclusive, and action-oriented and will also outline clear learning objectives.
We especially welcome proposals from individuals who bring diverse professional and life experiences to the conference, including those from underrepresented or historically excluded racial, ethnic, or religious backgrounds, immigrants, veterans, those with disabilities, and people of all sexual orientations or gender identities. As we have done in the past, the Program Committee will prioritize submissions from individuals who identify as Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), individuals working at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs), and other libraries, archives, museums, and organizations that center BIPOC to promote inclusivity to the greatest extent possible. Self-identification options will be provided in the proposal submission form but are not required.
Looking for co-presenters on a particular topic? Try using our 2024 DLF Forum Unofficial Program Sessions and Connections spreadsheet for connecting with other prospective presenters. Note that the Program Committee and CLIR+DLF Staff do not monitor the document and it is not part of the official submission process.