Archive for calls, August 2018

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[ecrea] cfp - Collaboration and Convergence of Libraries, Archives and Museums

Thu Aug 30 16:37:42 GMT 2018


Call for papers, Nordisk Kulturpolitisk Tidsskrift / Nordic

Journal of Cultural Policy

Thematic issue 2/2019: Collaboration and Convergence of Libraries, Archives

and Museums

New technology, cultural policy requirements, budget cuts and shifting patterns of use are among

the factors that have brought about major changes to the fields of libraries, archives and museums

since the millennium. One example of these changes is the shift by LAM institutions from a

collection-driven approach towards a more user-driven approach. While studies on the respective

subfields have addressed various aspects of the changes, questions concerning the united field

receive only limited attention from researchers.

The Nordic Journal of Cultural Policy wants to explore the changes, challenges and potential

for collaboration within the joint LAM field by inviting researchers to contribute with research

papers to a thematic issue to be published in the fall of 2019.

LAM institutions are redefining their mission while also presenting opportunities for

convergence. Libraries, archives and museums – the so-called LAM-sector – are institutions that

have emerged from different contexts and from different cultural policy objectives in the Western

world. Each of these institutions have diverse tasks and challenges that differentiate them from the

others. However, today we are witnessing similar developments within these institutions with

regard to the challenges they face and the way they respond to those challenges. These similar

developments and challenges can be seen as a convergence within the LAM-sector.

This is not the first time that there have been signs of convergence between LAM institutions.

There was an increased focus on the possibilities for digital convergence and colocations between

the LAM institutions in the beginning of the 2000’s. Many considered the digital convergence as a

return to the early history where collections encompassed materials that are now considered as

being unique to libraries, archives or museums. However, this movement lost pace around 2010. At

that point, joint LAM councils in Germany, Norway and the UK closed, organizational initiatives

dissolved, enthusiastic discussions about digital convergence abated, and many projects drowned

due to professional disputes and silo thinking. Presently, there are only a few universities still

offering unified LAM-programmes.

Currently, it appears that a new wave of convergence and collaboration may be underway

between LAM institutions. This new wave is characterized by a shift in focus away from the

collections and towards user participation and alternative dissemination practices. Many LAM

institutions face budget cuts and have to reinvent themselves and their key concerns.

Conservation, collection development and dissemination of cultural heritage is changing.

LAM institutions have more similarities than (ever) before as they adapt to a new digital climate

and adjust to new and everchanging user needs. Convergence and collaboration in new and

unexpected ways may help solve some of these complex challenges facing these institutions, such

as those relating to increasing participation, supporting citizenship and fostering social inclusion.

In a cultural policy context, the study of LAM institutions is interesting and important since it

is an area undergoing radical changes yet receiving only limited attention by researchers and

scholars. With this thematic issue, we would like to address such changes and draw attention to the

renewed focus on similarities and differences between the LAM institutions and ideas of

collaboration and convergence between them.

Themes include but are not limited to:

· Legitimacy and identity of LAM-institutions

· Digital and physical convergence

· Developments within collections and dissemination

· Developments within cooperation between institutions

· Partnerships and collaborations between LAM institutions

· Changes in demands and expectations from users

· Changes in demands and expectations from policymakers and financing bodies

· International, national and local collaborations

· LAM and the public sphere

· Potentials for experience, learning, participation and inclusion in LAM institutions

· The development of professional identities

· Teaching and education in LAM

· Volunteers

Send you abstract submission latest by 31st October 2018 to Nanna Kann-Rasmussen,

(nanna.kann.rasmussen /at/ hum.ku.dk).

Timeline:

· Abstracts due: 31st October 2018

· Manuscripts due: 31st February 2019

· Middle of September 2019: peer-reviewed and proofread final versions of manuscripts from

authors to NKT editors at the Centre for Cultural Policy Research CUPORE

· Publishing of thematic issue 2/2019: week 48/2019 (end of November 2019), latest

Editors:

Isto Huvila

Professor Isto Huvila holds the chair in information studies at the Department of ALM (Archival

Studies, Library and Information Science and Museums and Cultural Heritage Studies) at Uppsala

University and is adjunct professor (docent) in information management at Information

Studies, Åbo Akademi University in Turku, Finland. His primary areas of research include

information and knowledge management, information work, knowledge organization,

documentation, and social and participatory information practices

Samuel Edquist

Senior lecturer in ALM (Archives, Libraries and Museums) studies. Associate professor in History,

Uppsala University.

Jamie Johnston

Jamie Johnston is a Senior Lecturer at Lund University in the ALM Division of the Department of

Arts and Cultural Sciences. She is also a member of the ALMPUB research group which explores

issues related to ALM institutions, Digitalization, and the Public Sphere. Her research focuses on

cultural institutions, primarily libraries, and their role in multicultural societies.

Hans Dam Christensen

Hans Dam Christensen is professor in cultural communication at the University of Copenhagen,

Department of Information Studies. Currently, he is member of the research project Museum. A

Culture of Copies funded by the Research Council of Norway and the project Our Museum, a

Danish nation-wide research and development project with close collaboration between university

partners and museum partners.

Nanna Kann-Rasmussen

Nanna Kann-Rasmussen is associate professor in Cultural Policy and Library Development at the

University of Copenhagen, Department of Information Studies. She is Head of Centre for Cultural

Policy Studies and editor of NTIK, the Nordic Journal of Information Science and Cultural

mediation. Her research focuses on cultural institutions and their relation to society.



https://www.cupore.fi/images/tiedostot/NKT/call_for_papers_nkt_2_2019.pdf
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