New Journal Article: “Archive Workers’ Information Needs and How Their Expert Knowledge Influences Information Searching and Collection Curation: An Interview Study”
The article (full text) linked below was recently published by Information Research.
Title
Authors
Nils Pharo
Oslo Metropolitan University
Pia BorlundOslo
Oslo Metropolitan University
Ying-Hsang Liu
Uppsala University, Sweden
Source
Information Research an International Electronic Journal
30(3), 216–241
DOI: 10.47989/ir30357579
Abstract
Introduction. The paper makes a call for research on archive workers, including archivists as archive users, and reports indicative findings of a study of archive workers’ information searching and curation of cultural heritage archives. The study is part of a European research project concerning user access to digital cultural heritage archives, from a post-colonial perspective.
Method. We have conducted semi-structured interviews with five archive workers who work as scholars, as archive curators, and as mediators of archive content. All interviews were conducted in English, online, and were audio-recorded and transcribed.
Analysis. The study explores three research questions: 1) what characterises the archive workers’ information needs?; 2) how does the archive workers’ expert knowledge influence their information searching?; and 3) how does the archive workers’ domain knowledge, in the form of post-colonial knowledge, influence the curation? The interview data are analysed by use of a qualitative thematic analysis method.
Results. The archive workers’ information needs are characterised by topic, domain, and purpose. Further, the needs are work-related and illustrated by searching for their own research projects, intermediary searches on behalf of users, and searching as part of collection curation. They make use of numerous types of expert knowledge (collection knowledge, archival intelligence, artefactual literacy, and post-colonial domain knowledge) that influence their information searching and curation. Additionally, curation and information searching are affected by the quality of metadata, stemming from the colonizers’ perspective.
Conclusions. This paper contributes novel insights about archive workers’ information seeking behaviour, their handling of different types of information needs, user mediation, and collection curation, based on post-colonial knowledge and hence supports the call for future research on this topic.
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Filed under: Archives and Special Collections, Data Files, Interviews, Journal Articles, News, Patrons and Users, Profiles, Reports
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.



