Regular

Over the last while, two observations have been floating around in my head. The first is that several radically different kinds of work with different perspectives and values have been shoehorned into a single profession: technical services, systems/digital projects, public services/reference/teaching, etc. The dominant perspective on this is siloization, as...

On Friday, Code4Lib Edmonton hosted a day of lightning talks and workshops at the University of Alberta Library’s new Digital Scholarship Centre. The last session was a Fail4Lib session led by UAL’s Digital Scholarship Librarian Lydia Zvyagintseva. Using the Fyre Festival as a case study, participants in the session discussed...

(The following is the opening section of a paper I presented this summer at the Canadian Political Science Association conference. The full paper can be found in the University of Alberta’s Education and Research Archive.] Much of the analysis of platforms, data, and surveillance are predicated on a methodological individualism...

Next week I’m presenting a workshop for Code4Lib Edmonton, An Introduction to Machine Learning using Ruby, and I made sure to include a section on AI ethics, which is going to combine some of the lessons from Safiya Noble’s work, as well as some of the criticisms of analytics and...

Over the last while I’ve been investigating anti-positivist methodologies as a way to approach questions in librarianship. In “A ‘Common Sense’ in Librarianship” I looked at how hermeneutics - specifically Gadamer’s hermeneutics - might supplant a positivistic commitment to “documentation” in librarianship. In that post I commented on the strict...