Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited

Introduction. Ethnography has increasingly been utilised by social science researchers outside of social and cultural anthropology. We report here an analysis of the extent and nature of its use in library studies research over the past decade. Method. Our study adapts and extends a content analy...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Philip Hider, Simon Wakeling, Jane Garner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2025-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/40513
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832540502218506240
author Philip Hider
Simon Wakeling
Jane Garner
author_facet Philip Hider
Simon Wakeling
Jane Garner
author_sort Philip Hider
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. Ethnography has increasingly been utilised by social science researchers outside of social and cultural anthropology. We report here an analysis of the extent and nature of its use in library studies research over the past decade. Method. Our study adapts and extends a content analysis of library studies literature conducted by Khoo et al. (2012), using a systematic search process to identify potentially relevant studies published since 2011. Analysis. We coded the resulting corpus to establish whether articles were ethnographic using two interpretations of the term (one broad, one narrower). We also coded other aspects, including specific ethnographic methods used, library sector, country of research, and time in the field. Results. While there remains interest in ethnography, its growth appears to have slowed. We note also that the term ethnographic has been used in this corpus to describe research involving participant observation (the narrower definition) only in 55% of cases. Conclusion. Ethnography remains underutilised in library studies research, particularly in the context of public libraries.
format Article
id doaj-art-f9085bca14454814bea856490cc89fa9
institution Kabale University
issn 1368-1613
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher University of Borås
record_format Article
series Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
spelling doaj-art-f9085bca14454814bea856490cc89fa92025-02-05T01:42:24ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132025-01-0130110.47989/ir30140513Ethnographic methods in libraries revisitedPhilip Hider0Simon Wakeling1Jane Garner2Charles Sturt UniversityCharles Sturt UniversityCharles Sturt University Introduction. Ethnography has increasingly been utilised by social science researchers outside of social and cultural anthropology. We report here an analysis of the extent and nature of its use in library studies research over the past decade. Method. Our study adapts and extends a content analysis of library studies literature conducted by Khoo et al. (2012), using a systematic search process to identify potentially relevant studies published since 2011. Analysis. We coded the resulting corpus to establish whether articles were ethnographic using two interpretations of the term (one broad, one narrower). We also coded other aspects, including specific ethnographic methods used, library sector, country of research, and time in the field. Results. While there remains interest in ethnography, its growth appears to have slowed. We note also that the term ethnographic has been used in this corpus to describe research involving participant observation (the narrower definition) only in 55% of cases. Conclusion. Ethnography remains underutilised in library studies research, particularly in the context of public libraries. https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/40513EthnographyParticipant observationLibrary studiesFieldworkResearch methods
spellingShingle Philip Hider
Simon Wakeling
Jane Garner
Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Ethnography
Participant observation
Library studies
Fieldwork
Research methods
title Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
title_full Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
title_fullStr Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
title_full_unstemmed Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
title_short Ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
title_sort ethnographic methods in libraries revisited
topic Ethnography
Participant observation
Library studies
Fieldwork
Research methods
url https://publicera.kb.se/ir/article/view/40513
work_keys_str_mv AT philiphider ethnographicmethodsinlibrariesrevisited
AT simonwakeling ethnographicmethodsinlibrariesrevisited
AT janegarner ethnographicmethodsinlibrariesrevisited