Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T02:49:40.273Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ethical Dilemmas Facing Africanist Librarians, Archivists & Scholars Today

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Peter Limb*
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
Get access

Extract

The connections between our work as librarians, archivists or scholars of Africa and the structural foundations of research (in the form of archives, documentation, and publications) we often take for granted. This paper focuses on our ethical responsibilities towards acquisition of Africana, but the principles proposed as ethical guidelines are applicable to other kinds of research, such as fieldwork. I first discuss ethical questions in general and then address how ethics relates to African studies and Africana librarianship. I discuss related problems such as what I term the African “document drain.” In a forthcoming ARD article (Limb 2002c), I elaborate upon these themes with particular emphasis on how emerging new models of partnerships, together with new electronic tools, might help mitigate such problems.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Research & Documentation 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

An earlier version of this paper was presented to the University of Michigan Africa Workshop, February 2002.

References

Altbach, Philip & Teferra, Damtew eds. 1999. Publishing in African languages: challenges and prospects. Chestnut Hill, MD, Bellagio.Google Scholar
Cogburn, D. & Adeya, N. 1999. Globalization and the information economy: challenges and opportunities for Africa. www.un.org/Depts/eca/adf/infoeconomy.htm.Google Scholar
Darko, Kwaku Asante. 2002. Pitfalls in the African brain drain discourse. MotsPluriels 20; www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP2002kad.html.Google Scholar
Dick, Archie. 1999. The responsibility of intellectuals in South Africa today. Mousaion 17(2) 17-31.Google Scholar
Dumbuya, Mohamed Sulaiman 1994. Ethics and African Studies research, pp. 199-219 in Abdul Karim Bangura ed., Research methodology and African studies. Lanham, MD, UPA.Google Scholar
Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn, ed. Ethics and the profession of anthropology: dialogue for a new era. Philadelphia, PA, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991.Google Scholar
Hacksley, Malcolm. 2002. The National English Literary Museum (NELM): a case study in successful archival conservation in Africa, Innovation, 24, 9-13.Google Scholar
Harris, Verne. 2000. ‘They should have destroyed more': the destruction of public records by the South African State in the final years of apartheid, Transformation, 42.Google Scholar
Harris, Verne. 2002. Contesting remembering and forgetting: the archive of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Innovation 24, 29-56.Google Scholar
Hauptman, Robert. 2001. Technological implementations & ethical failures, Library Trends, 49, 433-40.Google Scholar
Hillebrecht, Werner. 2002. Archives, ethics, salaries, and the struggle: a view from Namibia, Innovation, 24, 25-31.Google Scholar
Jensen, M. 2001. African Internet Status 2001 <www3.sn.apc.org/africa/afstat.htm>>Google Scholar
Johnsen, T. 1998. Africana librarians on the information highway: do we need to reconsider our directions? Pp. 66-68 in Nancy, J. Schmidt (ed.), Africana Librarianship in the 21st Century. Bloomington, African Studies Program, Indiana University.Google Scholar
Leyten, H. ed. 1995. Illicit traffic in cultural property: museums against pillage. Amsterdam, Royal Tropical Institute; Bamako, Musee National du Mali.Google Scholar
Limb, Peter. 2001. New scenarios on Africa, African studies and the internet. Mots pluriels, 14 www.arts.uwa.edu.au/MotsPluriels/MP1801pl.html.Google Scholar
Limb, Peter. 2002a. Ethical issues in Southern African archives and libraries: what should be done? Innovation, 24, 51-58.Google Scholar
Limb, Peter. 2002b. The African &ldquo;document drain&rdquo; and its solutions: ethical dilemmas facing Africanists today, African issues (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Limb, Peter. 2002c. Accessing African archives, libraries and journals: partnerships, ethics and equity in the 21st century, African research & documentation (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Lipinksi, Tomas & Britz, Johannes. 2002. Rethinking the ownership of information in the 21st century: ethical implications, Ethics & Information Technology, 2, 49-71.Google Scholar
McBryde, Isabel (ed.). 1985. Who owns the past? Oxford, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mazarire, Gerald. 2002. Ethical considerations for Zimbabwean archives and the digital challenge, Innovation, 24: 39-45.Google Scholar
Mnjama, Nathan. 2002. Archival claims in Southern Africa, Innovation, 24.Google Scholar
Nyiira, Z. 2000. Information and communication technologies: experience with rural community telecentres. Paper to INET 2000 Conference.Google Scholar
Oyowe, Augustine. 1996. Brain drain: Colossal loss of investment for developing countries, The courier ACP-EU, 159, Sept.-Oct, 59-60.Google Scholar
Palmer, Norman. 2000. Sending them home: some observations on the relocation of cultural objects from UK museum collections, Art, antiquity and law 5, 343-354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, Dale & Pickover, Michele. 2001. DISA: Insights of an African model for digital library development D-Lib Magazine 7(11): www.dlib.org/dlib/novemberOl/peters/1lpeters.html.Google Scholar
Phukan, Sanjeev & Dhillon, G. 2001. Ethical and intellectual property concerns in a multicultural global economy. Electronic journal on information systems in developing countries 7 (3) 1-8: www.ejisdc.org.Google Scholar
Pickover, Michele & Peters, Dale. 2002. DISA: an African perspective on digital technology, Innovation 24, 14-20.Google Scholar
Riddle, N. 2001. Gilding the Lily, Research and creative activity, Jan., 7-9.Google Scholar
Sayed, Y. 1998. The segregated information highway: information literacy in higher education. Cape Town, University of Cape Town Press.Google Scholar
Schwartz, M. 2001. The nature of the relationship between corporate codes of ethics and behaviour, Journal of business ethics, 32, 247-62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Martha M. 2001. Global information justice; rights, responsibilities, and caring connections, Library trends,.49, 519-537.Google Scholar
Sturges, Paul & Neill, Richard. 1998. The quiet struggle: information and libraries for the people of Africa.. 2nd ed. London, Mansell.Google Scholar
Warren, Karen. 1999. A philosophical perspective on the ethics and resolution of cultural properties issues, in Messenger P.M. (ed.).Google Scholar