April 15, 2008
The traditional role of libraries is evolving rapidly from being
collectors of information to managing expertise and knowledge in
forming partnerships, says Linda Stoddart, Ph.D., head of the Dag
Hammarskjöld Library and Knowledge Sharing Centre at the United
Nations.
Dr. Stoddart, who was appointed to her current position in 2004,
will bring her expertise in information management and knowledge
sharing to St. John’s University for the Annual Gillard Lecture,
hosted by the Division of Library and Information Science, on
Monday, April 14th, at 6:15 p.m. in St. Augustine Hall. The title
of her presentation will be “The Changing Role of Information
Professionals: Some Examples from the United Nations.”
Recognized internationally as an expert in information
management and knowledge sharing, Dr. Stoddart spent most of her
career in Europe but returned to the United States four years ago
to take the job with the UN, where she is also Chair of the Task
Force on Knowledge Sharing. She says that the traditional role of
the Dag Hammarskjöld Library has been to serve the staff and
delegates of the Permanent Missions to the UN but in recent years,
that’s changed. The Library is working with a network of more than
400 depository libraries—university, national, public, and
parliamentary—that they help, the UN Library director explains, “by
partnering with them to disseminate information, not just collect
it, and to spread access to all kinds of information, including
expertise and knowledge.
“We’re not just providing documents anymore,” she says
emphatically.
Knowledge management is not a discipline per se, according to
Stoddart. “It’s a way of looking at intangibles, of facilitating
and sharing expertise that can bring innovative change.”
“We have a slogan,” she continues, ‘Moving from collections to
connections,’ depicting not only the evolution to electronic
information, but also giving a new focus to the promotion of
communities, encouraging and facilitating networking, and bringing
people together.”
Additionally, Stoddart reports, the Hammarskjöld Library is
forming a virtual community with UN regional offices. While in the
past these offices each had their own intranet sites, a policy was
implemented to ensure that all offices in the UN Secretariat around
the world would be linked through the same intranet, called iSeek.
Stoddart and her staff facilitated the migration from these
intranet sites to iSeek, which is managed by the UN internal
communications unit based in the Hammarskjöld Library in New York.
“We’re creating community this way,” she notes.
But that’s not all that the information specialist and her staff
are working on at present. They’re taking the lead in helping to
coordinate programs and policies of the other libraries in the UN
system. “Networking has become a core activity, worldwide,” says
Stoddart.
Many challenges remain and there is a need for transformation.
She notes that information specialists are now going from being
“gatekeepers to facilitators” and warns that those in the
profession or those thinking about a career in information science
shouldn’t be thinking just “information or documents and
books.”
Stoddart says that the importance of gathering and sharing
information, using it to move an organization forward, is
resonating with businesses and not-for-profits and she reports that
some companies (Microsoft is one) have actually created the
position of Chief Knowledge Officer. “It’s an extremely important
position,” she notes “It has to do with encouraging collaboration,
working together, creating communities of practice and making
better use of organization’s know-how.”
Other growing areas in the information field are web content
management, intranet site management, and web governance.
Assuredly, it’s a good time to be in the profession, the Head of
Dag Hammarskjöld says. “There are lots of opportunities in all
sorts of fields—government, not-for-profit, academia—that can use
these kinds of skills in accessing information, understanding how
different professions use information and knowing how information
and knowledge play a role in decision-making in a business or
profession.”
We all have to face innovation and change, Stoddart concludes.
“We have to look beyond the library walls. We have to understand
the importance of information and how it and knowledge play a role
in understanding organizational culture and developing strategies
for success.”