Essential work, invisible workers: The role of digital curation in COVID‐19 Open Science - Pasquetto - Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology - Wiley Online Library

infodocketGARY's bookmarks 2024-11-23

Summary:

Abstract:  In this paper, we examine the role digital curation practices and practitioners played in facilitating open science (OS) initiatives amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In Summer 2023, we conducted a content analysis of available information regarding 50 OS initiatives that emerged—or substantially shifted their focus—between 2020 and 2022 to address COVID-19 related challenges. Despite growing recognition of the value of digital curation for the organization, dissemination, and preservation of scientific knowledge, our study reveals that digital curatorial work often remains invisible in pandemic OS initiatives. In particular, we find that, even among those initiatives that greatly invested in digital curation work, digital curation is seldom mentioned in mission statements, and little is known about the rationales behind curatorial choices and the individuals responsible for the implementation of curatorial strategies. Given the important yet persistent invisibility of digital curatorial work, we propose a shift in how we conceptualize digital curation from a practice that merely “adds value” to research outputs to a practice of knowledge production. We conclude with reflections on how iSchools can lead in professionalizing the field and offer suggestions for initial steps in that direction.

Link:

https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/asi.24965?af=R

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks
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Tags:

oa.new oa.covid oa.open_science oa.data_curation oa.medicine oa.lis oa.recommendations oa.pandemic oa.preservation

Date tagged:

11/23/2024, 11:23

Date published:

11/23/2024, 04:26