Actors in Collaboration: Sociotechnical Influence on Practice-Research Collaboration
Abstract
There has long been a concern about the research-practice gap within Library and
Information Science (LIS). Several authors have highlighted the disconnection
between the world of professional practice, interested in service and information
system development, and the world of the academy, focused on the development of
theory and the progress of the discipline. A virtual organization, such as a
collaboratory, might support collaboration between LIS professionals and
academics in research, potentially transforming the way research between these
two groups is undertaken.
The purpose of this study was to examine how sociotechnical aspects of work
organization influence the initiation, development, and conclusion of collaboration
between LIS academics and professionals in distributed research projects. The
study examined the development of three collaborative projects from the start to
completion in two countries, Italy and another European country. The data analysis
aimed at deriving implications for the further development of theory on remote
scientific collaboration, and for the design of a sustainable collaboratory to support
small-scale, distributed research projects between LIS academics and professionals.
The research design, data collection, and data analysis were informed by Actor-
Network-Theory (ANT), in particular by Callon’s model of translation of interests.
Qualitative interviews and analysis of literary inscriptions formed the key sources of
data for the three case studies.
The analysis of how and why collaborations between LIS academics and
professionals initiated and developed revealed that the initial motivation to pursue
collaboration has to do with the lack of economic and organizational resources on
either or both sides, and with a genuine interest in a topic by both academics and
professionals. The case studies in this study were decentralized and bottom-up
projects in which LIS academics and professionals pursued collaboration because
they had a genuine interest in a given topic and not because they were mandated
by their employers, or they hoped to be acknowledged and promoted by them on the
basis of their participation in the project. Market conditions and/or institutional
pressures did not exert much influence on the start and development of these
collaborations, although one project was influenced by political considerations and
funding conditions in healthcare.
The patterns emerged from the findings of the three cases underpin the
development of a sociotechnical framework aimed at providing a better
understanding of remote collaboration between academics and professionals not
only in LIS but also in other fields affected by the research-practice gap.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Science
Institution
Department of Library and Information Science ; Enheten för biblioteks- och informationsvetenskap
Disputation
Torsdagen den 29 april 2010, kl. 13.15, Hörsal C203, Högskolan i Borås, Allégatan 1, Borås
Date of defence
2010-04-29
marisa.ponti@hb.se
Date
2010-04-06Author
Ponti, Marisa
Keywords
Actor-Network Theory
Collaborative Work
Information Science
Practice-Research Gap
Socio-technical Paradigm
Virtual Organization
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-89416-24-6
Series/Report no.
43
Language
eng