The trouble with diverse books, part I: on the limits of conceptual analysis for political negotiation in Library & Information Science

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Abstract

Purpose: The term diverse books is increasingly popular yet persistently nebulous. The purpose of this paper – Part I of II – is to illuminate both that the concept is in need of a unified account and that conceptual analysis, though at first seemingly quite promising, fails as a method for identifying one. Design/methodology/approach: This paper utilizes traditional (or intuitive) conceptual analysis to specify the respective clusters of necessary and sufficient conditions that constitute four broad candidate accounts of diverse books. Findings: Though diverse books is a concept in need of a definition, conceptual analysis is not an appropriate method for adjudicating between the definitions we have on offer. This is because the concept is fundamentally political, serving as a resource for re-shaping collective social arrangements and ways of life. The conceptual problem outlined here requires for its resolution a method that will move us from a descriptive project to an explicitly normative one, wherein we consider what we properly work to achieve with and through the concept in question. Originality/value: This paper initiates a systematic analytical project aimed at defining diverse books. In illustrating a moment of methodological failure, it paves the way for a critical alternative – namely, Part II's proposal of an analytical intervention in which political concepts are defined partially in terms of their benefits vis-á-vis informational justice.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1473-1491
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Documentation
Volume76
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 21 2020

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Information Systems
  • Library and Information Sciences

Keywords

  • Conceptual analysis
  • Diverse books
  • Research methods
  • Social justice

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