Our Publications
INASP publishes a wide variety of resources, most of which are available to download, free of charge. You can view the full list below or navigate via publication or audience type on the left hand menu. We publish books, case studies research reports and programme reviews.
We also publish a triannual INASP newsletter of original articles, alerts and news items: to find out more, or to read it online, go to the Newsletters page.
For information on training materials, guidelines and links, see the Resources page.
Featured Publications - Case Studies
Like a Frog in a Well
The story of a Librarian in Nepal.
This case study examines the impact workshops and networks can have on rural areas and smaller population centres. (2009)
My Journey: From workshop attendee to travelling facilitator
Wisdom Machacha's journey from attending INASP workshops to proposing, organising and facilitating his own. (July 2009)
New Skills Bring New Opportunities
This case study examines the integration of an information literacy programme at the University of Zimbabwe. (June 2010)
Peer Approved
The impact of an AuthorAID workshop on research output at the National University of Rwanda. (2011)
Reflections of a Trainer
This case study looks at the adaptation and application of information literacy training methodologies to participants from the Parliament of Zimbabwe. (Dec 2010)
Research in the Palm of your Hand
This case study looks at the development of Cambridge University Press' low bandwidth, mobile access point - CJOm.
Seeing the Big Picture
Open Learning Exchange Rwanda strategy in promoting, Monitoring and Evaluating e-resources in Rwanda.
M+E of e-resources helps improve usage and understand user needs. OLE Rwanda organised a series of workshops to promote a strong M+E framework and strategy.
Small Grants, Big Rewards
In its first two years, INASP’s small grants scheme has grown to support well over one hundred training events in developing countries across the globe. Thanks to local leadership, the scheme has reached beyond the usual audiences and centres of excellence to raise awareness of – and foster expertise in – many areas of communication and publishing. (August 2009)
The Right Tools for the Job
The Monitoring and Evaluation of Electronic Resource Usage (MEERU)workshops, originally introduced in 2006, were updated, translated and re-launched in 2009 to great success. (2010)
The Winning Formula
This case study examines the development and success of the Kenya Library and Information Services Consortium (KLISC). (2009)
