"More than just a library": public libraries in th 'smart city' / (Registro nro. 46072)

Detalles MARC
000 -CABECERA
Campo de control de longitud fija 02328nab a2200181 a 4500
003 - IDENTIFICADOR DE NÚMERO DE CONTROL
Campo de control ES-BaOER
005 - FECHA Y HORA DE LA ÚLTIMA TRANSACCIÓN
Campo de control 20210630123911.0
008 - CAMPO FIJO DE DESCRIPCIÓN FIJA--INFORMACIÓN GENERAL
Campo de control de longitud fija 190102s2018 ||||| |||| 0|| ||eng d
040 ## - FUENTE DE CATALOGACIÓN
Agencia de catalogación original ES-BaOER
Idioma de catalogación cat
Agencia que realiza la transcripción ES-BaOER
100 1# - ENCABEZAMIENTO PRINCIPAL--NOMBRE PERSONAL
9 (RLIN) 17255
Nombre de persona Leorke, Dale
245 ## - MENCIÓN DE TÍTULO
Título "More than just a library": public libraries in th 'smart city' /
Mención de responsabilidad, etc. Dale Leorke, Danielle Wyatt, Scott McQuire
520 ## - RESUMEN, ETC.
Nota de sumario, etc. This paper argues that the transformation of the contemporary public library can be usefully understood by situating it within the context of the technology-driven urban vision of the 'smart city'. We explore this through a focus on a recent public library development in Australia where a high-profile new library features as a signature investment in the city's broader digital and 'smart city' strategies. In analysing the library's entanglement with the digital visions of this city, our case study reveals the uneven and often contradictory impacts that characterize the digital economy. We argue that the articulation of a technology-led agenda with neoliberal governance settings has produced institutional tensions that go to the core of the library's role in public life, challenging us to consider how libraries might best serve a range of rapidly changing and competing needs and publics. We find that while libraries have been forced to make certain changes, they have also developed proactive responses to new technology. Efforts to reinvent themselves as 'hubs', 'makerspaces' and co-located community centres offering enriched spaces for social gathering, targeted learning, and new forms of creative production, including entrepreneurial activity and innovation, are strategies for maintaining and extending the traditional remit of the public library. However, these transformations are not adequately recognised within the structures through which libraries are evaluated and funded, thus making them vulnerable to future governmental agendas. (Font: Autors)
595 ## - NOTA DE SUMARIO (LOCAL CIDOC)
Sumario 1. Introduction -- 2. Public libraries in the 'smart city' -- 3. Geelong, a regional 'smart city' in the making -- 4. Metrics and management -- 5. Conclusion -- References
700 1# - ENCABEZAMIENTO SECUNDARIO--NOMBRE PERSONAL
9 (RLIN) 17256
Nombre de persona Wyatt, Danielle
9 (RLIN) 17257
Nombre de persona McQuire, Scott
773 0# - ENTRADA DE DOCUMENTO FUENTE
Subcampo de control nnas
ISSN 1877-9166
Título City, culture and society
Información relacionada Vol. 15 (Dec. 2018), p. 37-44
942 ## - ENTRADA PARA ELEMENTOS AGREGADOS (KOHA)
Koha tipo de item Artículo

No hay ítems disponibles.

Con tecnología Koha