Accessible Books Consortium Welcomes Leading Publisher Hachette Livre as
100th Signatory to ABC’s Charter for Accessible Publishing
Hachette Livre is the 100th
signatory of the Accessible Books Consortium (ABC) Charter, marking an
important milestone for the WIPO-sponsored alliance working to increase the
number of books in accessible formats for use by hundreds of millions of people
around the globe who are blind, visually impaired, or otherwise print disabled.
By signing ABC’s Charter for Accessible Publishing, Hachette
Livre, which is among the world’s largest publishers, is committing to making
its products fully accessible to all users.
ABC promotes the on-the-ground implementation of WIPO’s Marrakesh
Treaty, which allows for the production and international transfer of specially
adapted books for people living with blindness or visual impairments.
WIPO Director General Francis Gurry welcomed the development,
saying: “We are pleased to see a growing number of key industry players signing
the Charter for Accessible Publishing. This advances our global efforts to
increase the number of books available for use by people with print
disabilities.” He added: “Hachette Livre is a world-leading publisher and its
membership will make a big difference in making accessible format books
available to blind and visually impaired persons.”
Hachette Livre Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Arnaud Nourry
said “For the book industry, making books accessible to the widest readership,
including readers who are blind, visually impaired, or print disabled, not only
makes economic sense, but is a moral imperative. If we, publishers, do not
pioneer this duty on an industrial level, who will?”
The Charter contains eight high-level principles relating to the
production of digital publications in accessible formats, including the
promotion of the adoption of accessibility standards throughout the supply
chain, testing digital publications for accessibility and incorporating
appropriate feature descriptions and metadata.
Last year, Hachette Livre won the 2018 ABC International
Excellence Award for Accessible Publishing in the publisher category. Hachette
Livre was commended by the selection jury for its implementation of “born
accessible” production processes in the EPUB3 format in France and for its
implementation of mandatory accessibility conformance testing for all of its
trade publications through the use of the recently created “Accessibility
Checker for EPUB” known as Ace. When its accessibility features are used
correctly, EPUB3 is the gold standard in the publishing industry for the
production of accessible digital books.
About the Accessible Books Consortium
The Accessible Books Consortium is a public –private partnership
led by WIPO that brings together all of the key players – non-governmental
organizations representing people who are blind, visually impaired or otherwise
print-disabled, authors, publishers, collective management organizations,
libraries and other authorized entities, as well as standards bodies. ABC was
established after the 2013 adoption of the Marrakesh Treaty, which now has 58
contracting parties covering 85 countries, since the European Union ratified
the treaty as one bloc.
ABC aims to increase the number of books worldwide in accessible
formats – such as braille, audio and large print – and to make them available
to people who are print disabled. It carries out activities in three areas to
fulfill its mandate, namely:
- Accessible Publishing – activities to promote accessible book production techniques within the commercial publishing industry so that e-books are usable by both sighted people and those with print disabilities. Six national publishing associations have endorsed the ABC Charter for Accessible Publishing. The first ABC accessibility excellence award in the publisher category was presented at the London Book Fair in April 2015 to Cambridge University Press.
- ABC Global Book Service – a global library catalogue of books in accessible formats that enables libraries serving the print disabled to share items in their collections, rather than duplicating the costs of converting them to accessible formats. Currently, 61 organizations have joined the Service and the catalogue comprises over 540,000 accessible titles in 76 languages.
- Capacity Building – training in developing countries is provided to local NGOs and publishers who want to produce and distribute their books in accessible formats.
Source | https://www.wipo.int/
Regards
Mr. Pralhad Jadhav
Master of Library &
Information Science (NET Qualified)
Research Scholar (IGNOU)
Senior Manager @ Knowledge
Repository
Khaitan & Co
Twitter Handle | @Pralhad161978
Mobile @ 9665911593
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