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“The changing same” of whiteness in the US LIS academy: a cathartic testimonial from BIPOC faculty scholars

Vanessa Irvin (Master of Library Science Program, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA)
Kafi D. Kumasi (School of Information Sciences, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, USA)
Kehinde Akinola (East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, USA)

Journal of Documentation

ISSN: 0022-0418

Article publication date: 17 July 2024

Issue publication date: 25 September 2024

150

Abstract

Purpose

There is little to no empirical research on the phenomenon of ways in which the racism of whiteness transpires within the faculties and classrooms of US-based ALA-accredited library and information science (LIS) education programs. We do have scholars publishing meaningful work exploring diversity-equity-inclusion topics and initiatives to evolve the LIS discourse on these issues (Honma, 2005; Chancellor, 2019; De LaRosa et al., 2021; Gibson, 2019; Mehra et al., 2023; Colón-Aguirre et al., 2022; Hands, 2022). This research substantiates the conceptual research that exists by empirically exposing the ways in which the racism of whiteness functions at the interpersonal level of work culture in LIS programs (i.e. the academy) in the US.

Design/methodology/approach

Adapting Baima and Sude’s (2020) modified Delphi Method, a focus group of 13 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) library and information science faculty members in the United States were recruited to participate in a one-time 60-min virtual Zoom session. Participants were engaged in three iterative rounds of reflective inquiry to reach a consensus of experience. The study design was embedded with critical race theory-based (CRT) ethnographic methods such as testimony (counterstorytelling), collective affirmation (shared narratives), and silence.

Findings

BIPOC LIS faculty (tenure-track and tenured) have similar ideas about whiteness and how it is operationalized as micro- and macro-aggressions in the LIS academic workplace, most significantly inside the classroom. The experience of whiteness was prevalent among all study participants in two areas: workplace meetings with faculty colleagues and classroom sessions (face-to-face and online) with students.

Originality/value

The findings offer empirical evidence to support the prolific conceptual literature in LIS discourse concerning ways in which critical race theory (CRT) interrogates LIS’s socio-professional injustices and inequities (e.g. Gibson et al., 2018; Stauffer, 2020; Leung and Lopez-McKnight, 2021; Jennings and Kinzer, 2022; Snow and Dunbar, 2022). There remains a dearth of empirical research that reports how whiteness is reproduced in the practices, knowledge, and resources that make up the ethos of the LIS faculty meeting and classroom. Documenting the testimonies of BIPOC LIS faculty solidifies the existence of whiteness as a toxic reality in the LIS academy.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

We wish to thank the BIPOC LIS scholars who participated in this study with the focus group, emails and all correspondence. We are grateful for your courage and support. This research received IRB approval from Wayne State University, Detroit, Illinois, USA.

Citation

Irvin, V., Kumasi, K.D. and Akinola, K. (2024), "“The changing same” of whiteness in the US LIS academy: a cathartic testimonial from BIPOC faculty scholars", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 80 No. 6, pp. 1597-1625. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-03-2024-0066

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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