Librarianship: from collections control to tools understanding
Abstract
Purpose
To contribute to and evoke ongoing reflections on librarians' professional identity, i.e. librarianship. Inherent hereto is a questioning of the feasibility of collections and collections control as basic constituents hereof. Instead, it is argued that an inquiry into proprieties of librarians' actual and potential tools allows for establishing firmer grounds for present and future librarianship.
Design/methodology/approach
In a number of analytical steps, the concept of librarianship is deconstructed.
Findings
Collections and collections control are shown to equal conceptual quicksand for librarianship at a time where access to information is largely outside librarians' control. Alternatively, an understanding of actual and potential librarians' tools may potentially provide firmer conceptual basis.
Practical implications
It is suggested that librarians are to reflect critically on the appropriateness of actual and potential tools applied.
Originality/value
Questions whether collections and collections control constitute a feasible primary constituent for librarianship. Suggests, instead, that firmer conceptual grounds for librarianship are to be established.
Keywords
Citation
Nissen Pedersen, K. (2006), "Librarianship: from collections control to tools understanding", New Library World, Vol. 107 No. 11/12, pp. 538-551. https://doi.org/10.1108/03074800610713343
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited