This chapter considers the contribution of Library and Information Science (LIS) education to the ‘decolonising’ of our university curricula, and how students on LIS degree programmes can be supported to explore the concept of decolonising as students both in a Higher Education environment, and in the workplace as LIS professionals
LCC library staged the Decolonising the Arts Curriculum exhibition, in collaboration with the creato...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...
Purpose The aim of this paper is to introduce a holistic decolonial lens for Library and Informat...
In the past seven years, student-led decolonisation movements have taken root in UK universities. De...
The term ‘decolonizing the curriculum’ is of high currency in higher education in the UK and in loca...
Decolonisation is high on the agenda in many universities and library staff are increasingly contrib...
This chapter will discuss the commitment to anti-racist practice by library workers who seek to enga...
This is the introduction to 'Narrative Expansions: Interpreting Decolonisation in Academic Libraries...
This chapter examines the impact of decolonisation upon collection development, both in theory and p...
• From a series of listening exercises as part of the Race Equality Review (2021) at the University ...
Information literacy scholars and leaders are calling for the decolonization of library instruction,...
Drawing on his chapter in the collection Narrative Expansions (edited by Jess Crilly and Regina Ever...
This article presents a case study of liberating reading lists through a staff-student collaboration...
This work explores international research into library and information studies (LIS) education as pa...
LCC library staged the Decolonising the Arts Curriculum exhibition, in collaboration with the creato...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...
Purpose The aim of this paper is to introduce a holistic decolonial lens for Library and Informat...
In the past seven years, student-led decolonisation movements have taken root in UK universities. De...
The term ‘decolonizing the curriculum’ is of high currency in higher education in the UK and in loca...
Decolonisation is high on the agenda in many universities and library staff are increasingly contrib...
This chapter will discuss the commitment to anti-racist practice by library workers who seek to enga...
This is the introduction to 'Narrative Expansions: Interpreting Decolonisation in Academic Libraries...
This chapter examines the impact of decolonisation upon collection development, both in theory and p...
• From a series of listening exercises as part of the Race Equality Review (2021) at the University ...
Information literacy scholars and leaders are calling for the decolonization of library instruction,...
Drawing on his chapter in the collection Narrative Expansions (edited by Jess Crilly and Regina Ever...
This article presents a case study of liberating reading lists through a staff-student collaboration...
This work explores international research into library and information studies (LIS) education as pa...
LCC library staged the Decolonising the Arts Curriculum exhibition, in collaboration with the creato...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...
What does it mean to Indigenize and decolonize a Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) pr...