Elevating access services work that supports student success—through practical sessions, honest conversations, and a community that shares what really works.
The Access Services Conference is an opportunity for individuals working in all areas of Access Services in libraries to gather information and communicate with other professionals about circulation, reserves, interlibrary loan, student worker management, security, and other topics of interest.
ASC is where practical work meets shared expertise—where colleagues exchange ideas, strengthen skills, and learn from one another’s real-world experience.
Focused sessions rooted in operational realities—designed by and for professionals who manage the day-to-day work of access services.
Opportunities to deepen expertise, explore new tools, strengthen leadership skills, and elevate access services work within your institution.
A peer-driven space to connect with colleagues, share challenges, celebrate wins, and strengthen the network that supports our work year-round.
Celebrating over 15 years of advancing access services in libraries.
Save the milestones—details will be updated here as they’re finalized.
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Access Services work is full of tasks that appear nowhere in a job description—yet hold the library together. Access Services staff and librarians routinely take on hidden labor that keeps the public-facing side of the library running smoothly. Increasingly, Access Services employees are asked to help manage responsibilities that have traditionally lived in other areas of colleges and universities.
This panel invites Access Services employees and librarians to share their experiences with “other duties as assigned”— the surprising tasks, expectations (spoken and unspoken), the emotional labor, and the creative problem-solving that define the job.
This will be a conversational, supportive session where we highlight the realities of Access Services work and raise awareness of the essential, often invisible contributions our colleagues make every day.
Access services professionals are often expected to carry work that is unwritten, undefined, and frequently invisible. From emotional labor and crisis response to policy interpretation, systems troubleshooting, and filling operational gaps— much of our impact happens outside formal role descriptions.
The 2026 keynote will name this reality and center the leadership it takes to navigate it—while building healthier, clearer expectations for the work we do.