Library and Knowledge Management in Times of Crisis: Search for Effective Models of Activity

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15802/unilib/2023_295173

Keywords:

university libraries, knowledge management, time of crisis, crisis experience of libraries, UniLibNSD conference, Ukraine

Abstract

In this issue, our contributors share their thoughts, ideas, and doubts, describing how they and their library teams have worked hard during the recent crisis years to develop, improve, or find effective models of operation to prepare for high-level negative events and minimise catastrophic consequences. Knowledge management is definitely about university libraries, which have shifted their role from accessing and managing information to accessing, sharing and managing knowledge. The papers describe the library experience of knowledge management in times of crisis as a combination of information, communication and human resource management. The crisis experience is considered in the context of the conference "University Library at a new stage of social communications development" 2023 as the experience gained in the working library environment of universities around the world, created in the rapidly changing, chaotic and often dangerous for people's health and life conditions of large-scale crisis events. By illustrating the challenges, surprises, and rewards we face in library and information science in different countries, we hope that the articles in this issue will provide us all with the motivation to keep going in a difficult period. At the very least, these articles will help readers to appreciate how our understanding of higher education librarianship continues to evolve in times of crisis.

Author Biography

T. O. KOLESNYKOVA, Scientific Library, Ukrainian State University of Science and Technologies (Dnipro, Ukraine)

Tetiana Kolesnykova,
Editor-in-Chief,
PhD Social Sciences, Communication,
Senior researcher,
Director of the Scientific Library

References

Antczak, M., & Gruszka, Z. (2023). Library model of community resilience during the war. Activities of selected Polish academic libraries addressed to Ukrainians. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 49(5), Article 102752. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2023.102752 (in English)

Dalkir, K. (2017). Knowledge management. In J. D. McDonald, & M. Levine-Clark (Eds.). Encyclopedia of library and information science (4th ed., chapter 253). London, UK: CRC Press. doi: https://www.routledgehandbooks.com/doi/10.1081/E-ELIS4-120053698 (in English)

Haydabrus, A., Linskiy, I., & Giménez-Llort, L. (2023). Social media use, fake news and mental health during the uncertain times of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ukraine. Behavioral Sciences, 13(4), Article 339. doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13040339 (in English)

Kolesnykova, T. (2023). Year of sustainability, openness, and new roles: A Ukrainian university library in wartime. Problems and Perspectives in Management, 21(2-si), 114-122. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.21(2-si).2023.14 (in English)

Yap, J. M., Nemeth, R., & Hajdu Barat, A. (2022). Digital Civic Engagement and Youth Participation: Hungarian LIS Students’ Perspective of Political Information. University Library at a New Stage of Social Communications Development. Conference Proceedings, 7, 232-242. doi: https://doi.org/10.15802/unilib/2022_270384 (in English)

Downloads

Published

2023-12-28

How to Cite

KOLESNYKOVA, T. O. (2023). Library and Knowledge Management in Times of Crisis: Search for Effective Models of Activity. University Library at a New Stage of Social Communications Development. Conference Proceedings, (8), 5–8. https://doi.org/10.15802/unilib/2023_295173

Issue

Section

EDITORIAL