Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work

Introduction. To do a good job, public librarians must stay informed and updated on matters related to their work. Seeking and making use of information is ubiquitous in librarians’ everyday work life but this part of their work is elusive and hard to identify. This paper presents a study of how Swe...

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Main Authors: Ola Pilerot, Jenny Lindberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2024-06-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/842
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author Ola Pilerot
Jenny Lindberg
author_facet Ola Pilerot
Jenny Lindberg
author_sort Ola Pilerot
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. To do a good job, public librarians must stay informed and updated on matters related to their work. Seeking and making use of information is ubiquitous in librarians’ everyday work life but this part of their work is elusive and hard to identify. This paper presents a study of how Swedish public librarians keep updated with professional information. It aims to elucidate the parts of this work that occur silently and often outside of formal working hours. Method. The empirical data consists of recorded and transcribed interviews with librarians at Swedish public libraries. Analysis. The activity focused on in the study is conceptualised using the theoretical concept of articulation work, which is used to describe and analyse how various tasks are linked together into an overarching whole recognised as the abstract phenomenon of work. Results. The analysis shows how information seeking and use constitute a fundamental part of the work but also plays a significant role in the library's efforts towards direction and development. Conclusion. Failing to make visible this information practice may contribute to reducing the legitimacy of the activity, ultimately leading to this fundamental element not receiving the time and space it seems to require.
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spelling doaj-art-3296d816aad74bf4b031a6b41eb28c622025-02-03T10:10:34ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132024-06-0129248349410.47989/ir292842839Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation workOla Pilerot0Jenny Lindberg1University of BoråsUniversity of BoråsIntroduction. To do a good job, public librarians must stay informed and updated on matters related to their work. Seeking and making use of information is ubiquitous in librarians’ everyday work life but this part of their work is elusive and hard to identify. This paper presents a study of how Swedish public librarians keep updated with professional information. It aims to elucidate the parts of this work that occur silently and often outside of formal working hours. Method. The empirical data consists of recorded and transcribed interviews with librarians at Swedish public libraries. Analysis. The activity focused on in the study is conceptualised using the theoretical concept of articulation work, which is used to describe and analyse how various tasks are linked together into an overarching whole recognised as the abstract phenomenon of work. Results. The analysis shows how information seeking and use constitute a fundamental part of the work but also plays a significant role in the library's efforts towards direction and development. Conclusion. Failing to make visible this information practice may contribute to reducing the legitimacy of the activity, ultimately leading to this fundamental element not receiving the time and space it seems to require.https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/842public librariesswedeninformation practicesenvironmental scanning
spellingShingle Ola Pilerot
Jenny Lindberg
Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
public libraries
sweden
information practices
environmental scanning
title Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
title_full Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
title_fullStr Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
title_full_unstemmed Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
title_short Ubiquitous but invisible – public librarians’ self-imposed professional information practices as articulation work
title_sort ubiquitous but invisible public librarians self imposed professional information practices as articulation work
topic public libraries
sweden
information practices
environmental scanning
url https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/842
work_keys_str_mv AT olapilerot ubiquitousbutinvisiblepubliclibrariansselfimposedprofessionalinformationpracticesasarticulationwork
AT jennylindberg ubiquitousbutinvisiblepubliclibrariansselfimposedprofessionalinformationpracticesasarticulationwork