The Privilege to Select : Global Research System, European Academic Library Collections, and Decolonisation
Author
Summary, in English
The methodological approach of the thesis is multi-faceted, including conceptual analyses, scientometrics, and a short survey of collection managers and an analysis of the corresponding libraries' collection policies. The off-mainstream decolonial scientometric approach required the construction of a database from multiple sources. Southeast Africa was selected as a field for some of the empirical studies included, because out of all rarely studied local communities to which a peripheral status is commonly attributed, the large majority of Southeast African authors use English as their primary academic language. This excludes linguistic reasons for the peripheral attribution.
The theoretical and conceptual point of departure is to analyse scholarly communication as a self-referential social system with global reach (Luhmann). In this thesis, an unorthodox understanding of social systems theory is developed, providing it with cultural humility, inspired by decolonial thinking. The value of the approach lies in its in-built capacity for social change: peripheries are constructed communicatively, and culturally humble communication avoids adding to the accumulation of peripheral references attributed to the ‘Global South’, for instance by suspending the incarceration of area studies which tends to subsume any research from and about Africa as African studies, remote from the core of SSH. While centrality serves the necessary purpose of reducing the overwhelming complexity of global research, communicative centres can just as well be constructed as topical, and do not require a spatial attachment to be functional. Another advantage of this approach is its awareness of different levels of observation, differentiating, for instance, between whether the academic librarian's neutrality is imagined as playing out in interaction with the user (passive neutrality), as representing the diversity of the research system (active neutrality), or as balancing social bias running through society at large, and hence furthering social justice (culturally humble neutrality).
Department/s
- Division of ALM, Digital Cultures and Publishing Studies
- Information Practices: Communication, Culture and Society
Publishing year
2020-09-02
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences
Volume
26
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Lund University, Faculties of Humanities and Theology
Topic
- Information Studies
Keywords
- Scholarly communication
- Critlib
- Collection management
- Academic libraries
- Decolonialism
- Scientometrics
Status
Published
Research group
- Information Practices: Communication, Culture and Society
Supervisor
- Jutta Haider
- Fredrik Åström
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2001-7529
- ISSN: 2001-7510
- ISBN: 978-91-985459-6-8
- ISBN: 978-91-985459-7-5
Defence date
2 October 2020
Defence time
13:15
Defence place
https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/65492051947?pwd=UjJHUHorZ1dtZDl3M3NTelI5bUxYUT09
Opponent
- Wiebke Keim (doktor)