Abstract
The recent debate about user fees in public libraries has lasted over twenty-five years and still continues to be an emotional and heated one. Likewise, those from both the pro- and anti-fee camps seem commonly to argue across one another, with little meaningful communication taking place. A close analysis not only of the content, but also the form, of the arguments from the proponents and opponents of fees illuminates the situation. The pro-fee position is based largely on teleol-ogical or pragmatic arguments, while the anti-fee position is centered primarily on a communitarian ethic based on a historical relationship between public libraries and their communities. © 1999 by The Haworth Ress, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Jaeger, J. (1999). User fees, community goods, and the public library. Public Library Quarterly, 17(2), 49–62. https://doi.org/10.1300/J118v17n02_07
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