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| Title: | The Concept of Information Literacy in Policy-Making Texts: An Imperialistic Project? |
| Authors: | Pilerot, Ola Lindberg, Jenny |
| Department: | University of Borås. Swedish School of Library and Information Science |
| Issue Date: | 2011 |
| Journal Title: | Library Trends |
| ISSN: | 0024-2594 |
| Volume: | 60 |
| Issue: | 2 |
| Pages: | 338–360 |
| Publisher: | The Johns Hopkins University Press |
| Media type: | text |
| Publication type: | article, peer reviewed scientific |
| Subject Category: | Subject categories::Social Sciences::Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified::Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified |
| Research Group: | LinCS |
| Strategic Research Area: | Library and information science |
| Abstract: | Organizations such as the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) put a lot of effort in advocacy and policy making for information literacy (IL). Their ambition to foster IL can be seen as a part of a multinational educational project. By exporting a Western IL model focused on textual information sources and the use of information and communication technologies
(ICTs) into non-Western contexts that to a great extent lack ICTs, the educational project for IL runs the risk of turning into an imperialistic project. A discursively oriented analysis of two prominent policy
documents—discussed in the light of the so-called new imperialism and the idea of invisible technologies—indicates a standardized onesize-fits-all-model of IL. Through establishing a close contact between
the policy-making strand and the research strand in the IL literature and by adhering to the broad concept of information literacies, the risk of imperialism and oppression might lessen. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2320/9696 |
| Appears in Collections: | Artiklar och rapporter / Articles and reports (BHS)
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