1 / 14

The libray as a meeting place in different urban communities

The libray as a meeting place in different urban communities. By Ragnar Audunson and Svanhild Aabø Faculty of Journalism, Library and Information Science. Public Libraries – Arenas for Citenzenship (PLACE).

ebony
Download Presentation

The libray as a meeting place in different urban communities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The libray as a meeting place in different urban communities By Ragnar Audunson and Svanhild Aabø Faculty of Journalism, Library and Information Science

  2. Public Libraries – Arenas for Citenzenship (PLACE) A research project receiving funding from The Norwegian Research Council for the period 2007-2012

  3. Categories of meetings in the public library • Square • Observing people different from oneself • Public sphere • Joint activities • Meta meetings • Virtual meetings

  4. Basic concepts • Low intensive versus high intensive meeting places • Social capital • Public, parochial or private realm • First, second or third palce • Meetings

  5. Research questions • How is the balance between the library as a high intensive versus a low intensive meeting place? • To what extent is the library a private, a parochial or a public realm? • Which life spheres and life roles is the library linked to, e.g. a first, second or third place. • How is the degree of interaction and cooperation in meetings observed?

  6. Observations of library use in three markedly different urban districts • The gentrified community - Located in the Eastern part of the inner city - Working class tradition, now new strata -16% immigrants with non-Western background • The multicultural community - Suburban area completed in the 1980s - The educational level below city average - 40% immigrants with non-Western background • The middle class community - In the Western part of the city - Household income is higher than city average - 6% inhabitants with non-Western background

  7. Findings • The library as a square • A public, a private or a parochial realm? • Otherness: The library as locale or location? • The library as a part of the public sphere • The library as a place for joint activities

  8. Discussion, Q1 • How is the balance between the library as a high intensive versus a low intensive meeting place? * Some visitors use the library as a high- intensive, others as a low-intensive meeting place. * Many move between high-intensive activities and arenas and low-intensive ones. The library encourages this movement.

  9. Discussion, Q2 • To what extent is the library a private, a parochial and a public realm? * The library as a whole is a public realm * Most uses constitute the library as a private realm *The library’s community activities constitute it as a parochial realm The library is complex and has characteristics of all three realms

  10. Discussion, Q3 • Which life spheres and life roles is the library linked to, e.g. a first, second or third place • An extension of the home; a first place • An extension of or alternative to the work place; a second place • A neutral place where regulars meet and speak; a third place

  11. Q4: How is the degree of interaction and cooperation in meetings observed?

  12. Overall impression • Diversity and manifold of a variety of library uses and users • Easy transition between different activities and different levels; from high-intensive studying in a private realm to low-intensive participating in the newspaper room in a public realm • The library facilities encourage these transitions

  13. Conclusions • The library’s capacity of being a meeting place equalizes the possibilities of being an active citizen across social, economic and ethnic differences. • Library users are exposed to the plurality of the community and learn about otherness. This contributes to a sense of community identity and social cohesion. • In the library, people are not categorized by profession, or as being unemployed, a patient or a client. This quality of the library contributes to social inclusion.

More Related