Eli M. Oboler Memorial Award

The Eli M. Oboler Memorial Award honors a literary work or series of works, in the area of intellectual freedom, including matters of ethical, political, or social concerns related to intellectual freedom.

The Oboler Award, which consists of $500 and a certificate, is presented annually to a significant published work in the area of intellectual freedom. The award was named for Eli M. Oboler, the extensively published Idaho State University librarian known as a “champion of intellectual freedom who demanded the dismantling of all barriers to freedom of expression.” Works to be considered for the award may be single articles (including review pieces), a series of thematically connected articles, books, or manuals published on the local, state or national level in English or English translation. Books and articles are awarded in alternate years, with books considered for odd-year awards (2021, 2023, etc), and articles considered for even-year awards (2022, 2024, etc.).

The Oboler Award is administered by the Oboler Committee which recognizes the importance of published works in the area of intellectual freedom.

Past award recipients

Donate to the Gerald Hodges Award

Support the award with a $25, $50, $100, or $250 donation to IFRT.

Criteria

  • It must be an article (including a review article), a series of thematically connected articles, a book, or a manual published on the local, state, or national level, in English or in English translation. It need not have appeared in the library press.
  • It must have as its central concern one or more issues, events, questions, or controversies in the area of intellectual freedom, including matters of ethical, political, or social concern related to intellectual freedom.
  • It must also be demonstrably relevant to the concerns and needs of members of the library community, including the worlds of publication (print and non-print) and communication.
  • It must meet high standards of literary quality, accuracy, and responsibility. While the primary focus of evaluation will be the work itself, the judges may find other considerations relevant. These may range from the use of particularly effective illustrations to recognition for the difficult nature of the background research or the subject itself, or for special courage or persistence displayed in writing and publishing the work.
  • The work must have been published within the two-year period ending the December prior to the ALA Annual Conference at which it is granted. For example, the 2025 award will be granted to a book published in 2023 and 2024. An article or series of articles published in 2024 and 2025 will be considered for the 2026 award. This award was given first at the 1986 Annual Conference in New York, for writing which appeared in print in the two years 1984 and 1985.

Deadline

Submission deadline is January 2. Articles may be submitted digitally via the online form. Digital access to books (eBook, PDF, etc.) are preferred, but, if needed, physical copies of books must be postmarked by January 2. Submissions may be sent at any time and will be considered during the appropriate award cycle.

Nominations

Name of publisher, date and place of publication, periodical title if appropriate, volume/issue numbers if appropriate, pagination.
Type of Work
Please upload PDF(s) of articles submitted for nominations. If the upload feature doesn't work, email any articles to ifrt@ala.org
One file only.
2 MB limit.
Allowed types: pdf.
Please include the name of the author(s); mailing address, phone number, email, and website
Name, address, and website of publisher.
Please describe in detail why you feel the publication should receive the award, including any special circumstances about this nomination.
Please Include your contact information: name, organization, position, mailing address, phone number, email, and website.
Is this a self nomination?
Postmark deadline for 2025 nominations: January 2, 2025.