Future libraries will play a wider range of roles. They will be more active in opening access to information and knowledge, in disseminating – not just collecting and documenting) global goods, in catalyzing knowledge sharing among people, in providing integrated platforms for information and knowledge management, and in providing a range of targeted services and products. Future libraries will be more and more ‘e-libraries’, providing access to current and archival knowledge in a wide range of digital formats. Future libraries will increasingly be places to exchange and interact, they will manage and facilitate processes of organizing and sharing and collaborating. Future libraries will be part of wider information and knowledge exchange systems in which ‘users’ will increasingly become ‘collaborators’ and librarians will become knowledge sharing catalysts and brokers.
IAALD - La información agrícola y el intercambio de conocimientos: Oportunidades promisorias para los especialistas en información agraria - Presentation Transcript
Lima, Peru 28 October 2009 Peter Ballantyne
“ all actors in the R&D process – from research design through to those who will apply the outcomes in the field – should communicate with each other and should have equal access to knowledge”
“ Innovation processes can be enhanced by creating more possibilities for actors to interact”
Inclusive, participatory approaches to knowledge-sharing.
Mobilize knowledge from a diverse set of sources.
Tap into many other information flows and find ways to document and provide access to this knowledge
Design information products and services for more diverse audiences.
Devise different, collaborative, interactive ways to share and exchange information.
New ‘communicators’ to support collaboration and interactive processes with different types of stakeholders
“ International public goods are … outputs of knowledge and technology … that are applicable and readily accessible internationally”
information and knowledge are not born ‘public.’ We must make them public, i.e., to be available, accessible, and applicable.
la información y el conocimiento no son intrínsecamente ‘públicos’. Es necesario adaptarlos para que lo sean, es decir, hacer que estén disponibles y que sean accesibles y aplicables.
'Open knowledge' is any content, information or data that people are free to use, re-use and redistribute - without any legal, technological or social restriction.
The main principles are:
Free and open access to the material
Freedom to redistribute the material
Freedom to reuse the material
http://www.okfn.org/about
“ En la economía de las ideas que la Web está generando, eres lo que compartes... El mayor cambio que provocará la Web en nosotros es que nos permitirá compartir con los demás de manera distinta y, particularmente, compartir ideas”.
“ In the economy of ideas that the web is creating, you are what you share … The biggest change the web will have on us is to allow us to share with one another in new ways and particularly to share ideas.”
Charlie Leadbetter
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Future libraries will increasingly be places to exchange and interact
Future libraries will be more and more ‘e-libraries’
‘ Users’ will become ‘collaborators’ and librarians will become knowledge sharing catalysts and brokers
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