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      Commodification of the information profession: A critique of Higher Education under neoliberalism

      journal contribution
      Stuart Lawson, Kevin Sanders, Lauren Smith
      figshare
      Library and Information Studies

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          Abstract

          <p>The structures that govern society’s understanding of information have been reorganised under a neoliberal worldview to allow information to appear and function as a commodity. This has implications for the professional ethics of library and information labour, and the need for critical reflexivity in library and information praxes is not being met. A lack of theoretical understanding of these issues means that the political interests governing decision-making are going unchallenged, for example the UK government’s specific framing of open access to research. We argue that building stronger, community oriented praxes of critical depth can serve as a resilient challenge to the neoliberal politics of the current higher education system in the UK and beyond. Critical information literacy offers a proactive, reflexive and hopeful strategy to challenge hegemonic assumptions about information as a commodity.</p> <p>This is a post-print of an article accepted for publication in <em>Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication</em> in September 2014.</p> <p> </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          figshare
          2014
          27 October 2014
          27 October 2014
          Article
          10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.1217592
          97b72667-9bd8-4e8a-8d6a-94d6fdc11e90

          CC BY 4.0

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          Library and Information Studies
          Library and Information Studies

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