Princeton University Library’s rich and diverse collections reflect and support the University’s mission to “advance learning through scholarship, research, and teaching of unsurpassed quality.” They are central to the Library’s mission of creating and developing resources to advance world-class research through creative partnerships at Princeton and across the global community. 

Extensive digital holdings are represented by primary sources such as manuscripts, archives, rare books, and also include ephemera, data, images, electronic materials, maps, music and video. Extensive physical collections include printed works, archival materials, maps, prints, realia, coins and incunabula. Princeton’s collections grow and evolve through careful selection, acquisitions and shaping by subject specialists and curators, gifts to the Library, and collaborative collecting programs with partner research institutions and consortia. Princeton aspires to foster an environment of innovative knowledge creation and diversity within its collections, and prioritizes equity and inclusive accessibility.

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Only Princeton University affiliated individuals may make requests.

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The Collections

Collection Development Policies

Princeton’s subject selectors and curators shape the Library’s collections based on the University’s teaching, learning and research needs. 

The processes for the acquisition and shaping of the collections are documented in Princeton’s collection development policies which are constantly evolving and based on an ongoing dialogue with faculty and students. The policies explore differences in collecting level, formats, languages and other criteria among collections at Princeton and with collaborative collecting programs with partner institutions.

Gifts

Princeton University Library welcomes gifts of books, manuscripts, and other materials that are deemed to be within the scope of its collection. Gifts are accepted which meet the collecting guidelines established to support the University’s teaching and research or to add core material of scholarly research interest. We are deeply grateful to all of our donors, who for more than two and a half centuries have generously given books and other library materials to Princeton University.

Contact Us

General questions regarding collecting at Princeton may be directed to David Magier, Associate University Librarian for Collections and Access Services, or Patricia Gaspari-Bridges, Assistant University Librarian for Collection Development.