September is the best month of the year. I’ve always found it ideal for travelling. Summer is starting to let go but the autumn slump has not yet begun and the beginning-of-the-semester vibe is omnipresent, full with hope and enthusiasm for the future. 🌞🍁⚖️
This September I have been (and am still!) travelling through Sweden 🇸🇪 (and Finland 🇫🇮) to interview public librarians for my research. I want to learn more about their perceptions of privacy and freedom of information in relation to public libraries and also how this works in practice – what challenges do they have? What questions are being discussed among librarians and library users in relation to these topics? 📚🛤️👩🏻💻
One of my main research questions is the European perspective – do European librarians face similar issues, do they have a common librarian information ethic or are they heavily influenced or limited by local laws, traditions, and perceptions? And if so, how does this affect international policy making as the international aspect is impossible to ignore due to the “nature” of the information society (e.g. the internet, that so far remains “borderless”)? I’ve previously interviewed librarians in Czechia 🇨🇿, France 🇫🇷, and the United Kingdom 🇬🇧.
I am aware it will be hard to answer the European question – partly due to the method (semi-structured interviews – meaning fewer informants but a richer, more complex material) and partly due to not being able (restrictions: time, money, advised length of academic articles) to interview more public librarians from more European countries. However, the selection I do have is incredibly interesting in itself with so many rabbits to follow it’s unclear if I’ll show up on the other side with something coherent. Fingers crossed I do. 👩🏻🏫🐇🤞
This post was moved here from Linkedin on 31 May 2024.