Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship

This dissertation aims to perform a sketch of the legal information domain in Singapore by employing the domain-analytic approach which was first proposed by Hjørland (1993). The domains of various disciplines, topics and communities have since been studied in the domain analysis literature of libra...

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Main Author: Lin, Clement Zikai
Other Authors: Brendan Luyt
Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152822
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1528222023-03-05T16:24:00Z Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship Lin, Clement Zikai Brendan Luyt Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Brendan@ntu.edu.sg Library and information science::Libraries::Special libraries Library and information science::Knowledge management This dissertation aims to perform a sketch of the legal information domain in Singapore by employing the domain-analytic approach which was first proposed by Hjørland (1993). The domains of various disciplines, topics and communities have since been studied in the domain analysis literature of library and information science (LIS), but law remains one of the areas with limited contributions. By exploring this topic, the paper hopes to contribute to both (1) the general pool of domain analysis literature; as well as (2) to generate discourse as part of the process of building up the landscape of Singapore law librarianship, which is still presently in its nascent stages. Law librarianship, like health/medical librarianship, offers much potential for studies in domain analysis in LIS due to it being fairly established with its own set of unique domain-specific information norms and practices. This study therefore examines different key aspects of the legal information domain but with a specific focus on Singapore, a common law legal system. The dissertation explores the following aspects of the Singapore legal information domain: (1) its conceptual boundaries; (2) its historical underpinning; (3) the information sources and services; (4) the producers and users of legal information; and (5) prevailing legal information organization practices. In each of these sections, unique elements of the Singapore legal information domain are articulated through the domain-analytic approach. Through this exercise, the value of domain analysis as a systematic approach to mapping out a knowledge domain is demonstrated. This study finds that domain analysis exposes certain assumptions about the Singapore legal information domain as well as gaps in the current literature, on top of its role of providing structured roadmap for Singapore legal information professionals to learn about the domain. The insight generated from the dissertation may be relevant to law librarians, knowledge management personnel, information professionals, the legal fraternity and LIS academics. As an exploratory piece, it is hoped that it will spur further research in the terrain of Singapore law librarianship. Master of Science (Information Studies) 2021-10-05T06:20:36Z 2021-10-05T06:20:36Z 2021 Thesis-Master by Coursework Lin, C. Z. (2021). Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152822 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152822 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Library and information science::Libraries::Special libraries
Library and information science::Knowledge management
spellingShingle Library and information science::Libraries::Special libraries
Library and information science::Knowledge management
Lin, Clement Zikai
Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
description This dissertation aims to perform a sketch of the legal information domain in Singapore by employing the domain-analytic approach which was first proposed by Hjørland (1993). The domains of various disciplines, topics and communities have since been studied in the domain analysis literature of library and information science (LIS), but law remains one of the areas with limited contributions. By exploring this topic, the paper hopes to contribute to both (1) the general pool of domain analysis literature; as well as (2) to generate discourse as part of the process of building up the landscape of Singapore law librarianship, which is still presently in its nascent stages. Law librarianship, like health/medical librarianship, offers much potential for studies in domain analysis in LIS due to it being fairly established with its own set of unique domain-specific information norms and practices. This study therefore examines different key aspects of the legal information domain but with a specific focus on Singapore, a common law legal system. The dissertation explores the following aspects of the Singapore legal information domain: (1) its conceptual boundaries; (2) its historical underpinning; (3) the information sources and services; (4) the producers and users of legal information; and (5) prevailing legal information organization practices. In each of these sections, unique elements of the Singapore legal information domain are articulated through the domain-analytic approach. Through this exercise, the value of domain analysis as a systematic approach to mapping out a knowledge domain is demonstrated. This study finds that domain analysis exposes certain assumptions about the Singapore legal information domain as well as gaps in the current literature, on top of its role of providing structured roadmap for Singapore legal information professionals to learn about the domain. The insight generated from the dissertation may be relevant to law librarians, knowledge management personnel, information professionals, the legal fraternity and LIS academics. As an exploratory piece, it is hoped that it will spur further research in the terrain of Singapore law librarianship.
author2 Brendan Luyt
author_facet Brendan Luyt
Lin, Clement Zikai
format Thesis-Master by Coursework
author Lin, Clement Zikai
author_sort Lin, Clement Zikai
title Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
title_short Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
title_full Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
title_fullStr Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
title_sort exploring singapore legal information : a domain-analytic approach to law librarianship
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/152822
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