[CivicAccess-discuss] Closing of NRCan Libraries

michael gurstein gurstein at gmail.com
Tue May 7 00:06:59 AEST 2013


Ah yes, but we will get continued enlightenment about the in's and out's of
the War of 1812, a suitable substitute I'm sure.

 

M

 

From: civicaccess-discuss-bounces at civicaccess.ca
[mailto:civicaccess-discuss-bounces at civicaccess.ca] On Behalf Of Tracey P.
Lauriault
Sent: Monday, May 06, 2013 6:02 AM
To: civicaccess discuss; Canadian Association of Public Data Users; CAGLIST
Subject: [CivicAccess-discuss] Closing of NRCan Libraries

 

I never knew I would grow up to discover that the rock stars of my world
would be librarians and archivists.  They have been the knowledge
democratisers of the past couple of centuries and continue to be under the
radar in terms of assuring that the public gets access to information
resources.  They are however under attack from all sides, at a time when we
need them more than ever.  Sure, their form and methods have to change, and
they are, and media are shifting.  Irrespective, we need these data and info
diggers more than ever, as it is still institutions that produce trusted,
'official' or peer reviewed knowledge, and their products are not always
found or accessible via google search engines, no matter what all the new
undergrads think.

 

Today I am working in a library, 615 Booth in Ottawa, one of my favourites,
and it will most likely close in the next couple of years as did its other
NRCan cousins:

*	Pacific Forestry Centre, Victoria BC
*	Northern Forestry Centre, Edmonton AB
*	CanmetENERGY, Varennes QC
*	CanmetENERGY, Bells Corner Complex, Ottawa ON
*	Mines and Minerals. 555 Booth St., Ottawa ON 

(http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/library/6600)

 

The one I am in at the moment is under incredibly reduced public hours, and
because I am doing some special work with older items in the collection, I
have been given a kind of priviledged access.  The Mines and Minerals
section for instance, contains our Canadian heritage in terms of mineral
exploration in Canada, from 1842 onward when the Geological Survey of Canada
began.  The history of resource discovery, documentation, and exploitation,
is in fact the history of Canada and continues to be our economic driver,
yet the information about it is becoming less and less accessible to us.

 

Sure, we are opening data, but data need context, classification systems
emerged overtime even though we think the data we collect according to them
are facts - they are - except, they are socially constructed scientific
facts, the outcome of categorizing things a certain way according to a
certain norm.  How those came to be are stored here, in the libraries.

 

Open data is mere technocracy if context associated with the data disappear.
The libraries hold that context and it is librarians who are the key to
uraveling it.

 

-- 

 

Tracey P. Lauriault

Post Doctoral Fellow

Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre

https://gcrc.carleton.ca/confluence/display/GCRCWEB/Lauriault

http://datalibre.ca/
613-234-2805
 

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