CALL FOR PAPERS -- LIBRARY TRENDS

The editors of Library Trends are pleased to announce plans for a special issue 
titled "Involving Users in the Co-Construction of Digital Knowledge in 
Libraries, Archives, and Museums."

This special issue will be guest edited by Drs. Paul F. Marty and Michelle M. 
Kazmer, College of Communication and Information, Florida State University, 
with Dr. Corinne Jorgensen (Florida State University), Katherine Burton Jones 
(Harvard Divinity School), and Richard J. Urban (University of Illinois at 
Urbana-Champaign).


DESCRIPTION

Many libraries, archives, and museums provide their users with social computing 
environments that include the ability to tag collections, annotate objects, and 
otherwise contribute their thoughts to the knowledge base of the institution. 
Information professionals and users have responded to the transition to a web 
2.0 world of user-created content by developing open source tools to coordinate 
these activities and researching the best ways to involve users in the 
co-creation of digital knowledge.

This rapid influx of new technologies and new methods of interacting with users 
has come at a time when libraries, archives, and museums still struggle to 
share data across their own institutions, let alone between different types of 
institutions. Information professionals in libraries, archives, and museums had 
barely begun to make progress developing crosswalks and data interoperability 
standards when, as social computing became the norm on the web, providing the 
ability for users to manipulate data changed from a cool toy to a basic 
expectation. Moving forward -- and keeping pace with user expectations -- 
requires the coordination of many different users (in all their variety) as 
they contribute, participate, shape, and create all types of data in all types 
of contexts.

We need to consider what social computing really means for the future of 
libraries, archives, and museums, and think carefully about the future trends 
and long-term implications of involving users in the co-construction of 
knowledge online. It is important to have broad-based discussions about what 
happens when users are involved in shaping and directing and guiding the 
development of online libraries, archives, and museums and their information 
resources.

For this issue of Library Trends, therefore, we seek authors who can step back 
and think broadly about those issues that are raised when we bring users into 
the mix in various ways and at various points in the data/information/knowledge 
life-cycle. We are interested in receiving high-level theory pieces, supported 
by research data of course, but with a focus on the long-term trends involved 
and their implications for libraries, archives, and museums. In particular, we 
are looking for papers that explore the future trends and long-term 
implications of the many different ways in which information professionals in 
libraries, archives, and museums have, can, and should involve their users in 
the co-construction of digital knowledge based on their online collections.

Sample questions include, but are certainly not limited to:

* How are libraries, archives, and museums implementing user-contributed data / 
descriptions of artifacts, objects, or collections on their websites? What are 
the long-term implications of involving users in the co-description, 
co-cataloguing of digital knowledge?

* How are libraries, archives, and museums encouraging users to create online 
collections of personal favorites or similar items on their websites? What are 
the long-term implications of involving users in the co-creation, co-curation 
of digital knowledge?

* How are libraries, archives, and museums encouraging users to create / 
structure their own online environments, designing personalized websites or 
portals specifically suited to individual needs? What are the implications of 
involving users in the design and structuring of online interfaces for the 
development and presentation of digital knowledge?

* How is the education of library, archives, and museum practitioners (and in 
particular the increase in online and hybrid learning technologies) influencing 
the ways practitioners subsequently incorporate technology into their user 
service environments in libraries, archives, and museums?


IMPORTANT DATES

* Optional Abstract: December 1, 2009 (see below)

* Submission Deadline: March 1, 2010

* Review Decisions: May 15, 2010 (all submissions will be peer-reviewed)

* Final Versions Due: July 15, 2010

* Publication: Early 2011


SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

All submissions should be emailed directly to Paul Marty at marty at fsu.edu or 
Michelle Kazmer at mkazmer at fsu.edu.

For formatting instructions, please see the Library Trends Author Guidelines 
available here:
http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/library_trends/guidelines.html

If you wish, you may submit an optional abstract (by email to Paul Marty at 
marty at fsu.edu or Michelle Kazmer at mkazmer at fsu.edu) for feedback by 
December 1, 2009.

If you have any questions about the special issue, please contact Paul Marty at 
marty at fsu.edu or Michelle Kazmer at mkazmer at fsu.edu.

For more information about Library Trends, please see: 
http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/library_trends/

A PDF version of this CFP is available at: 
http://marty.ci.fsu.edu/misc/cfp_librarytrends.pdf


--------------
Paul F. Marty, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, School of Library and Information Studies
College of Communication and Information, Florida State University
240 Louis Shores Building, Tallahassee, FL 32306-2100
http://marty.ci.fsu.edu | marty at fsu.edu


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