Alison Hicks
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alisonhicks0.bsky.social
Alison Hicks
@alisonhicks0.bsky.social

Associate Professor, Library and Information Studies @ucldis. Editor in Chief @jinfolit. information literacy researcher | european | she/hers/ella

Computer science 27%
Communication & Media Studies 13%
Pinned
Happy publication day to me! My monograph, Risk-Informed Information Practice: Ways of Knowing in an Uncertain World is published open access in Routledge’s Global Perspectives on Library and Information Science series, today (Paperback, Hardback also available…) www.routledge.com/Risk-Informe...
Risk-Informed Information Practice: Ways of Knowing in an Uncertain World
How do people become informed about risk and why is this important? This book draws upon three case studies to interrogate risk’s informational thread, including how people map and orient themselves t...
www.routledge.com

Yes, Amelia! And may it be the first citation of many!
This is the first time I've been cited, what an honour to have it be about a topic as important as this one! An excellent read.
"... best practices are better implemented as the default so that all candidates, regardless of whether they are neurodivergent or neurotypical, can benefit without the added burden of disclosure at potential personal risk."

Reposted by Alison Hicks

This is the first time I've been cited, what an honour to have it be about a topic as important as this one! An excellent read.
"... best practices are better implemented as the default so that all candidates, regardless of whether they are neurodivergent or neurotypical, can benefit without the added burden of disclosure at potential personal risk."
Are We Implementing Neuroinclusive Hiring Practices?: An Investigation for Academic Library Positions by Liz Bellamy, Alex Flores Glosson, James Glosson, Mary Oberlies, Michael Runyon and Paul Showalter

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Tonight at UCL, the Information Studies department, in collaboration with CILIP SLG and the Library Services Trust, hosted a screening of the @thelibrariansfilm.bsky.social documentary on book censorship and banning in the US. Barbara Band from SLG is talking about censorship in UK school libraries.

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Have an interest in Information Literacy and want to get started in academic publishing? JIL is looking for Associate Editors! journals.cilip.org.uk/jil/announce... this is a great opportunity to be mentored by Alison, and to see the inner workings of journals and research.
The Journal of Information Literacy seeks 3-5 Associate Editors to co-manage the content, quality, and direction of the journal. | Journal of Information Literacy
journals.cilip.org.uk

The Journal of Information Literacy has announced a new special issue on information literacy and censorship- please consider submitting your work! Given political tensions, we will be permitting pseudonymous submissions. Please contact me or @bookelf.bsky.social with questions- DMs open!

Reposted by Alison Hicks

EXCITING THINGS ARE AFOOT (Check your LIS-LINK).

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Seminar 2 of the LIS Research Seminar Series is now confirmed. Come and hear @patchedelbows.bsky.social talk about his brilliant research on HE librarians & social class. Some of you probably even contributed 😉

cassyni.com/series/KVXBf...
Cassyni | Science starts with a seminar
Seamlessly organise, run and publish academic research seminars. Get started in minutes.
cassyni.com

or the toll that the reconfiguration of professional work is having on core functions and long-term viability. Part of my wider project exploring information literacy and censorship, the paper is available free and open access in the journal of librarianship and information science!

Given that censorship creates legal, financial and employment risks for school librarians + risks to young people (eg driving reading into unregulated online spaces), I argue that framing the work of school librarians in terms of risk uncovers the hidden costs of censorship…

New paper alert! ‘Shelves under siege: School librarians as (temporary?) risk workers’, uses the concept of risk work to explore the impact that the risks of censorship are having on professional school librarianship journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Shelves under siege: School librarians as (temporary?) risk workers - Alison Hicks, 2025
Book-banning and censorship attempts are becoming increasingly prominent within UK school libraries. Creating legal and financial risk for school librarians, at...
journals.sagepub.com
Just read this - it was shared on LinkedIn. ‘To my users, “we couldn’t generate an answer for your question” translates to “your topic is not worthy of pursuing—change it.”’ While it’s nice to think that students will come & ask when they don’t find results, many won’t.

And the blocking of content…
“We Couldn’t Generate an Answer for your Question” - ACRLog
Editor’s note: We welcome a guest blog post from Jay Singley, Document Delivery and Circulation Desk Manager at North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. In March 2025, Ex Libris unveiled thei...
acrlog.org

Reposted by Alison Hicks

"It’s never been more important for us to ensure that libraries have the resources and support to create and defend diverse collections" Read @katiedd.bsky.social’s response to Reform’s attack on books:
bylinetimes.com/2025/07/08/r...
Reform UK's 'Children's Book Bans' Could Open The Floodgates for Censorship
The party that claims to champion "free speech" is now trying to crack down on books whose messages they disagree with, reports Katie Dancey-Downs
bylinetimes.com

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Calling all the UK public library workers! 📚 Seeking participants for UCL MA Library and Information Studies research project

#LibraryScience #Libraries #LibraryLife #LIS #LibraryTwitter
#LibTech #UCL #EDI #Librarians #LibraryStaff #CulturalHeritage #PublicLibraries #Research

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Did you know that although Section 28 was repealed in 2003, Kent County Council was the only council in England which voted to uphold their own version of section 28 all the way up until 2010. Way before Reform existed.

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Monday: The House of Lords debates my @indexoncensorship.org investigation into UK school library censorship, showing overwhelming support for freedom to read.

Friday: Kent's Reform council bans books with transgender topics in all of its 99 libraries and 5 library vans. Based on one complaint.
Kent council bans transgender books in children’s library section
KCC says the move came after a
www.bbc.co.uk

Reposted by Alison Hicks

Amazing to see this conversation unfold in the @houseoflords.parliament.uk today. It is great to see the recognition for the SLA and the work we do advising on #schoollibrary provision 👉 bit.ly/3Gqs5yL

Watch from 14:47:09 - Index on Censorship and School Libraries

#uksla #schoollibraryassociation

We do this at @jinfolit.bsky.social in the editorial- will see if we can integrate into the PDF too!

Reposted by Alison Hicks

‪Restrictions to US databases and scholarly work mean that researchers need new approaches to navigate research absences and silences rather than the more typical information overload, writes @alisonhicks0.bsky.social‬: www.timeshighereducation.com/campus/strat... #AcademicSky #EduSky
Strategic silencing: how censorship is reshaping scholarly discourse
Restrictions to US databases and scholarly work mean that researchers need new approaches to navigate research absences and silences rather than the more typical information overload, writes Alison Hi...
www.timeshighereducation.com

Oh, I’m so pleased, Lauren- thanks for letting me know!

Reposted by Eamon Tewell

Hey IL folks! If you thought censorship was just impacting school librarians, take a look at my new article in @timeshighered.bsky.social exploring what challenges to intellectual freedom mean for HE teaching librarians, too. How do we shift our work from overload to absence?

Reposted by Eamon Tewell

“The substantial challenges that authoritarian ideology poses to knowledge exchange mean that researchers must be prepared to safeguard their commitment to empirical insight.”

🖊️ @alisonhicks0.bsky.social via @timeshighered.bsky.social
#US #HigherEducation #AcademicSky #EduSky #Censorship
Strategic silencing: how censorship is reshaping scholarly discourse
Restrictions to US databases and scholarly work mean that researchers need new approaches to navigate research absences and silences rather than the more typical information overload, writes Alison Hi...
www.timeshighereducation.com

Thanks to @ioe.bsky.social library for covering worrying growth in censorship in school libraries in their most recent exhibition! Featuring my research as well as the fabulous work of @katiedd.bsky.social 🙌🏼

I know, right- I was so excited to see this!

And watch this space for an upcoming piece from me on the implications of recent attacks on intellectual freedom on information literacy and other academic work and practices…

Reposted by Alison Hicks

*CW Discussion of sensitive themes inc. sexual assault*

#CALC25 Recording no. 2 is up!
This is Heather Barr talking about her research into the information behaviour of survivors of sexual assault. Incredibly important and difficult research.
youtu.be/v4mTCO6PsMs
#CritLit #LibrarySky
Heather Barr -Looking for help: exploring the information behaviour of survivors of sexual assault
YouTube video by CALC Conference
youtu.be

Oh! I actually have questions about this… will DM.

I loved writing this book- and to my amazement, I am still as eager to think more about this topic as I was when I started writing, so please do let me know if you want to chat about this topic further! Thanks in advance for downloading, reading and buying for your library!

(And I promise that all the other chapters are well worth your while, too…)

If you are interested in book-banning in the UK, head to Chapter 4, which explores how the work of school librarians is changing in the face of censorship challenges. And if methods are your thing (surprisingly understudied in risk research), head to Chapter 7.

If you have never thought about information literacy and risk could be linked, take a look at Chapter 1, which presents my rationale for bringing these two concepts together. If you are an information literacy theory nerd, head to Chapter 6, when I theorise how all these ideas fit together.