Interlibrary Loan & Scanning Services
User Services
UW
Current students, faculty, staff, retirees.
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Services for UW students, faculty, and staff
Services are restricted to UW-related research and coursework. Direct all other requests to your public library.
- Summit Borrowing
- Interlibrary Loan - Book/Item
- Interlibrary Loan - Article Scan
- UW Article Scanning Service
- Course Instruction Scanning Service
- Home Delivery Service
Other UW affiliates
- Services for Cascadia users are fee-based.
- UW Law School users should place ILL requests through the Gallagher Law Library.
More information
Non-UW
Businesses, individuals, UW alumni, UW donors.
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Fee-based services
- Provide scans of material owned by the UW or other libraries
- Mail books owned by the UW to your home or another address
How long does it take?
- Most scans are available for download within 3 business days or less
- Most books are mailed within 1-3 days
More information
Other Libraries
Other Libraries, archives, museums, and government agencies.
Request materials from the University of Washington Libraries using
- Resource sharing networks:
- OCLC Worldshare (WAU)
- DOCLINE (WAUWAS)
- RAPID (RAPID:WAU)
More information
Let us scan that for you!
Article Scanning: Journal articles from the UW Libraries print collection and from other libraries now delivered to your desktop at no charge. This service is available for current UW students, faculty and staff only.
What is Summit?
If you need an item that can't be supplied by UW Libraries it may be available through Summit. Summit is a service used to request items from other libraries in the Orbis Cascade Alliance Consortium. Summit libraries lend print items and some audio/visual materials to each other. MORE >
PubMed Searchers
Did you know you can order articles directly from PubMed? Try Loansome Doc - a streamlined requesting system allowing both UW and non-UW users to order copies of articles after searching for citations in PubMed.
Copyright
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17. United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy/reproduction is not to be "USED FOR ANY PURPOSES OTHER THAN PRIVATE STUDY, SCHOLARSHIP, or RESEARCH." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes IN EXCESS of fair use, that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law.