Key research themes
1. How can digital archives and web archives transform the study and preservation of historical information?
This research theme explores the potential and challenges of using digital and web archives to understand, preserve, and represent historical information. It addresses how digital surrogates of historical data can be redocumented using contemporary paradigms, the socio-technical processes behind web archiving platforms like the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, and the role of born-digital and reborn-digital materials in historical research. This theme is significant because it highlights the transition from analogue to digital preservation and historiography, and the new methodologies needed to unlock the past from present-day digital resources.
2. What methodological and epistemological challenges shape the development of information history as a research field?
This theme investigates the foundational scholarly debates concerning the positioning, methodology, and explanatory frameworks of information history within broader historical and information science disciplines. It centers on issues of causation, explanation complexity, interdisciplinarity, and the conceptual clarity of ‘information’ in historical studies. Understanding these challenges is vital to advancing rigorous scholarship in information history that transcends mere description and integrates social, technical, and cultural dimensions of information processes.
3. How do the dynamics of language globalization, information infrastructure, and digital technologies influence the socio-cultural construction of information history?
This theme examines the intersection of linguistic dominance, technological infrastructures, and socio-political contexts and their impact on the production, dissemination, and historiography of information. It includes an analysis of English as a global language shaping information flows, the political economy of information infrastructures, and the challenges of intellectual sovereignty and cultural identity in the digital information age. These factors influence both the past and future construction of knowledge and historiographic narratives.