A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences

We report on a case study which examines the social science community’s capability and institutional support for data management. Fourteen researchers were invited for an in-depth qualitative survey between June 2014 and October 2015. We modify and adopt the Community Capability Model Framework (CCM...

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Main Authors: Wei Jeng, Liz Lyon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2016-10-01
Series:International Journal of Digital Curation
Online Access:http://www.ijdc.net/article/view/398
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spelling doaj-d7ea9ae0c2ad480384679b98e663b9f32020-11-25T03:37:19ZengUniversity of EdinburghInternational Journal of Digital Curation1746-82562016-10-0111110.2218/ijdc.v11i1.398A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social SciencesWei Jeng0Liz Lyon1University of PittsburghUniversity of PittsburghWe report on a case study which examines the social science community’s capability and institutional support for data management. Fourteen researchers were invited for an in-depth qualitative survey between June 2014 and October 2015. We modify and adopt the Community Capability Model Framework (CCMF) profile tool to ask these scholars to self-assess their current data practices and whether their academic environment provides enough supportive infrastructure for data related activities. The exemplar disciplines in this report include anthropology, political sciences, and library and information science. Our findings deepen our understanding of social disciplines and identify capabilities that are well developed and those that are poorly developed. The participants reported that their institutions have made relatively slow progress on economic supports and data science training courses, but acknowledged that they are well informed and trained for participants’ privacy protection. The result confirms a prior observation from previous literature that social scientists are concerned with ethical perspectives but lack technical training and support. The results also demonstrate intra- and inter-disciplinary commonalities and differences in researcher perceptions of data-intensive capability, and highlight potential opportunities for the development and delivery of new and impactful research data management support services to social sciences researchers and faculty.   http://www.ijdc.net/article/view/398
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei Jeng
Liz Lyon
spellingShingle Wei Jeng
Liz Lyon
A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
International Journal of Digital Curation
author_facet Wei Jeng
Liz Lyon
author_sort Wei Jeng
title A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
title_short A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
title_full A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
title_fullStr A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
title_full_unstemmed A Report of Data-Intensive Capability, Institutional Support, and Data Management Practices in Social Sciences
title_sort report of data-intensive capability, institutional support, and data management practices in social sciences
publisher University of Edinburgh
series International Journal of Digital Curation
issn 1746-8256
publishDate 2016-10-01
description We report on a case study which examines the social science community’s capability and institutional support for data management. Fourteen researchers were invited for an in-depth qualitative survey between June 2014 and October 2015. We modify and adopt the Community Capability Model Framework (CCMF) profile tool to ask these scholars to self-assess their current data practices and whether their academic environment provides enough supportive infrastructure for data related activities. The exemplar disciplines in this report include anthropology, political sciences, and library and information science. Our findings deepen our understanding of social disciplines and identify capabilities that are well developed and those that are poorly developed. The participants reported that their institutions have made relatively slow progress on economic supports and data science training courses, but acknowledged that they are well informed and trained for participants’ privacy protection. The result confirms a prior observation from previous literature that social scientists are concerned with ethical perspectives but lack technical training and support. The results also demonstrate intra- and inter-disciplinary commonalities and differences in researcher perceptions of data-intensive capability, and highlight potential opportunities for the development and delivery of new and impactful research data management support services to social sciences researchers and faculty.  
url http://www.ijdc.net/article/view/398
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