dc.description.abstract |
As the rapid changes in Library and Information Science (e.g. information technology) has
gathered momentum in recent years, the character of a professional librarian has also changed and
requires the revision of the organisational structures in which librarians perform their day-to-day
operations. The main purpose of this change is to maximise the job satisfaction of professional
librarians while enabling them to play an efficient role and reach their potential in the changing
environment.
Today, most professional librarians carry out their duties within a bureaucratic structure. They
seem to believe that the existing organisational structure has hindered the development of the genuine
professional in Iibrarianship. It has also been suggested in the literature that the loss of professional
autonomy in the bureaucratic situation can cost librarians their occupational authority and control over
library work. In recent years, many attempts have been made to suggest a 'more innovative'
organisational structure in which the professional librarians perform their work more efficiently with
higher job satisfaction. The basic direction can be summarised as moving from 'mechanistic' to
'organic' structure.
This article aims to investigate the causes of problems encountered by library professionals in
the bureaucratic structure and analyse how their job satisfaction can change in alternative structures |
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