About the National Medal for Museum and Library Service
The National Medal for Museum and Library
Service is the nation’s highest honor bestowed on
institutions that make significant and exceptional contributions
to their communities. The National Medal awards are made
every year by the Institute of Museum and Library Services
(IMLS), an independent government agency that is the primary
source of federal support for the nation’s 122,000
libraries and 17,500 museums.
Recipient institutions receive the National
Medal at a ceremony held in Washington, D.C., and a $10,000
award in recognition of their extraordinary civic, educational,
economic, environmental, and social contributions. This
is the second year that IMLS has awarded medals to 10
institutions; in previous years, the National Medal was
known as the National Award for Museum and Library Service
and was awarded to three museums and three libraries.
Including the 2008 winners, 72 institutions have received
the award. All types of museums, from anthropological
to zoological, fine art to folk art, urban and rural,
large and small are nominated for this award. Public or
private nonprofit libraries are eligible to receive this
award and nominations of libraries of all sizes are encouraged.
Selection Process
Any individual may nominate a museum and/or
library in the United States and its territories for the
National Medal for Museum and Library Service. Members
of the National Museum and Library Services Board, the
Institute’s presidentially-appointed policy advisory
board, review the nominations and make recommendations
to the Institute Director who selects the winners.
To view nomination information, please go
to www.imls.gov/medals.
The deadline for 2009 nominations is February 15, 2009.
|