Abstract
This study examines how diversity, equity, inclusivity, and accessibility are understood and practiced in Indian academic libraries. A survey of 214 professionals across institutional types shows high conceptual awareness of inclusivity and diversity but lower engagement with equity and accessibility. Only 22.9% report formal diversity, equity, inclusivity, and accessibility training and 35% report active involvement, revealing an awareness–action gap. Factor analysis identifies two strong dimensions shaping outcomes: perceived challenges (limited training, policy voids, staff resistance, weak community engagement) and institutional support (leadership prioritization, resources, funding, feedback mechanisms). The differences by gender, age, and role are minimal; education level relates to perceptual variation. Overall, institutional deficits, rather than individual attitudes, impede implementation. The study recommends mandatory, context-sensitive training, leadership advocacy, policy integration, and systematic user feedback to translate awareness into measurable diversity, equity, inclusivity, and accessibility practice in Indian academic libraries.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
