Call For Papers: Indigenous
Special Issue - Cataloging & Classification
Quarterly
Guest
editors Cheryl Metoyer and Ann Doyle invite contributions to an
Indigenous Special Issue of Cataloging & Classification
Quarterly. This special issue aims to engage an
international and interdisciplinary dialogue about Indigenous
approaches to cataloguing and classification. It
includes theoretical and applied research that examines processes
of representing and organizing documents or their resultant
products in Indigenous contexts. It values
practitioners’ perspectives and projects that envision new
directions or inspire innovation drawing upon Indigenous
methodologies and epistemologies.
The concept of the
catalog is broadly defined as a tool for organizing and
facilitating access to various kinds of information at different
levels of granularity – archival collection, song, image,
monograph, multimedia et al – that draws upon multiple sources of
metadata.
Call for
Proposals
Contributions are welcomed on a range of
themes. The list below is meant to be generative,
and we encourage contributors to be creative in their
interpretations of topics that fit the theme of representing,
ordering, and accessing information in Indigenous
contexts.
·
Indigenous theoretical,
conceptual and methodological approaches to representing, ordering,
and accessing information;
·
Indigenous and tribal libraries’
cataloguing and classification;
·
Structural bases for organizing
information in Indigenous contexts;
·
Indigenous names, naming and
authority control;
·
Collaboration and partnerships
(community/academy; tribal and non-tribal institutions);
·
Indigenous information ethics/
ethics of Indigenous information;
·
Cataloguing and classification
for reconciliation;
·
The UN Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples (UN 2007) and bibliographic
organization;
·
Development of iSchool education
and curriculum for cataloguing, classification, and knowledge
organization of Indigenous materials;
·
Indigenous research agendas in
cataloging and classification.
Proposals in the form of abstracts
(approximately 300 words excluding
references) should be sent to the guest editors by February 15, 2014.
Acceptance of a proposal does not guarantee
publication. All manuscript submissions will be
double-blind peer reviewed, and should be in the range of
5,000-8,000 words.
Guest Editors
Cheryl
Metoyer (Cherokee), University of Washington, is an Associate Professor and the Associate
Dean for Research at the iSchool and Adjunct Associate Professor in
American Indian Studies. Dr. Metoyer's research interests include
indigenous systems of knowledge with an emphasis on American Indian
and Alaska Native tribal nations; information seeking behaviors in
cultural communities; and ethics and leadership in cultural
communities. Ann Doyle serves as the Head of the
Xwi7xwa Library at the First Nations House of
Learning, the Aboriginal branch of the University of British
Columbia Library. Dr. Doyle’s research interests focus on knowledge
organization in Indigenous contexts, Indigenous education, and the
interaction of knowledge domains.
IMPORTANT DATES
Abstract submissions (up to 300 words): February 15,
2014
Notification of abstracts review (results): February 28,
2014
Manuscript submission: August 30, 2014
Peer review completed: October 30, 2014
Final manuscript revisions: January 15, 2015
Planned publication date: Spring/summer 2015
The complete special issue becomes available
approximately 3 months after all pieces of the issue are received
by the publisher. The individual articles become
available online (with DOI) as soon as they are completed (before
the whole issue is out).
Cataloging & Classification
Quarterly “is
respected as an international forum for discussion in all aspects
of bibliographic organization. It presents a balance between
theoretical and applied articles in the field of cataloging and
classification, and considers the full spectrum of creation,
content, management, and use and usability of both bibliographic
records and catalogs. This includes the principles, functions, and
techniques of descriptive cataloging; the wide range of methods of
subject analysis and classification; provision of access for all
formats of materials; and policies, planning, and issues connected
to the effective use of bibliographic records in modern society.”
…
http://catalogingandclassificationquarterly.com
Instructions for
Authors: “The journal deals with the historic
setting as well as with the contemporary, and with theory and
scholarly research as well as with practical applications. In a
rapidly changing field, it seeks out and fosters new developments
in the transition to new forms of bibliographic control and
encourages the innovative and the nontraditional.” …
http://catalogingandclassificationquarterly.com/instructions.html
Taylor & Francis' Author Services – LIS
Rights:
“Copyright is retained by the author, who
grants a license to Taylor & Francis to publish the version of
Scholarly Record, but who remains copyright holder and is free to
post versions of the Article – Author’s Original Manuscript
(preprint) and Author’s Accepted Manuscript (postprint) – at any
time, without embargo, with a link to the Version of Scholarly
Record.” … (Definition of Terms. Paragraph 3) http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/lisrights.asp
Please
direct all proposal submissions and inquiries to the guest
editors:
Cheryl
Metoyer
E: metoyer@uw.edu
Ann
Doyle
E: ann.doyle@ubc.ca
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