CRL was founded as a cooperative interlibrary center for March 1949 when 10 major U.S. universities entered into a formal agreement to establish the Midwest Inter-library Corporation (MILC).
Early deposits from the members were materials that has outlived their immediate usefulness at their respective campuses but were worth retaining for historical purposes. Hence our earliest strengths were built on college textbooks, catalogues, dissertations, government documents, and publications from scientific and learned societies. Collection building efforts soon included direct subscriptions to U.S. and foreign newspapers, and hundreds of other serial titles, relieving the member libraries from having redundant subscriptions across the membership.
Over time CRL created and adopted different programs, projects, and initiatives that expanded our collection strengths and methods of collecting. In the 1960's six Area Microform Projects, which were later renamed Areas Materials Projects (AMPs), began collaborating with international organizations to film collections of primary and secondary research materials to create shared stable copies for the members. Each with different origin stories and developmental paths, these were the Cooperative Africana Microform Project (CAMP), Latin American Microfilm Project (LAMP), Middle East Microform Project (MEMP), Slavic and East European Microform Project (SEEMP), South Asia Microform Project (SAMP), and the Southeast Asia Microformat Project (SEAM). See https://www.crl.edu/collaborations/global-resources-programs
The early 2000's ushered in the addition of the Global Resources Network, a collection of new programs to connect U.S. and Canadian libraries with international research institutions. The GRN programs included the Cooperative African Newspaper Project (AFRINUL), German-North American Resources Partnership (GNARP), Latin Americanist Research Resources Project (LARRP), Collaborative Initiative for French Language Collections (CIFNAL), and the Digital South Asia Library (DSAL). Again, these programs came from different sources with unique paths of development. With an emphasis on expanding collection access, their work supported building systems for access, discovery, and delivery between complementary research collections.
In 2025, CRL implemented the Global Collections Committees (GCC)
Starting with Area Studies committees to continue the historical collections and relationships build by the AMP and GRN programs, the GCC model is flexible and extensible by building out CRL project management support, reinvigorating collection development in print and digital resources, and expanding licensing support.
This page highlights historical distinctions of the collection, including uncatalogued and partially cataloged collections, and current practices in collection development and maintenance.