Social Justice Design and Implementation in Library and Information Science

Author:   Bharat Mehra
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367653828


Pages:   312
Publication Date:   30 December 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Social Justice Design and Implementation in Library and Information Science


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Author:   Bharat Mehra
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.417kg
ISBN:  

9780367653828


ISBN 10:   0367653826
Pages:   312
Publication Date:   30 December 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Figures; Tables; Contributors; Foreword: The Legacy of Promoting Social Justice in Library and Information Science (Paul T. Jaeger); Introduction (Bharat Mehra); I. EMERGING NEW RESPONSIBILITIES ; 1. Libraries Fighting for Social Justice During the COVID-19 Pandemic (Nicole A. Cooke, Cyndee Sturgis Landrum, and Jocelyn Pettigrew); 2. Role of Rural Libraries in Supporting Social Well-being in their Communities: Participatory Research to Promote Social Justice (Eli M. Guinnee and Margo E. Gustina); II. REFLECTIVE CASE PRACTICES; 3. Understanding the Librarian Identity: The Common Agency Within the Diversity of Public Librarianship (Vanessa Irvin); 4. Wilkes County Public Library’s Involvement in the Food Justice Movements in Rural North Carolina (Noah Lenstra and Rebecca Floyd); 5. A Public Library’s Response to Substance Abuse Recovery: Blount County Recovery Court Life Skills Program (Kaurri C. Williams-Cockfield); 6. Digital Archives and Inclusion of Underrepresented Groups: Case Studies of the Voices Out Loud and Black in Appalachia Projects (Scott Sikes); III. REACHING OUT: NEW RESEARCH APPROACHES AND STRATEGIES; 7. Positioning Social Justice in a Black Feminist Information Activist Community Context: A Case Study of African American Activist-Mothers in Chicago’s Public Housing (LaVerne Gray and Yiran Duan); 8. Everyday Information Practices of Migrant Latinas Living in Boston (Mónica Colón-Aguirre and Janet Ceja Alcalá); 9. Conceptualizing Co-mapping Knowledges to Promote Social Justice Outcomes with Aboriginal Communities through Design Pedagogy (Jia Tina Du, Julie Nichols, Stefan Peters, Darren Fong, Angelica Harris-Faull, Ning Gu, Anna Leditschke, and Jannatul Fardous); 10. Multidisciplinary Perspectives for an Integrative Critical Gerontology Information Framework (Joseph Winberry and Bharat Mehra); IV. TRANSFORMING LIS EDUCATION; 11. The Mis-Education of the Librarian: Addressing Curricular Injustice in the LIS Classroom through Social Justice Pedagogy (Beth Patin, Melinda Sebastian, Jieun Yeon, Danielle Bertolini, and Alexandra Grimm; 12. Creating Accessible Learning Environments and Informing Social Justice through Inclusive Course Design (Clayton A. Copeland and Kim M. Thompson); 13. Social Responsibility of Libraries to Address Community Homelessness: Social Justice Actions in Two LIS Courses (Julie Ann Winkelstein); 14. Indigenous-Engaged Education: A Canadian Case (Toni Samek); 15. Designing for Social Justice in the MLIS Curriculum: A Case Study of the University of Maryland (Morgan Adle, Paul T. Jaeger, and Ursula Gorham); V. INSTRUMENTS OF ACTION AND CHANGE; 16. An Autoethnographic Narrative of Institutional Injustice: Queer Resilience through Use of Evidence and Memory (Donna Braquet); 17. Inspiring Information Communities to Advance the UN Sustainable Development Goals: Information Action Briefs for Social Transformation (Kendra S. Albright, Clara M. Chu, Jia Tina Du, and Bharat Mehra); 18. Implementation of Social Justice Design in Developing International Guidelines for LGBTQ+ Library Resources, Services, and Programming (Rachel Wexelbaum, Julie Winkelstein, and Michael David Miller); Index

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Bharat Mehra is EBSCO Endowed Chair in Social Justice and Professor in the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Alabama, USA. His many research interests include diversity and inclusion advocacy, intercultural communication and communicative action, social justice in library and information science, community-engaged scholarship, and critical and cross-cultural studies. He has applied action research to further community-engaged scholarship while collaborating with racial/ethnic groups, international diaspora, sexual minorities, rural communities, low-income families, small businesses, and others, to represent their experiences and perspectives in the design of community-based information systems and services.

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