Call for Nominations for the James Madison Award and the Eileen Cooke State & Local Madison Award
Contact: Andy Bridges
ALA Washington Office
202-628-8410
For Immediate Release
January 29, 2008
Call for Nominations for the James Madison Award and the Eileen Cooke State & Local Madison Award
WASHINGTON —The James Madison Award and the Eileen Cooke State & Local Madison Award are to be presented at Freedom of Information Day on March 14, 2008, and ALA is now accepting nominations!
Each year, the James Madison Award and the Eileen Cooke State & Local Madison Award are presented by the American Library Association on Freedom of Information Day to recognize those individuals or groups that have championed, protected, and promoted public access to government information and the public’s right to know.
· James Madison Award – The award named for President James Madison was established in 1986 and is presented annually on the anniversary of his birth. That award is designed to celebrate an individual or group that has brought awareness to these issues at the national level.
· Eileen Cooke State & Local Madison Award – The award named for Eileen Cooke, former director of the ALA’s Washington Office, honors an extraordinary leader who has built local grassroots awareness of the importance of access to information. Cooke herself was a tireless advocate for the public’s right to know and a mentor to many librarians and trustees.
2008 marks the 42nd anniversary of the Freedom of Information Act, the fourth year that ALA will present the Eileen Cooke Madison Award, and the 19th year that ALA will present the James Madison award.
Please send nominations to esheketoff@alawash.org by Wednesday, February 6, 2008. Be sure to include a letter of nomination and any supporting materials.
More information will be available at the ALA Washington Office web site – www.alawash.org – under "Events."
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Freedom of Information Day is an annual event on or near March 16, the birthday of James Madison, who is widely regarded as the Father of the Constitution and as the foremost advocate for openness in government.