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Issue title: Bibliometrics Education
Guest editors: Dangzhi Zhao
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Petersohn, Sabrina
Affiliations: GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Computational Social Science, Unter Sachsenhausen 6-8, 50667 Cologne, Germany. Tel.: +49 221 47694 235; Fax: +49 221 47694 199; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: Quantitative metrics in research assessment are proliferating all over the world. The demand has led to an increase in bibliometric practitioners and service providers. Their professional roles and competencies have not yet been subject to systematic study. This paper focuses on one important service provider in evaluative bibliometrics - academic librarians - and analyzes their professional competencies from a sociology of professions perspective. To this end, expert interviews with 25 British and German information professionals and several documents have been analyzed qualitatively. Academic librarians compete with other occupations for professional jurisdiction in quantitative research assessment. The main currency in this competition is their expert knowledge. Our results show that academic librarians rely strongly on the know-how gained in their academic Library and Information Science (LIS) training and develop a specific jurisdictional claim towards research assessment, consisting primarily in training, informing and empowering users to proficiently manage the task of evaluating scientific quality themselves. Based on these findings, and informed by the theoretical framework of Andrew Abbott, our conceptual proposal is to adapt formal training in bibliometrics to the various specific professional approaches prevalent in the jurisdictional competition surrounding quantitative research assessment.
Keywords: Professional jurisdiction, evaluative bibliometrics, academic libraries, Andrew Abbott, sociology of professions, academic knowledge base, professional knowledge base, bibliometrics education, claiming vacant jurisdiction
DOI: 10.3233/EFI-150972
Journal: Education for Information, vol. 32, no. 2, pp. 165-193, 2016
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