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  • 1.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Andersson, Cecilia
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Centerwall, Ulrika
    Högskolan i Borås, Sweden.
    Engström, Lisa
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Haider, Jutta
    University of Borås, Sweden.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hedemark, Åse
    Uppsala university, Sweden.
    Kärrholm, Sara
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Lundh, Anna
    University of Borås, Sweden.
    Söderlind, Åsa
    University of Borås, Sweden.
    Stärkta skolbibliotek kräver stora satsningar på att utbilda bibliotekarier2024Other (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
    Abstract [sv]

    Debatt: Äntligen kom den: regeringens lagrådsremiss som ska stärka elevers rätt till skolbibliotek. Vi som utbildar blivande bibliotekarier gläds över remissen som i linje med forskning visar skolbibliotekets och skolbibliotekariers betydelse för elevers lärande. Samtidigt konstaterar vi att en lagändring också måste följas av riktade satsningar på landets bibliotekarieutbildningar för att förverkligas, skriver 16 biblioteksforskare.

  • 2.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Documentary Practices of Hospital Librarians in Evidence-based Medicine: the Example of Health Technology Assessment in Swedish Healthcare2021In: Proceedings from the Document Academy, ISSN 2473-215X, Vol. 8, no 2, p. 1-22, article id 12Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    In times of health crises, we rely upon the knowledge and skills of our highly specialized modern healthcare. But what are the tools and principles that healthcare relies on to make informed decisions about courses of treatments? In this paper, we will attend to documentary practices of hospital librarians in Health Technology Assessment (HTA), an example of how the evidence-based movement is enacted in modern healthcare.

    Since resources for health care are limited, there is widespread political support for making rational choices based on evidence. Use of evidence is today a key element in health care at policy, administrative, and clinical levels (Banta & Jonsson, 2009). The evidence-based movement originates from the notion of evidence-based medicine (EBM) but can also be related to the broader movement evidence-based healthcare (Chaturvedi, 2017). The most reliable evidence is generally considered to be systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials, minimizing the risk of bias and allowing for causal explanations of interventions. In this way, EBM is grounded in a natural science-oriented epistemology directed towards quantitative and predictive studies (cf. Sundin, Limberg & Lundh, 2008). Arguably, (medical) librarianship and EBM share a common goal: the application of the best scientific research in the process of providing efficient and safe medical care to patients (Eldredge, 2000). In line with the development of the EBM paradigm, systematicreviews are also ascribed a high level of evidence within the field of LIS (Eldredge, 2000). Notably, systematic reviews connect to a core skill of librarians and related professions: literature searching. Overall, systematic reviews are designed to reduce bias and to synthesize scientific evidence to answer specific research questions (Higgins & Green, 2011).

    HTA, a practice centered on synthesizing evidence through systematic reviews, originates from the US Office of Technology Assessment that produced a first report on the matter in the late 1970’s. In the late 1980’s, HTA spread to Sweden and then to other European, Latin American and Asian countries (Banta & Jonsson, 2009). Several international actors such as The World Bank, WHO, and the EU have been active in the field of HTA, providing funding, coordination and making HTA more visible (Banta & Jonsson, 2009). In Sweden, the independent national authority Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Assessment of Social Services (SBU) is tasked by the government to provide assessments of healthcare and social services covering both medical, economical, ethical and social aspects. SBU, one of the oldest HTA-organisations in the world, produces systematic reviews and has developed a review method outlined in the SBU Handbook (SBU, 2020). The local HTA-units studied in this paper follow the procedures and methods described in the SBU Handbook.

    Major work tasks for hospital librarians include supporting healthcare staff in their information seeking and providing healthcare staff with relevant information (Lewis et al, 2011). Increasingly, such work is done in collaboration between clinicians, researchers and librarians (Hallam et al, 2010), and HTA-teams with medical doctors, librarians and other specialists can be seen as examples of this trend. In this paper we focus on hospital librarians – a profession often overlooked, but still crucial for many of the documentary practices associated with EBM in general, and HTA in particular. As part of an ongoing research project focusing on information work of hospital librarians in different professional practices, this paper is guided by the research question: how are documentary practices associated with HTA-reports shaped by, and shaping, the work of hospital librarians?

    In this study we apply the concept of documentary practices, understood as activities surrounding various types of documents (Pilerot & Maurin Söderholm, 2019). Our research interest is based on the role and function of documents in practices, and how documents create and construct social practices (Brown & Duguid, 1996). The way we view documentary practices departs both from practice theory (see for example Nicolini, 2013; Reckwitz, 2002), as well as from critical document theory (Lund, 2009). From a practice theoretical approach all human action is regarded as practices which comprise a set of routinized social activities, norms and artefacts as well as a common idea on how the world is constituted (Reckwitz, 2002; Talja & McKenzie, 2007). Lund (2009) with the support of Smith (2005) suggests a critical view on documents and how they provide a pattern for upholding structures of power, where a focus on the content of the documents has transformed into a focus on documents as underpinning social life. According to Brown & Duguid (1996), documents structure practices and also contribute to bring together social activities, relations and interactions within practices, in the same way as social practices may influence documents. Documents are resources for negotiating the meaning of practices: the role of documents in practices is captured through the notion of "the social life of documents" (Brown & Duguid, 1996).

    The empirical material of the ongoing research project includes nine in-depth interviews with hospital librarians and five observations of hospital librarians indifferent work situations, including search instructions and HTA-meetings, at three different hospital libraries in Sweden during January - February 2020. In this paper, we focus on the HTA-process and how documents like the HTA-report and the SBU Handbook interact with documentary practices. To provide additional empirical depth, supplementary interviews and observations from a fourth hospital library are planned.

    Preliminary findings show how the HTA-process at two HTA-units entails five main categories of documentary practices: 1) initial searching when a clinicalquestion is submitted; 2) negotiating a literature search strategy in the HTA-team; 3) conducting the main literature searches; 4) making a selection; and 5) documenting the search process. The SBU Handbook contains several resources for negotiating the nature and meaning of these practices. One specific device that structures documentary practices in the HTA-process is the PICO-format (Population, Intervention, Control, Outcome), a tool widely used in EBM to negotiate and formulate literature search strategies. Other structuring devices include guidelines for making a selection and for rating the quality of evidence. Ouranalysis illustrates how hospital librarians enact and negotiate documentary practices located between the instructions provided by the authoritative SBU Handbook and the material outcome of the documentary practices: the HTA-report. In this way, the institutional structures of these documents are highlighted and point to both past and future activities (cf. Østerlund, Snyder, Sawyer, Sharma, & Willis, 2015), providing a deeper understanding of how EBM is enacted in healthcare as documentary practices of hospital librarians in HTA are unfolded.

  • 3.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Information Literacy Practices of Hospital Librarians in an Era of Evidence-Based Medicine2024In: Information Experience and Information Literacy, Springer, 2024, p. -235Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Demands for an evidence-based healthcare increase and today all medical decisions are to be based on scientific results. The evidence-based healthcare means that hospital librarians have a stronger role as mediators of scientific information. The evidence-based movement implies a positivistic epistemological view that influences the information literacy practices. This study focuses how the information literacy practices of hospital librarians in Sweden are constructed and enacted in relation to different epistemological perspectives in healthcare. The analysis is structured around three identified practices of hospital librarians where information work is performed: the clinical practices, the information seeking practices and the health technology assessment (HTA)-practice. In these practices, different epistemological perspectives are present, which affects the information literacy practices of hospital librarians. There is a movement from the holistic knowledge connected to the clinical practices, via specialized knowledge and generic instructions in the information seeking practices, to the most specialized knowledge and positivistic perspective in the HTA-practice.

  • 4.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Mitigating the infodemic of the pandemic: Hospital librarians’ enactment and development of information resilience in healthcare organisations2024In: Journal of Documentation, ISSN 0022-0418, E-ISSN 1758-7379, Vol. 80, no 7, p. 267-286Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Purpose. The challenges to healthcare caused by the COVID-19 pandemic forced hospital librarians to develop their abilities to cope with change and crises, both on a social level and an organisational level. The aim of this study is to contribute to knowledge about how hospital librarians developed library services during the pandemic and how these changes contributed to building information resilience in the healthcare organisation. This paper also seeks to explore how resilience theory, and specifically the concept information resilience, can be used within library and information science (in LIS) to investigate resilience in the library sector.

    Design/methodology/approach. Nine semi-structured interviews with librarians were conducted at four different hospital libraries in four different regions in Sweden between March and May 2022. The empirical material was analysed through an interaction between the tzheoretical perspective and the empirical material through a thematic analysis. In each theme, specific resilience resources are identified and analysed as components of the information resilience developed by hospital librarians.

    Findings. The results show that hospital librarians contribute to several different information resilience resources, which support information resilience in the healthcare organisation. Three aspects characterize the qualities of resilience resources: access, flexibility, and collaboration. The findings suggest that the framework for analysing information resilience used in this study is well suited for studying the resilience of libraries from both organisational and informational aspects.

    Originality/value. The analysis of information resilience on an organisational level presents a novel way to study resilience in the library sector.

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  • 5.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Sjukhusbibliotek och medicinska bibliotek: För en säker och jämlik vård2022In: Biblioteksgeografin: En antologi om biblioteksväsende och biblioteksforskning / [ed] Roger Blomgren; Katarina Michnik; Johan Sundeen, Lund: Studentlitteratur AB, 2022, p. 215-243Chapter in book (Other academic)
    Abstract [sv]

    Biblioteksgeografin är ett översiktsverk som på ett kartläggande vis introducerar de vanligaste bibliotekstyperna i Sverige samt sätter in dem i relevanta begreppsliga, juridiska och historiska sammanhang. I antologin presenteras och analyseras ett stort antal bibliotekskategorier såsom folk-, national-, skol-, företags- och sjukhusbibliotek.

    Boken visar på bredden och komplexiteten som ryms inom det samlade biblioteksväsendet och på den mångfald av perspektiv som kännetecknar forskningen inom fältet. Författarnas skiftande bakgrund och kompetenser skapar en ändamålsenlig blandning av teoretiska och praktiska infallsvinklar på biblioteksverksamheten, med ingångar av såväl humanvetenskapligt som samhällsveten­skapligt slag.

    Biblioteksgeografin vänder sig i första hand till studenter på grund­­­­l­äggande och avancerad nivå i biblioteks- och informationsvetenskap samt till företrädare för bibliotekarieprofessionen.

  • 6.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, FredrikLinnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.Skøtt, BoLinnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.Da Silva Santos Sundström, AdmeireLinnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Biblioteks- och informationsvetenskap vid Linnéuniversitetet: En jubileumsskrift vid ämnets 20-årsjubileum2023Collection (editor) (Other academic)
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  • 7.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Netnography in the Digital Humanities2020In: Doing Digital Humanities: Concepts, Approaches, Cases / [ed] Joacim Hansson, Jonas Svensson, Växjö: Linnaeus University Press, 2020, p. 45-64Chapter in book (Other academic)
  • 8.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Engström, Lisa
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Revisiting the notion of the public library as a meeting place: challenges to the mission of promoting democracy in times of political turmoil2023In: Journal of Documentation, ISSN 0022-0418, E-ISSN 1758-7379, Vol. 79, no 7, p. 178-195Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    PurposeThis article explores how public librarians understand and perform the democratic mission of public libraries in times of political and social turbulence and critically discusses the idea of public libraries as meeting places.Design/methodology/approachFive group interviews conducted with public librarians in southern Sweden are analyzed using a typology of four perspectives on democracy.FindingsTwo perspectives on democracy are commonly represented: social-liberal democracy, focusing on libraries as promoters of equality and deliberative democracy, focusing on the library as a place for rational deliberation. Two professional dilemmas in particular present challenges to librarians: how to handle undemocratic voices and how to be a library for all.Originality/valueThe analysis points to a need for rethinking the idea of the meeting place and offers a rare example of an empirically based argument for the benefits of plural agonistics for analyzing and strengthening the democratic role of public libraries.

  • 9.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    ”Det känns som att jag bara sitter och väntar på att det ska explodera”: politisk påverkan på de kommunala folkbibliotekens verksamhet i sex sydsvenska regioner2022In: Nordic Journal of Library and Information Studies, E-ISSN 2597-0593, Vol. 3, no 1, p. 26-43Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Public libraries are one of several institutions that uphold Swedish democracy. The representative liberal democratic model, expressed in the Library Act, is increasingly being questioned and challenged. Political actors, mainly from the radical right, advocate ademocracy focused on the will of the people at the expense of the rights of individuals. With the notion of plural agonistics, public libraries can be seen as important arenas for debates and meetings between people, offering ways to handle conflicts within democratic institutions. Methodologically, this study employs the perspective of institutional ethnography, and the aim of this paper is to develop knowledge about public libraries’ experiences of political pressure and how this is enacted in a time of political turbulence. This paper reports findings from the first stage of a survey study directed at public library managers in 77 municipalities from the six southernmost regions of Sweden. Based on replies in these surveys, interviews were conducted withseven of the participating library managers. Findings show that the interplay between libraries and the local political level, and between national and local political levels, generally functions without notable opposition. Illegitimate political pressureis uncommon, but when it occurs, it is primarily triggered by issues connected to cultural diversity. Results further indicate that local public libraries tend to respond to illegitimate political pressure by development and use of professional policy documents, but also, in some cases, by avoiding certain activities.

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  • 10.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Ehrenberg, Maria
    Folkbiblioteket - demokratins kanariefågel?2024In: En ifrågasatt demokrati: Forskare och praktiker i dialog / [ed] Magnus Hagevi, Göteborg: Makadam Förlag, 2024, p. 187-216Chapter in book (Refereed)
    Abstract [sv]

    Folkbiblioteken framträder i allt högre grad som en arena för politisk konflikt och turbulens. Denna utveckling ger i sin tur upphov till ett flertal dilemman. I detta kapitel vill biblioteks- och informationsvetarna Hanna Carlsson, Fredrik Hanell och Joacim Hansson i dialog med Maria Ehrenberg, som arbetat som regionbibliotekarie i Region Halland, diskutera de utmaningar och möjligheter som folkbiblioteksinstitutionens demokratibärande uppdrag står inför i samtidens politiska landskap.

  • 11.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Lund University.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University.
    Lindh, Karolina
    Lund University.
    Exploring multiple spaces and practices: a note on the use of ethnography in LIS-research2013In: Information research, E-ISSN 1368-1613, Vol. 18, no 3, article id C17Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Introduction. In recent years, there has been a growing interest in ethnographic research within the field of library and Information studies. Although ethnography has been used by information researchers for studying a wide variety of phenomena, discussions concerning methodological developments and directions, as well as ethnography’s wider applicability within the field are rare. Our intent is to contribute to the such discussions.

    Method. The article draws on three on-going research projects to illustrate how the analytical and methodological concepts of following and translation are operationalized.

    Analysis. Particularly the article addresses the tension between the site specificity traditionally associated with ethnographic methodology, and the fluidity and place transcending but yet situated character of the objects of study in the field.

    Conclusion. The authors conclude that an ethnography of following and translation is a tool for handling the movability characterizing the phenomena studied in the field, thus turning the necessary uncertainty of inductive research into an advantage. This allows the researcher to stay open and let the object of study lead the way.

  • 12.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    et al.
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Lindh, Karolina
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Exploring multiple spaces and practices: a note on the use of ethnography in LIS-research2013In: Information research, E-ISSN 1368-1613, Vol. 18, no 3, article id C17Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Introduction. In recent years, there has been a growing interest in ethnographic research within the field of library and Information studies. Although ethnography has been used by information researchers for studying a wide variety of phenomena, discussions concerning methodological developments and directions, as well as ethnography’s wider applicability within the field are rare. Our intent is to contribute to the such discussions.

    Method. The article draws on three on-going research projects to illustrate how the analytical and methodological concepts of following and translation are operationalized.

    Analysis. Particularly the article addresses the tension between the site specificity traditionally associated with ethnographic methodology, and the fluidity and place transcending but yet situated character of the objects of study in the field.

    Conclusion. The authors conclude that an ethnography of following and translation is a tool for handling the movability characterizing the phenomena studied in the field, thus turning the necessary uncertainty of inductive research into an advantage. This allows the researcher to stay open and let the object of study lead the way.

  • 13.
    Engström, Lisa
    et al.
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Drag story hour at public libraries: the reading child and the construction of fear and othering in Swedish cultural policy debate2024In: Journal of Documentation, ISSN 0022-0418, E-ISSN 1758-7379, Vol. 80, no 7, p. 226-245Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Purpose: The purpose of the paper is to produce new knowledge about the positions that public libraries both take and are given in the conflicts over politics and identity that play out in contemporary cultural and library policy debates. Using conflicts over drag story hour at public libraries as case, the study seeks to contribute to an emerging body of research that delves into the challenges that public libraries as promoters of democracy are confronting in the conflictual political landscape of today.

    Design/methodology/approach: The paper presents an analysis of debates reported in news articles concerning Drag story hour events held at Swedish public libraries. Utilizing the analytical lenses of discourse theory and plural agonistics, the analysis serves to make visible the lines of conflicts drawn in these debates – particularly focusing on the intersection of different meanings ascribed to the notion of the reading child, and how fear is constructed and used as an othering devise in these conflicts.

    Findings: Different imaginings of the reading child and the construction and imagination of fear and safety shapes the Drag story hour debates. The controversies can be understood as a challenge to the previous hegemony regarding the direction and goals of Swedish cultural and library policy and the pluralistic democratic society these policies are meant to promote.

    Originality/value: The paper offers new insights into the consequences of the revival of radical right politics, populism and societal polarization, and the different responses from public libraries.

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  • 14.
    Engström, Lisa
    et al.
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Pilerot, Ola
    University of Borås, Sweden.
    Editorial2022In: Nordic Journal of Library and Information Studies, E-ISSN 2597-0593, Vol. 3, no 1, p. i-iiiArticle in journal (Other academic)
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  • 15.
    Engström, Lisa
    et al.
    Lund University , Sweden.
    Skøtt, Bo
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    An Act of Balance: Exploring the Boundaries of Librarianship in Times of Political Turmoil in Sweden and Denmark2023Conference paper (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    This paper reports from a study produced within the currently ongoing project Public libraries in a changed political landscape – a democratic mission for a new era? The paper compares experiences of librarians and library assistants in Sweden and Denmark concerning how they perceive the democratic role of the library profession in the political landscape of today. Relating to research on the democratic role of libraries, library ethics and issues on neutrality, empirical data was gathered through seven group interviews with library professionals from eleven local libraries in south Sweden and Jutland in Denmark. Results indicate a commonly perceived discrepancy between general formulations of values formulated in professional codes of ethics, and practical librarianship. Dealing with threats and challenges against liberal democratic values in the public library requires an ethical toolbox that in individual cases may question the need for value-neutrality among librarians and library assistants if the basic mission of the library is to be upheld.

  • 16.
    Engström, Lisa
    et al.
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Skøtt, Bo
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    An Act of Balance: Exploring the Boundaries of Librarianship in Times of Political Turmoil in Sweden and Denmark2024In: Nordisk kulturpolitisk tidskrift, ISSN 1403-3216, E-ISSN 2000-8325, Vol. 27, no 1, p. 8-25Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    This paper presents an analysis of how library professionals in Sweden and Denmark perceive the democratic role of the library profession in the polarised political landscape of today. Relating to research on the democratic role of libraries, professional ethics and cultural policies, empirical data was gathered through seven group interviews with library professionals from eleven local libraries in south Sweden and Jutland in Denmark. Results indicate a commonly perceived discrepancy between general formulations of values found in professional codes of ethics, and practical librarianship. Dealing with threats and challenges against liberal democratic values in the public library requires professional ethical considerations that in individual cases may question the need for value-neutrality among library professionals if the basic democratic mission of the library is to be upheld.

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  • 17.
    Francke, Helena
    et al.
    University of Borås, Sweden.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Användning och värdering av sociala medier i skola och högre utbildning2014In: Medie- och informationskunnighet i en biblioteks- och informationsvetenskaplig belysning / [ed] Johanna Rivano Eckerdal, Olof Sundin, Stockholm: Svensk biblioteksförening , 2014, p. 51-61Chapter in book (Other academic)
  • 18.
    Golub, Koraljka
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Tyrkkö, Jukka
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Ihrmark, Daniel
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Papmehl-Dufay, Ludvig
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Introducing Digital Methods Platform for Arts and Humanities (DiMPAH)2022In: Presented at the 8th Big Data Conference, Kalmar, Sweden, December 1-2, 2022, 2022Conference paper (Other academic)
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  • 19. Hanell, Fredrik
    A situated view on Information Literacy: epistemological issues and practical solutions through analysis of participatory media in learning environments2011In: The 3rd i3 Conference (Information: Interactions and Impact): June 20-23 2011, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, 2011Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 20.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Appropriating Facebook: Enacting Information Literacies2014In: Human IT, ISSN 1402-1501, E-ISSN 1402-151X, Vol. 12, no 3, p. 5-35Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The aim of this paper is to describe and analyse the repurposing of Facebook into a tool for learning in teacher training, and how information literacies are enacted in the process. The study is informed by a socio-cultural view on information literacy which implies that learning and literacies are situated, tool-based practices. An ethnographic study of a Facebook Group with two hundred Swedish teacher trainees and two educators is conducted. Five semi-structured interviews contextualize and validate the online material. 201 conversations from the Group during April and May 2012 are analysed using the theoretical concept appropriation and the empirical lens of information literacy. The Facebook Group can be appropriated as a problem-solving tool and a relation-building tool. Depending on the mode of appropriation, different information literacies including different conceptions of credibility are enacted in the Facebook Group.

  • 21.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Att ta plats och göra skillnad: skolbibliotekariepraktiker i framgångsrika verksamheter2022In: Nordic Journal of Library and Information Studies, ISSN 2003-184X, Vol. 3, no 2, p. 59-64Article, book review (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    Book review of Ulrika Centerwalls (2022) Att ta plats och göra skillnad: skolbibliotekariepraktiker i framgångsrika verksamheter, Högskolan i Borås, Borås. 

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  • 22.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Co-learning in a Digital Community: Information Literacy and Views on Learning in Pre-school Teacher Education2020In: Sustainable Digital Communities: 15th International Conference, iConference 2020, Borås, Sweden, March 23–26, 2020, Proceedings / [ed] Anneli Sundqvist, Gerd Berget, Jan Nolin, Kjell Ivar Skjerdingstad, Cham: Springer, 2020, p. 327-342Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Through analysing how different views on learning enable pre-school teacher students to distinguish and use affordances offered by digital tools and the learning environment, this paper seeks to connect modes of appropriation, identity positions and information activities to types of information literacy. Identity, particularly views on learning, is analysed to find out how a Facebook group to some students remains a sustainable digital community throughout teacher education. The paper reports results from a netnographical study conducted between 2012 and 2015. The material used in the analysis consists primarily of 12 semi-structured student interviews and 6 teacher interviews. In the thematic analysis, a socio-cultural perspective on identity is applied. The concept affordance is used to analyse how identity is connected to use of digital tools and the learning environment. The findings show how the appropriation of the Facebook group is connected to identity positions and views on learning in two types of information literacy: a relational information literacy and a pragmatic information literacy. The normative function of co-learning is found to be an important aspect of the learning environment of pre-school teacher education that explains why the digital community can be experienced as either including or excluding.

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  • 23.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Editorial2021In: Nordic Journal of Library and Information Studies, E-ISSN 2597-0593, Vol. 2, no 2, p. i-iiiArticle in journal (Other academic)
  • 24. Hanell, Fredrik
    From an Architecture of Participation to a Structure for Nurturing Relationships: Swedish Teacher Trainees’ Informal Learning on Facebook2012In: Internet Research 13: Technologies (Salford) 2012, 2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 25.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Förord2021In: Att nå varenda unge: Bokstart i Blekinge och Kronoberg / [ed] Sara Wijk, Biblioteksutveckling , 2021, p. 74-75Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 26.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    In med MIK-begreppet i styrdokumenten2019In: MIK och bibliotek: en lägesrapport / [ed] Ingela Hofsten, Svensk biblioteksförening , 2019, p. 17-20Chapter in book (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
  • 27.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Information activities and appropriation in teacher trainees’ digital, group-based learning2016In: Information research, E-ISSN 1368-1613, Vol. 21, no 1Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Introduction: This paper reports results from an ethnographic study of teacher trainees’ information activities in digital, group-based learning and their relation to the interplay between use and appropriation of digital tools and the learning environment.

    Method. The participants in the present study are 249 pre-school teacher trainees in Sweden. Three key informants and their teams were followed during a course module using online and offline participant observation. The produced material includes transcribed interviews with nine students, recorded digital interactions from Facebook, Google Drive and Prezi, field notes and a field diary.

    Analysis: The material was read repeatedly, coded and comparatively analysed using the lens of information literacy and the concept appropriation. The analysis generated recurring themes. These themes emerged as phases of the group-based learning process.

    Results. The results illustrate how information activities during teacher trainees’ digital, group-based learning are performed during four phases: setting the scene, negotiating the topic, gathering material and presenting the assignment.

    Conclusions: Crucial aspects of an information literacy of digital, group-based learning in teacher training are identified. The learning environment of teacher training constrains and enables use and appropriation of digital tools in terms of flexibility, lack of participation and transparency.

  • 28.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Lärarstudenters digitala studievardag: Informationslitteracitet vid en förskollärarutbildning2019Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    This dissertation reports on an investigation into how digital tools are used, negotiated and given meaning in Swedish pre-school teacher education. The overall aim has been to create a deeper understanding of how students’ information literacies are enacted when digital tools are used and appropriated in the daily life at a pre-school teacher education, in relation to conceptions of the digitalisation of teacher education in national policy. A netnographical study at a pre-school teacher education was conducted between 2012 and 2015. The study generated online material, mainly from a Facebook Group used by students and teacher, and field notes from participant observations, transcribed interviews and a field diary. Through application of a socio-cultural perspective on information literacy, the netnographical material was analysed using the concepts appropriation and identity. To analyse the discursive level, four national policy documents with demands for increased digital competence in teacher education were analysed using Carol Bacchi’s ‘what’s the problem represented to be?’ approach.

    The findings show how views on learning and identity interact with the materiality of the digital tools and the enabling and constraining properties of the local learning environment when information literacies are enacted. The identity position discussion-oriented student is connected to how the Facebook Group is appropriated as a relation-building tool and a relational information literacy. This type of information literacy entails a view on learning as co-learning, rooted in the historical development of pre-school teacher education, and a non-hierarchical understanding of teacher and student roles. The identity positions goal-oriented student and customer-oriented student are connected to how the Facebook Group is appropriated as a collaborative problem-solving tool and a pragmatic information literacy. This form of information literacy reflects instrumental and neoliberal views on learning, and a traditional understanding of teacher and student roles. The policy analysis shows how an economic and competitive perspective underpins demands for increased digital competence in teacher education, and how the value of digital tools for learning and teaching is taken for granted. The idea of co-learning, that is found to be influential but not fully accepted at the pre-school teacher education, is difficult to combine with an economic perspective emphasising measurability and quantification. The economic perspective is partly compatible with a pragmatic information literacy. The findings of the dissertation shed light on the gap between what is described as important in policy documents and what teacher students and teachers describe as important when digital tools are used in teacher education.

  • 29.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Lärarstudenters digitala studievardag: informationslitteracitet vid en förskollärarutbildning2019In: Pedagogisk forskning Syd: Torsdag 29 augusti 2019, Linnéuniversitetet, Kalmar, Kalmar: Linnaeus University , 2019Conference paper (Other academic)
  • 30.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Managing Personal Data in the Age of Surveillance Capitalism: A Sociomaterial Reading of Mozilla’s Data Detox Kit2021In: The Seventh European Conference on Information Literacy (ECIL): September 20th-23rd, 2021, Online, Abstracts / [ed] Sonja Špiranec, Serap Kurbanoğlu, Denis Kos, Joumana Boustany, Paris: InLitAs – Information Literacy Association , 2021, p. 46-46Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    For nearly two decades, dominant internet companies have successfully implemented a new business model that capitalises on the gathering of enormous amounts of personal data about every aspect of our lives. Within this logic of surveillance capitalism (Zuboff, 2019), individuals become objects from which raw material (data) is extracted to enable the selling of predictions of behaviour. Personal data enables personalisation of digital services enticing users to release even more personal data for the benefit of the service provider (Špiranec, Kos & George, 2019), making users increasingly vulnerable to various influences (commercial, political etc.). Data literacy, as a part of information literacy, refers to the ability to “access, interpret, critically assess, manage, handle and ethically use data” (Prado & Marzal, 2013, p. 126). As a way to increase knowledge of how personal data is collected, used and how individuals may take better control over these processes, the not-for-profit Mozilla Foundation has presented an online guide, the Data Detox Kit (DDK), available in several languages. In this study, the DDK is viewed as a window into what influential internet organisations consider important and reasonable for average internet users. Consequently, the DDK can be seen as a contemporary, practical expression of a data literacy expressed in various information activities. This contribution applies a sociomaterial perspective (Orlikowski, 2007), acknowledging the constitutive entanglement of the social and the material, to identify and analyse the information activities described in the DDK.

    The DDK is a website (www.datadetoxkit.org) containing 20 pages divided into three main categories: privacy, security and wellbeing. Every page of the DDK-website was downloaded and then closely read, and 105 information activities was identified. After removing duplicates, 65 of these activities were labelled as data-related and included in a qualitative content analysis. Guided by the notion of sociomaterial assemblages (Suchman, 2007), where humans and artefacts enact each other in practices, a thematic analysis showed that information activities related to controlling the gathering of personal data are intimately connected to the tools used for accessing internet. In particular, phones, browsers, search engines, and social media interact with users in different ways affecting how personal data is collected and distributed. Two forms of data literacy are identified and discussed: a re-active mode, focused on removing data already gathered, and a pro-active mode, focused on preventing data from being gathered.

    Through this analysis of a practical example of data literacy, it is possible to discuss the role of data in our everyday lives, including the challenging task to manage personal data online. The results of this study place data literacy, as a crucial component of information literacy, in the context of surveillance capitalism. Results also illustrate the extent of personal data gathered by examining the plethora of information activities suggested to individuals interested in taking control over how personal data is collected and used by internet companies. The findings are useful for librarians and teachers who can supplement traditional information literacy instruction with a deeper understanding of data literacy.

  • 31.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Managing Personal Data in the Age of Surveillance Capitalism: A Sociomaterial Reading of Mozilla’s Data Detox Kit2022In: Information Literacy in a Post-Truth Era: ECIL 2021 / [ed] Serap Kurbanoğlu;Sonja Špiranec;Yurdagül Ünal;Joumana Boustany;Denis Kos, Cham: Springer, 2022, p. 122-133Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Within the logic of surveillance capitalism, individuals become objects from which raw material (data) is extracted to enable the selling of predictions of behavior. In this study, the Data Detox Kit (DDK), developed by the not-for-profit Mozilla Foundation, is viewed as a contemporary, practical example of data literacy expressed through descriptions of information activities. A sociomaterial perspective is applied to identify and analyze sociomaterial assemblages among the information activities described in the DDK. Two forms of data literacy are identified and discussed: a re-active mode, focused on removing data already gathered, and a pro-active mode, focused on preventing data from being gathered. Through the analysis it is possible to discuss the role of data in our everyday lives, including the challenging task of managing personal data online.

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  • 32.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Teacher Students’ Digital Daily Lives: Information Literacy at a Pre-school Teacher Education – A Summary2019In: Tidskrift för ABM, ISSN 2002-4614, Vol. 4, no 1, p. 4-8Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    This article is a summary of the doctoral thesis “Lärarstudenters digitala studievardag: informationslitteracitet vid en förskollärarutbildning”, defended and published at Lund University in February 2019. The thesis is published as part of the series Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences and is available through open access.

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  • 33.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Teacher trainees’ information sharing activities and identity positioning on Facebook2017In: Journal of Documentation, ISSN 0022-0418, E-ISSN 1758-7379, Vol. 73, no 2, p. 244-262Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Purpose

    The purpose of this paper is to extend the knowledge of how identity is connected to information sharing activities in social media during pre-school teacher training.

    Design/methodology/approach

    An ethnographic study is performed where 249 students at a Swedish pre-school teacher-training programme are followed through participant observations from November 2013 to January 2014, and from September 2014 to January 2015. The material produced includes 230 conversations from a Facebook Group used by 210 students and several teachers, field notes and transcribed interviews with nine students. Comparative analysis is used to analyse the Facebook conversations to identify ways of positioning identity and engaging in information sharing activities. Interviews with students are analysed to contextualise and validate the findings from the online interactions.

    Findings

    Three identity positions are identified: discussion-oriented learner, goal-oriented learner and customer-oriented learner. The way a student commits to others, to ideas and to a career choice affects their identity positions and information sharing activities. Results suggest that information sharing with social media should be understood as a powerful device for identity development in pre-school teacher training.

    Research limitations/implications

    This study is designed to provide detailed accounts with high validity on the expense of a high degree of representativeness.

    Originality/value

    No previous library and information science-studies have been presented that explore the relationship between the identity of learners and the information sharing activities in which they engage, in the context of social media or in relation to teacher training.

  • 34.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    What is the ‘problem’ that digital competence in Swedish teacher education is meant to solve?2018In: Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy, E-ISSN 1891-943X, Vol. 13, no 3, p. 137-151Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    This paper explores how policy makers argue for the importance of digital competence in Swedish teacher education. A policy analysis of key policy documents from the government and from government-affiliated organisations from the time period 2011–2016 is conducted using Carol Bacchi’s ‘what’s the problem represented to be?’ approach. The paper critically examines underlying assumptions and particular viewpoints that underpin how the concept digital competence is formulated in key policy texts.

    Digital competence is found to be a part of a globalised policy discourse that conceptualises education as a necessity for a competitive work force. Policy makers describe Swedish schools as unsuccessful in providing pupils with adequate digital competence and how this may cause Sweden to fall behind in global competition. Shortcomings in schools are considered to be caused by low digital competence being developed as part of teacher education. In the studied policy documents, the ‘problem’ that digital competence in teacher education is meant to solve is consequently an issue of economic growth and global competition. The strong emphasis on economic benefits and an instrumental perspective on technology expressed in the global policy discourse on digital competence leads to the need for a renewed focus on Bildung and civic competences.

  • 35.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Where identity meets information: teacher trainees' performance of identity positions and information activities2016In: 9th International Conference in the Conceptions of Library and Information Science (CoLIS), 2016Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Introduction. This paper reports findings from an on-going analysis of how pre-school teacher trainees position their identities, as learners and future pre-school teachers, as information activities are performed in a Facebook Group and on a blog.

    Method. The analysis is based on results from an ethnographic study at a pre-school teacher-training programme at a Swedish university. Participant observations and interviews were conducted from November 2013 to January 2014, among a class of 249 students who started the programme in 2011.

    Analysis. Three types of identity positions are identified through comparative and thematic analysis of 147 Facebook conversations. Interviews with students and teachers are analysed to contextualize and validate the findings from the online interactions.

    Results. Three identity positions are identified: discussion-oriented learner, goal-oriented learner and customer-oriented learner. The way a student commits to others, to ideas and to a career choice affects the performance of identity positions and information activities.

    Conclusion. The findings presented in this paper begin to chart how the performance of identity positions is connected to the performance of information activities in teacher training. Results suggest that a socio-cultural understanding of identity positioning is valuable for understanding how information activities are performed.

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  • 36.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Why Teachers Like Facebook or Two Teacher Educators, One Facebook Group and 200 Teacher Trainees2012In: The 3rd U21 Digital Humanities Workshop at Lund University: Lund, Sweden, September 19 - 21, 2012, Lund: Lund University , 2012Conference paper (Refereed)
  • 37.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Ahlryd, Sara
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Information work of hospital librarians: Making the invisible visible2023In: Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, ISSN 0961-0006, E-ISSN 1741-6477, Vol. 55, no 1, p. 70-83Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    The aim of this paper is to explore and to make visible how the information work of hospital librarians is enacted in key practices where services of the hospital library are employed to support evidence-based practice. The empirical material was produced at three hospital libraries in three different regions in Sweden between January and March 2020. A practice-oriented approach using the theoretical lens information work is employed to analyze nine semi-structured interviews with hospital librarians and hospital library managers, together with field notes from observations of interactions between hospital librarians and healthcare practitioners. The analysis investigates the conditions for information work performed by hospital librarians as they participate in three key practices: clinical practices, information seeking practices, and HTA-practices. The results of the analysis are related to four categories of invisible information work, and the nature of the information work done to counter different types of invisibilities within the key practices is discussed. The findings suggest that a substantial amount of the information work of hospital librarians is invisible to clinicians. At the same time, considerable efforts are made by hospital librarians to counter different types of invisibility, for example through building relationships with healthcare staff and to develop and make specialized competencies visible. In particular, the importance assigned to evidence-based practice in healthcare allows for the librarians to be regarded by clinicians as legitimate partners with clearly defined competencies in specific situations.

  • 38.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Engström, Lisa
    Lund University, Sweden.
    The public library as a political symbol: a post-political reading of the demise of the consensus-model in Swedish cultural policy2024In: The International Journal of Cultural Policy, ISSN 1028-6632, E-ISSN 1477-2833, Vol. 30, no 7, p. 899-913Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Recent use of public libraries as political symbols by the radical right in their challenge of the established consensus in Swedish cultural policy is part of an ongoing (re)politicization of the field of cultural policy. This paper frames this development as part of a post-political condition of Swedish cultural and library policy. Through an analysis of previous research, policy, and policy debates, a conceptual understanding of the post-political condition is offered. The paper also provides an analysis with empirical examples of how this condition unfolds in librarians’ accounts of everyday public library practices. This composite analysis furthers our understanding of the enactment of Swedish cultural and library policy and contributes to a broader discussion of the current challenges facing these policy fields following the rise of the radical right in several countries. The findings point to a need for more nuanced and ideological discussions concerning the relationship between politics and culture and where public libraries are situated between autonomy and democracy.

  • 39.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Engström, Lisa
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Canaries of Democracy: The Role of Public Libraries in Times of Political Turmoil2024In: Public Library Quarterly, ISSN 0161-6846, E-ISSN 1541-1540Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    This article reports conclusions from a three-year research project on Swedish public libraries. The focus of the project is on librarians experience of libraries mission to promote democracy when democratic norms and values are challenged politically by radical right populism. Results of a longitudinal survey point to stability and lack of political interest over time, but increased societal polarization causes several ethical dilemmas for librarians. Examples of illegitimate political influence and librarians adapting to changes in the political climate call for renewed discussions on the professional role and understandings of democracy in library practice.

  • 40.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Public libraries in a changing political landscape: Results from a survey on political influence and pressure on public libraries in Southern Sweden2022In: Conceptions of Library and Information Science - CoLIS11: 11th International Conference, 29 May–1 June, Oslo, Norway, Oslo Metropolitan University , 2022Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Introduction. When the definition of democracy and the meaning of a democratic society is re-negotiated and re-interpreted, the mission of the public library is placed in a new context. This paper reports findings from an ongoing research project focused on library managers’ and librarians’ lived experiences of recent political developments in Sweden. 

    Method. Methodologically, the research project departs from the perspective of institutional ethnography, and combines a longitudinal survey study with interviews, focus-group interviews, and document studies. This paper reports findings from the first stage of a library manager survey.

    Findings. Results indicate that the interplay between libraries and the local political level is experienced as mostly well-functioning, although notable exceptions exist, and that the correspondence between national cultural- and library policies and politics of the participating municipalities is perceived as high. However, the paragraph from the Library Act about particular attention to national minorities and persons with a native language other than Swedish causes notable opposition between local and national political levels.

    Conclusion. Irregular political pressure is uncommon, but when it occurs, it is often connected to issues focused by radical right-wing parties. The study indicates a need to further investigate the intersection of (national) policies and (local) politics. 

  • 41.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hansson, Joacim
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Public libraries in a changing political landscape: results from a survey on political influence and pressure on public libraries in Southern Sweden2022In: Information research, E-ISSN 1368-1613, Vol. 27, article id colis2216Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    When the definition of democracy and the meaning of a democratic society is renegotiated and reinterpreted, the mission of the public library is placed in a new context. This paper reports findings from an ongoing research project focused on library managers’ and librarians’ lived experiences of recent political developments in Sweden. Methodologically, the research project applies the perspective of institutional ethnography and combines a longitudinal survey study with interviews, focus- group interviews, and document studies. This paper reports findings from the first stage of a library manager survey.Results indicate that the interplay between libraries and the local political level is experienced as mostly well-functioning, although notable exceptions exist, and that the correspondence between national cultural- and library policies and politics of the participating municipalities is perceived as high. However, the Library Act paragraph, stipulating that particular attention should be devoted to national minorities and persons with a native language other than Swedish, causes notable opposition between local and national political levels. Illegitimate political pressure is uncommon, but when it occurs, it is often connected to issues pursued by radical right-wing parties. The study indicates a need to further investigate the intersection of (national) policies and (local) politics. 

  • 42.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Kävlinge Municipality, Sweden.
    Kronfält, Eva
    University of California Berkeley, USA.
    Sundin, Olof
    Lund University, Sweden;University of Borås, Sweden.
    Referencesamtalens diskurser2006In: Bibliotekarerne: En profession i et felt af viden, kommunikation og teknologi / [ed] Trine Schreiber, Hans Elbeshausen, Frederiksberg: Samfundslitteratur, 2006, p. 119-139Chapter in book (Other academic)
  • 43.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Severson, Pernilla
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Media and Journalism.
    An open educational resource for doing netnography in the digital arts and humanities2023In: Education for Information, ISSN 0167-8329, E-ISSN 1875-8649, Vol. 39, no 2, p. 155-172Article in journal (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    As a part of the DiMPAH-project, the authors have developed an open educational resource (OER) on netnography. In this paper, the OER is presented and critically discussed as the broader problem identified during course-development is made explicit and explored through two research questions: 1) How can an OER be designed that positions netnography as a viable methodology for the digital humanities? 2) How can an OER be designed that theoretically and methodologically combines both quantitative and qualitative approaches for doing netnography?

    An up-to-date theoretical overview of netnography as a methodology for studying social experiences online is provided. Methodological considerations are presented, aimed for sensitizing students to nuances of active (participatory) and passive (non-participatory) netnography through two analytical concepts. The OER is presented through three case studies and a learning scenario offering flexible and authentic technology-integrated learning. Netnography is found to contribute to the digital humanities, overall characterized by method-driven and quantitative approaches, with reflexivity and a potential for critical research and pedagogy. The two analytical concepts community-based netnography and consociality-based netnography allow for a nuanced methodological understanding of how and when qualitative and quantitative approaches should be employed, and how they may complement each other.

  • 44.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Severson, Pernilla
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Media and Journalism.
    Netnography: An Open Educational Resource (OER) for DARIAH Teach platform2023Other (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    Netnography is an adaptation of ethnography to the study of digital interactions. In this course, the ethnographic perspective underpinning Netnography is introduced together with the netnographic approach and different types of netnographic material. Ethnographic procedures adapted to digital settings, such as participant observations, interviews and taking field notes, are described together with Social Network Analysis. Employing both qualitative elements (such as participant observations) and quantitative (Social Network Analysis), learners will work hands-on with pre-selected datasets to do a small-scale netnographic study. This study will depart from questions connected to equality, cultural diversity and public health.

    The course includes four units that are designed to gradually introduce the learner to Netnography as a research field and a methodology, but the units can also be studied separately. Each unit includes theoretical content and practical assignments that will allow the learner to develop a thorough understanding of Netnography and a useful skillset for doing netnographies.

  • 45.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Severson, Pernilla
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Media and Journalism.
    Netnography: Two Methodological Issues and the Consequences for Teaching and Practice2022In: Proceedings of the 6th Digital Humanities in the Nordic and Baltic Countries Conference (DHNB 2022): Uppsala, Sweden, March 15-18, 2022 / [ed] Karl Berglund; Matti La Mela; Inge Zwart, CEUR-WS.org , 2022, Vol. 3232, p. 221-227Conference paper (Refereed)
    Abstract [en]

    As part of a transnational project focused on creating Open Education Resources (OERs) on selected digital methods and fostering learning experiences by taking data from the past into future stories, the authors are currently developing an OER on netnography. Robert Kozinets, who coined the term in the 1990s, recently described netnography as offering a recipe book with clear directions for doing qualitative social media research (2020). 

    Designing this OER, we have identified two pertinent methodological issues of netnography that have been debated during recent years: the need to shift focus from “community” to “consociality” (Perren & Kozinets, 2018) and the issue of active versus passive approaches (Costello, McDermott & Wallace, 2017). Using these two methodological issues as a starting point, this paper outlines our understanding of netnography. It provides examples of consequences for how netnography can be taught and practiced in action. 

    Consociality is more about contextual fellowship (what we share) than the identity boundary (who we are) associated with communities. While this position holds merit, online communities still exist (and warrant consideration), and consequently, we argue for two possible points of departure for conducting netnographic investigations: 

    1) community-based netnography, using the notion of community, focused on interactions characterized by (lasting) communal ties and practices; 

    2) consociality-based netnography, using the notion of consociality, focusing on interactions characterized by (fleeting) connections in contextual fellowships. 

    These two points of departure frame the nature of the phenomenon of study in slightly different ways, leading us to the debate concerning active and passive approaches in netnographic studies. Costello, McDermott, and Wallace (2017) problematize a certain preference for “observational” or “non-participatory” approaches. Such passive approaches include unobtrusive observations of interactions in a specific social setting. Active approaches include processes to generate elicited material through interactions (such as interviews) between researcher and participants and the writing of field notes.

    The critique of passive approaches echoes how a key strength of netnography has historically been described as providing ethnographically thick descriptions of online interactions through the intense and sustained involvement of the researcher in the daily life of the participants (Kozinets, 2010). However, passive approaches are useful to help us navigate vast amounts of digital data and social sites and possibly gain a higher representativity and reduce the risk of bias (Kozinets, 2020). Therefore, we propose that for community-based netnography, it is advisable to engage mainly in active approaches to engage with participants of a community over time. For consociality-based netnography, passive approaches such as selecting and archiving online traces can be enough to conduct a netnographic study. Still, active approaches such as taking field notes should be considered. 

    Two cases with practical assignments are discussed in relation to these methodological considerations together with insights for teaching and netnographic practice. In the first case, students are invited to investigate a digital community of their own choosing that they know well. The second case introduces students to an accessible online tool suitable for learning about fundamentals of Social Network Analysis (SNA) for studying consociality using data from Twitter.

    References: 

    Costello, L., McDermott, M. L. & Wallace, R. (2017). Netnography: Range of practices, misperceptions, and missed opportunities. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 16(1), https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406917700647.

    Kozinets, R. V. (2010). Netnography: Doing ethnographic research online. Los Angeles: Sage.

    Kozinets, R. (2020). Netnography: The essential guide to qualitative social media research. London: Sage.

    Perren, R. & Kozinets, R. V. (2018). Lateral exchange markets: How social platforms operate in a networked economy. Journal of Marketing, 82(1), 20-36. https://doi.org/10.1509/jm.14.0250

    Download full text (pdf)
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  • 46.
    Ihrmark, Daniel
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Tyrkkö, Jukka
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Considering KNIME Workflows as Shareable Resources: An Example from ‘Trolling the Library’2024In: Presented at HumInfra Conference (HiC) 2024, Gothenburg, 2024Conference paper (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    As the growing influence of the radical right turns cultural institutions into political symbols (Harding, 2021), online forums and social media are key venues for antagonistic outbursts directed at public libraries (Carlsson, Hanell & Hansson 2022). Trolling the Library aims to explore radical right digital attacks against public libraries, and is currently piloting different methods to analyse online comments and news items from the website SamNytt. This contribution outlines one intended deliverable of the project: a shareable workflow for the low-code tool KNIME (KoNstanz Information MinEr).

     

    Low-code tools play an important role in making data analysis and visualization accessible to researchers and students with limited experience, or interest, in programming (see De Mauro, Marzoni & Walter, 2021). While low-code tools do introduce closed-box issues, they can still be considered important steppingstones towards computational approaches (Tyrkkö & Ihrmark, submitted). An additional benefit is the shareability of the workflow resulting from designing the method pipeline in tools such as KNIME or Orange. 

     

    The specific workflow resulting from Trolling the Library contains sentiment analysis and topic modeling components. While limited in scope, the discussion of the workflow highlights both the benefits and drawbacks of low-code workflows as potential shareable resources for the digital humanities. This contribution focuses on the ease of use, possible obstacles from an unfamiliar user’s perspective, and the availability of appropriate resources for the platform. 

     

     

    Works cited:

     

    Carlsson, H., Hanell, F., & Hansson, J. (2022). ”Det känns som att jag bara

    sitter och väntar på att det ska explodera”: politisk påverkan på de

    kommunala folkbibliotekens verksamhet i sex sydsvenska regioner. Nordic

    Journal of Library and Information Studies, 3(1), 26-43.

     

    De Mauro Andrea, Francesco Marzoni & Andrew J. Walter. 2021. Data Analytics Made Easy: Analyze and present data to make informed decisions without writing any code. Packt Publishing

     

    Harding, T. (2021). Culture wars? The (re) politicization of Swedish cultural

    policy. Cultural Trends, 1-18.

     

    Tyrkkö, J., & Ihrmark, D. Submitted. Low-code data science tools for linguistics: Swiss army knives or pretty black boxes? In Coats S. and V. Laippala (eds.) March of Data (Language, Data Science and Digital Humanities X). London: Bloomsbury Academic.

  • 47.
    Ihrmark, Daniel
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Tyrkkö, Jukka
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Trolling the Library: The digital threat to the democratic mission of public libraries2023Conference paper (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    In Sweden, the growing influence of the radical right have turned cultural

    institutions into political symbols in an emerging ‘culture war’ (Harding,

    2021). Carlsson, Hanell & Hansson (2022) show how digital forums and social

    media play a significant part in orchestrating the ideologically laden conflicts

    and confrontations that public libraries are currently facing. This prompts an

    investigation of the digital environments where supporters of radical right-wing

    ideas interact, share thoughts, construct collective identities, and coordinate

    actions towards libraries. In this explorative pilot study, we use selected

    methods on a small dataset to test viable methods and approaches.

    Download full text (pdf)
    fulltext
  • 48.
    Ihrmark, Daniel
    et al.
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Tyrkkö, Jukka
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Languages.
    Carlsson, Hanna
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Linnaeus University, Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Department of Cultural Sciences.
    Trolling the Library: the digital threat to the democratic mission of public libraries2023In: Presented at Big Data 2023, November 30th - December 1st, Växjö, 2023Conference paper (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    In Sweden, the growing influence of the radical right have turned cultural institutions into political symbols in an emerging ‘culture war’ (Harding, 2021). Carlsson, Hanell & Hansson (2022) show how digital forums and social media play a significant part in orchestrating the ideologically laden conflicts and confrontations that public libraries are currently facing. Digitally mediated threats from the radical right may obstruct the statutory mission of the institution to promote democracy, but knowledge about how such threats develop and unfold, as well as the relation between online interactions and offline events (Scrivens, Davies & Frank, 2020), is lacking. This prompts an investigation of the digital environments where supporters of radical right-wing ideas interact, share thoughts, construct collective identities, and coordinate actions towards libraries.

    Methodologically, the pilot study explores user comments on online news websites (Landert 2014), applying a data-driven approach informed by sentiment analysis and topic modelling (TM) testing both conventional lexicon-based sentiment scoring and LDA (Latent Dirichlet Allocation) topic modelling, and more recent BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers) modelling. For purposes of transparency and easy replicability, we carry out the analyses in the open-source environment KNIME (Konstanz Information Miner; see Ihrmark & Tyrkkö 2023).

    The dataset of the pilot study contains 561 comments taken from 138 different articles published between 2019 and 2023 on the SamNytt website, the main media outlet for the Swedish radical right. The articles were selected by using the search term “bibliotek” in the site’s search function. The comments were made by 338 different user accounts, with a low number of individual accounts making more than 5 comments. An ongoing analysis suggests that the frequency and temporality of comments and upvotes provide a window into the processes shaping radical right-wing digital attacks that result in tangible consequences for public libraries.

  • 49.
    Josefsson, Pernilla
    et al.
    KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden.
    Hanell, Fredrik
    Lund University, Sweden.
    Role confusion in Facebook groups2014In: An Education in Facebook?: Higher Education and the World's Largest Social Network / [ed] Mike Kent, Tama Leaver, Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge, 2014, p. 162-170Chapter in book (Other academic)
    Abstract [en]

    During recent years communication between teachers and students in the context of higher education has become increasingly visible. One explanation is the use of parallel educational venues, such as learning platforms and the broad admittance of social networking services (SNSs). The use of SNSs such as Facebook-that are public by default-leads to changed conditions for teaching, providing by design others the ability to view any individual’s performance and, depending on the individual’s privacy settings, to follow their digital traces. This increased visibility has great impact on how teachers carry out their profession, and there is an imminent risk of confusion between the professional and private role. To better understand how student and teacher roles are managed and performed today we will here investigate how the increased visibility affects the performance of these actors in higher education, and to what Goffman (1959) refers to as roles.

  • 50.
    Kjellberg, Sara
    et al.
    Lund university, Sweden.
    Carlsson, HannaLund university, Sweden.Wiklund, GunillaLund university, Sweden.Haider, JuttaLund university, Sweden.Hanell, FredrikLund university, Sweden.Lindh, KarolinaLund university, Sweden.Rivano Eckerdal, JohannaLund university, Sweden.Sonestad, PatrikLund university, Sweden.Sundin, OlofLund university, Sweden.
    En vänbok till Birgitta Olander : tankar och erfarenheter från f d studenter2012Collection (editor) (Other (popular science, discussion, etc.))
12 1 - 50 of 51
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