Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems

Across the US and around the world, a growing number of public sector, educational, and nonprofit organizations have been sharing data with one another. These organizations hope to increase transparency, enhance efficiency and service quality, improve communities, encourage public participation, de...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robert Gradeck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-10-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/1048
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spelling doaj-119ef7bd77be45b8a0384d28a03d1f6f2020-11-25T01:16:16ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-10-013510.23889/ijpds.v3i5.1048Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data EcosystemsRobert Gradeck0University of Pittsburgh Across the US and around the world, a growing number of public sector, educational, and nonprofit organizations have been sharing data with one another. These organizations hope to increase transparency, enhance efficiency and service quality, improve communities, encourage public participation, develop new knowledge, and foster civic innovation. While there are many success stories around data sharing, there is a growing awareness that the act of publishing data will not always result in community impact. Data intermediaries are often needed to help people extract value from data, and to help producers make good decisions about what and how they publish. In Pittsburgh, our local civic data ecosystem is unique in that both public and academic librarians are actively involved as data intermediaries, and they work in close collaboration with other intermediaries, data publishers and users in a variety of ways. Librarians play a number of roles, including helping people discover information, building data literacy and technical skills, providing technical assistance in data management and documentation, creating feedback mechanisms to publishers, convening and hosting events, and connecting data users. Our experience shows that libraries and librarians should be key actors in the continuing development of data ecosystems and act as core data intermediaries; their expertise adds value to a wide range of issues that affect both data publishers and users. In this talk, I will share insights gained through the Civic Switchboard project, which aims to develop the capacity of libraries in civic data ecosystems. https://ijpds.org/article/view/1048
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Gradeck
spellingShingle Robert Gradeck
Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Robert Gradeck
author_sort Robert Gradeck
title Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
title_short Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
title_full Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
title_fullStr Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Librarians as Critical Infrastructure in Data Ecosystems
title_sort librarians as critical infrastructure in data ecosystems
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Across the US and around the world, a growing number of public sector, educational, and nonprofit organizations have been sharing data with one another. These organizations hope to increase transparency, enhance efficiency and service quality, improve communities, encourage public participation, develop new knowledge, and foster civic innovation. While there are many success stories around data sharing, there is a growing awareness that the act of publishing data will not always result in community impact. Data intermediaries are often needed to help people extract value from data, and to help producers make good decisions about what and how they publish. In Pittsburgh, our local civic data ecosystem is unique in that both public and academic librarians are actively involved as data intermediaries, and they work in close collaboration with other intermediaries, data publishers and users in a variety of ways. Librarians play a number of roles, including helping people discover information, building data literacy and technical skills, providing technical assistance in data management and documentation, creating feedback mechanisms to publishers, convening and hosting events, and connecting data users. Our experience shows that libraries and librarians should be key actors in the continuing development of data ecosystems and act as core data intermediaries; their expertise adds value to a wide range of issues that affect both data publishers and users. In this talk, I will share insights gained through the Civic Switchboard project, which aims to develop the capacity of libraries in civic data ecosystems.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/1048
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