> I think this just goes to show, with the advent of the
> Internet, centralized authorities are not as necessary/useful
> as they once
> used to be. —ELM
>

-- Maybe. I think it it recession-related. The high water mark for nearly all of the groups on that list is 2007 (2006 for one or two). The overall stats for ALA show the same membership pattern (increasing until 2007, decreasing thereafter): http://www.ala.org/membership/membershipstats_files/annual_memb_stats

I'd be interested to know if LITA's membership decrease is greater (as a percentage) than the others. Perhaps that would suggest forums such as code4lib peeled off some of those would-be LITA members. Otherwise, it just looks like a broader decline in ALA membership, probably for a few reasons: fewer librarians in the workforce, fewer institutions willing to pay professional membership fees, less willingness to pay those fees out of pocket, etc.

Yours,
Kevin




On 1/5/15 10:12 AM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
I’m curious, how large is LITA (Library and Information Technology
Association)? [0] How many members does it have?

Apparently it has around 3000 members this year. I found this on the ALA
membership statistics page:

http://www.ala.org/membership/membershipstats_files/divisionstats#lita


Interesting and thank you. Code4Lib only needs fifty more subscribers to equal 
LITA’s size. I think this just goes to show, with the advent of the Internet, 
centralized authorities are not as necessary/useful as they once used to be. 
—ELM

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