• Source: Swedish Agency for Accessible Media
    • The Swedish Agency for Accessible Media (Swedish: Myndigheten för tillgängliga medier, MTM), formerly the Audiobook and Braille Library (Talboks- och punktskriftsbiblioteket, TPB), is a Swedish governmental administrative agency under the Ministry of Culture.
      The agency's task is to work in collaboration with other libraries in the country to ensure that everyone has access to literature and social information based on their own abilities, regardless of reading ability or disability, and to make easy-read literature available. For example, the agency must ensure that people with reading and writing difficulties/dyslexia and visual impairments have access to literature in media adapted for them: audiobooks, Braille books, tactile picture books and e-books. All audiobooks are made in DAISY format. DAISY stands for Digital Accessible Information System and is an open, internationally established standard. In addition to cooperation with other area libraries on lending accessible media, the agency also has its own program to lend Braille books. It is also working on developing technology for media for people with reading disabilities.
      The available books and newspapers are downloaded from the agency's digital library Legimus. In March 2016, there were over 100,000 audiobooks, more than 18,000 Braille titles, around 3,000 e-books and 150 books in sign language.
      The Swedish Braille Authority (Punktskriftsnämnden), and as of 1 August 2010, the Audio Newspaper Authority (Taltidningsnämnden), are part of MTM.
      The agency is located in Bylgiahuset in Malmö and has operated there since 1 January 2020.


      History


      A Braille library was established in Stockholm in 1892 by Amy Segerstedt, director of Tysta skolan (lit. 'the Silent School'), a private school for the deaf. It moved into the same building as the Swedish Association of the Blind (Swedish: De Blindas Förening) in 1895 and was taken over by the association in 1912.
      The Swedish Association of the Blind began lending audiobooks in 1955. Library activities continued when the association changed its name to the Swedish Association of the Visually Impaired in 1977.
      The Audiobook and Braille Library became an authority in 1980. When the agency was established, all books were transferred from the Swedish Association of the Visually Impaired to the agency, which thus became the lending center for audiobooks and braille books.
      On 1 January 2013, the Audiobook and Braille Library changed its name to Myndigheten för tillgängliga medier ('the Agency for Accessible Media'). One of the reasons for the name change was that its assignment has been broadened from audiobooks and Braille books to include other accessible media.


      Publications


      Since 2015, MTM has taken over the state's responsibility for publishing and distributing easy-to-read literature and making easy-to-read news information available through the publication of the easy-to-read news magazine 8 sidor.
      The agency publishes three free publications, Läsliv, Vi punktskriftsläsare, and Boktidningen Lättläst.


      Nordic cooperation


      MTM cooperates with similar agencies in the Nordic countries: the Norwegian Library of Talking Books and Braille, Nota in Denmark, Celia in Finland; and the Icelandic Hljóðbókasafns Íslands. An agreement was signed in 2009 which allows accessible literature to be shared between these countries. The agreement increases user access and also eliminates unnecessary duplication of work in creating accessible versions.


      MTM's awards


      MTM has two awards: Årets Läsombud ('Reading Ambassador of the Year') and Läsguldet ('Reading Gold'). The Årets Läsombud award is presented to a reading ambassador or narrator (for recordings) who has made outstanding efforts to promote reading in the care sector. Läsguldet recognizes organizations or institutions that do an excellent job of enabling people with reading difficulties or disabilities to read on their own terms. Previously, the Amy Award (Amy-priset) and the Best Easy-Reading Library Award (Bästa lättlästa bibliotek) were awarded, now combined and known as Läsguldet.


      = Current awards

      =


      Läsguldet


      Läsguldet ('Reading Gold') is MTM's accessibility award, presented to an individual or organization that has made an exciting or progressive contribution to accessible media during the year. Formerly known as the Amy Award, it is named after Amy Segerstedt, who founded the Association for Braille in 1892, a direct predecessor of MTM.


      = Recipients

      =
      2018 – The Unga läser för gamla ('youth reading for the elderly') project by Helena Pennlöv Smedberg and Laven Fathi at Gottsunda Library in Uppsala
      2019 – The Sustainable Poetry project in Trelleborg, project leader Maria Glawe
      2020 – Eva Fridh and Martin von Knorring for a cookbook for the visually-impaired


      Årets läsombud


      The Årets läsombud award ('Reading Ambassador of the Year Award') is presented to a reading ambassador or narrator for efforts to promote reading in care for disabled or elderly people.


      = Recipients

      =
      2012 – Marie Schelander, Härryda
      2013 – Barbro Granberg and Helena Oskarsson, Piteå
      2014 – Ann Erixson, Halmstad
      2015 – Susanne Sandberg, Skövde
      2016 – Ingrid Jonsson, Lidköping
      2017 – Ingeborg Albrecht, Ystad
      2018 – Bitte Sahlström, Östhammar
      2019 – Agneta Json Granemalm, Ljungby
      2020 – Sebastian Åkesson


      = Previous awards

      =


      Amy Award


      The Amy Award was MTM's accessibility award, presented to an individual or organization that made an exciting or progressive contribution to accessible media during the year. In 2018, the Amy Award and the Best Easy-Reading Library Award were merged to form Läsguldet.


      = Recipients

      =
      2010 – Minabibliotek.se, six libraries in the Umeå region
      2011 – Komvux Kärnan in Helsingborg
      2012 – Heidi Carlsson Asplund, librarian and project manager
      2013 – Anna Fahlbeck, librarian, Linköping library
      2014 – Anne Ljungdahl, school library developer, Västerås
      2015 – Jenny Edvardsson, teacher at Wendesgymnasiet, Kristianstad
      2016 – Göteborg University Library's reading service
      2017 – no award


      Best Easy-Reading Library


      The prize was awarded to a library that recognized the need for easy reading among several target groups and actively worked with marketing and well-planned information about easy reading.


      = Recipients

      =
      2009 – Norrköping Library
      2010 – Sundbyberg Library
      2011 – Strängnäs Library
      2012 – Mjölby Library
      2013 – Värnamo Library and Gävle Library
      2014 – Halmstads Library
      2015 – Linköpings Library
      2016 – Tumba Library
      2017 – no award


      See also


      Scandinavian Braille


      References




      External links


      The Swedish Agency for Accessible Media (in Swedish)

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