The Labor of Informational Democracy: A Library and Information Science Framework for Evaluating the Democratic Potential in Socially- Generated Information

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Labor of Informational Democracy: A Library and Information Science Framework for Evaluating the Democratic Potential in Socially- Generated Information
Abstract
This essay outlines a framework that LIS can use to analyze socially-generated information. The proposed evaluative framework involves three democratic horizons of analysis: the level of access, the level of production, and the level of communicative speech. This inquiry synthesizes the political economy of communication/librarianship, autonomist Marxist insights about the dematerialization of labor in late capitalism, and the concerns of contemporary democratic theory. The essay concludes with a set of proposals for LIS to pursue research and policies that use a critical theoretical framework linking the realm of production (i.e., labor) with communicative democracy.
Book Title
Progressive community action: Critical theory and social justice in library and information science
Date
2016-01-01
Language
English
Short Title
The Labor of Informational Democracy
Citation
Cope, Jonathan. 2016. “The Labor of Informational Democracy: A Library and Information Science Framework for Evaluating the Democratic Potential in Socially- Generated Information.” in Progressive Community Action: Critical Theory and Social Justice in Library and Information Science.
Publication year
Keywords
  • dematerialization of labor
  • informational democracy
  • late capitalism
  • MARX, Karl, 1818-1883

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