A Phenomenological Study of an Emergent National Digital Library, Part I: Theory and Methodological Framework
(2005) A Phenomenological Study of an Emergent National Digital Library, Part I: Theory and Methodological Framework . The Library Quarterly 75(4):pp. 391-420.
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Abstract
This article focuses on the activities surrounding the National Digital Library Program (NDLP) at the Library of Congress (1995-2000) to identify modalities of successful innovation and the characteristics of creative decision making. Theories of social change and organizational rationality, and the social construction of technology (SCOT) approaches provided the theoretical basis for this study. The underlying design for a phenomenological approach is discussed, together with the method for constructing a descriptive narrative that synthesizes the phenomenon under study (an emergent national digital library program). Theory, methodology, data collection, and the summary of findings with implications for practice are presented here. The accompanying article (Part II, dLIST item number 1635) presents the narratives of development, applying the interpretive phenomenological framework to document the innovators' perspectives about this formative event.
| EPrint Type: | Journal Article (Paginated) |
|---|---|
| Keywords: | Library of Congress; National Digital Library Program (NDLP)- Library of Congress (1995-2000); technology innovation in the library context; digital library development; SCOT (Social Construction of Technology); discourse analysis; social informatics; sociotechnical change; American Memory (LC); national libraries |
| Subjects: | Digital Libraries |
| ID Code: | 1636 |
| Deposited On: | 12 November 2006 |
| Alternative Locations: | http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/LQ/home.html |
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