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Statement
on Intellectual Freedom
Approved by Executive Council June 27, 1974
Amended November 17, 1983; and November 18, 1985
All persons in Canada have the fundamental right,
as embodied in the nation's Bill of Rights and the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to have access
to all expressions of knowledge, creativity and intellectual
activity, and to express their thoughts publicly.
This right to intellectual freedom, under the law,
is essential to the health and development of Canadian
society.
Libraries have a basic responsibility for the development
and maintenance of intellectual freedom.
It is the responsibility of libraries to guarantee
and facilitate access to all expressions of knowledge
and intellectual activity, including those which some
elements of society may consider to unconventional,
unpopular or unacceptable. To this end, libraries
shall acquire and make available the widest variety
of materials.
It is the responsibility of libraries to guarantee
the right of free expression by making available all
the library's public facilities and services to all
individuals and groups who need them.
Libraries should resist all efforts to limit the exercise
of these responsibilities while recognizing the right
of criticism by individuals and groups.
Both employees and employers in libraries have a duty,
in addition to their institutional responsibilities,
to uphold these principles.
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