Critiquing Neocolonial Digital Barriers’ Impact on eLibraries and African Scholarship

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Annals of Anthropological Practice Pub Date : 2023-03-17 DOI:10.1111/napa.12193
Kamela Heyward-Rotimi
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Abstract

This article offers an overview of the Knowledge Exchange Research Group (KERG) West African Elibrary Collaborative (WAELC) study of West African scholars' systemic restricted access to digitized scholarly databases. WAELC, an ongoing qualitative and quantitative study, explores limited accessibility to current open-access digital repositories and platforms at some African universities. A practical output of the study is to inform the development of a sustainable institutional repository and support the development of an open-access multimodal digital platform that will feature scholarly and creative works of global Black people. The WAELC data addresses gaps in previous research on library access and usage at African universities and critically responds to the general African Digital Divide literature. A central focus of this article is to discuss the sociocultural and historical practices and processes that shape current digital access to electronic scholarship in Africa. Foregrounded in a Black feminist autoethnographic approach, the author's research process and researcher positionality were central to developing the WAELC research project. A significant finding of this research is that the systemic inequities framing global knowledge access and production in Global South institutions are reproduced in infrastructures weakened from colonial, neocolonial, and neoliberal social, political, and economic systems.

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批判新殖民主义数字壁垒对图书馆和非洲学术的影响
本文概述了知识交换研究小组(KERG)西非图书馆合作(WAELC)对西非学者对数字化学术数据库的系统限制访问的研究。WAELC是一项正在进行的定性和定量研究,探讨了一些非洲大学目前开放获取数字资源库和平台的有限可及性。该研究的一个实际产出是为可持续的机构存储库的开发提供信息,并支持开放获取的多模式数字平台的开发,该平台将以全球黑人的学术和创造性作品为特色。WAELC的数据弥补了以前关于非洲大学图书馆访问和使用的研究中的空白,并批判性地回应了非洲数字鸿沟的一般文献。本文的中心焦点是讨论社会文化和历史实践和过程,这些实践和过程塑造了当前非洲电子学术的数字访问。在黑人女权主义者的自我民族志方法中,作者的研究过程和研究者的立场是发展WAELC研究项目的核心。本研究的一个重要发现是,在全球南方机构中构建全球知识获取和生产的系统性不平等,在被殖民主义、新殖民主义和新自由主义社会、政治和经济制度削弱的基础设施中重现。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
21
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