• Jutta Haider deposited Conceptions of “information poverty” in LIS: a discourse analysis on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months ago

    Purpose – To provide an analysis of the notion of “information poverty” in library and information
    science (LIS) by investigating concepts, interests and strategies leading to its construction and thus to
    examine its role as a constitutive element of the professional discourse.
    Design/methodology/approach – Starting from a Foucauldian notion of discourse, “information
    poverty” is examined as a statement in its relation to other statements in order to highlight
    assumptions and factors contributing to its construction. The analysis is based on repeated and close
    reading of 35 English language articles published in LIS journals between 1995 and 2005.
    Findings – Four especially productive discursive procedures are identified: economic determinism,
    technological determinism and the “information society”, historicising the “information poor”, and the
    library profession’s moral obligation and responsibility.
    Research limitations/implications – The material selection is linguistically and geographically
    biased. Most of the included articles originate in English-speaking countries. Therefore, results and
    findings are fully applicable only in an English language context.
    Originality/value – The focus on overlapping and at times conflicting discursive procedures, i.e. the
    results of alliances and connections between statements, highlights how the “information poor”
    emerge as a category in LIS as the product of institutionally contingent, professional discourse. By
    challenging often unquestioned underlying assumptions, this article is intended to contribute to a
    critical examination of LIS discourse, as well as to the analysis of the discourses of information, which
    dominate contemporary society. It is furthermore seen to add to the development of discourse
    analytical approaches in LIS research.