Low Morale in Ethnic and Racial Minority Academic Librarians: An Experiential Study

Library and information science (LIS) literature about workplace bullying and burnout in academic libraries continues to grow, and a recent study has revealed the experience of low morale in the same environment. Concomitantly, research focusing on continuing recruitment, promotion, advancement, and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLibrary trends Vol. 68; no. 2; pp. 174 - 212
Main Authors Kendrick, Kaetrena Davis, Damasco, Ione T
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 01.09.2019
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Summary:Library and information science (LIS) literature about workplace bullying and burnout in academic libraries continues to grow, and a recent study has revealed the experience of low morale in the same environment. Concomitantly, research focusing on continuing recruitment, promotion, advancement, and retention problems for ethnic and minority librarians; links between North American library values and workplace abuse; and historiographies on the historic marginalization of minority librarians has also appeared in LIS literature. Citing aforementioned developments in LIS literature and the racially homogenous participant make-up of Kendrick's 2017 study of low morale in academic libraries, this follow-up qualitative study focuses on racial and ethnic minority academic librarians to understand this group's experience of low morale. Emerging data validate the development, trajectory, and health-related consequences of low morale; center the load of additional impact factors; and highlight the impact of low morale on recruitment and retention efforts of racial and ethnic minority librarians employed in North American colleges and universities.
ISSN:0024-2594
1559-0682
1559-0682
DOI:10.1353/lib.2019.0036