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Negotiating normative institutional pressures and maintaining legitimacy in a complex work environment: A multiple case study of three academic cataloging units

Advances in Library Administration and Organization

ISBN: 978-0-85724-287-7, eISBN: 978-0-85724-288-4

Publication date: 24 November 2010

Abstract

The user-centered approach to understanding information use and users has shaped research in library and information science (LIS). In a user-centered environment, catalogers are told to focus on users and adapt standards to meet users’ needs while following standards in order to be efficient in their jobs. This study describes three academic cataloging units as they negotiate both the demands to follow and adapt these standards to meet users’ needs. New institutional theory served as a framework for the study. The results suggest that standards and users are pressures that cataloging units negotiate in their jobs, along with demands for work efficiency and professional legitimacy. While negotiating these pressures, catalogers and cataloging units redefine their work jurisdiction and maintain legitimacy to remain relevant in a complex work environment. Understanding how catalogers negotiate the normative institutional pressures of standards and users leads to an understanding of the complex nature of work in areas that deal with issues of standards and users, shows how an area within a profession maintains legitimacy when the profession no longer values that work, and, finally, shows the limits of the user-centered focus in LIS practice.

Citation

Hoffman, G.L. (2010), "Negotiating normative institutional pressures and maintaining legitimacy in a complex work environment: A multiple case study of three academic cataloging units", Delmus E., W. and Janine, G. (Ed.) Advances in Library Administration and Organization (Advances in Library Administration and Organization, Vol. 29), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 243-292. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0732-0671(2010)0000029009

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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