Unsettling Our Practices: Decolonizing Description at the University of Alberta Libraries


The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion, 2(1-2), 2018 
ISSN 2574-3430, publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/ 

Unsettling Our Practices: 
Decolonizing Description at the University of Alberta 
Libraries 

Sharon Farnel, University of Alberta Libraries 
Denise Koufogiannakis, University of Alberta Libraries 

Ian Bigelow, University of Alberta Libraries 
Anne Carr-Wiggin, University of Alberta Libraries 
Debbie Feisst, University of Alberta Libraries 
Kayla Lar-Son, University of Alberta Libraries 
Sheila Laroque, University of Alberta Libraries 

Keywords: academic libraries; cataloguing; decolonization; metadata; LIS practice 

Publication Type: poster 

Abstract 

Post-secondary educational institutions figure large in the Calls to Action of the Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission (2015) for the important role they can, and must, play in advancing 
reconciliation in Canada. For as Justice Murray Sinclair, Chair of the Commission, reminds us, 
the educational system has contributed to the negative relationship between Indigenous and non-
Indigenous peoples in Canada, and it is the educational system that will help us change that 
relationship (2015). Libraries, as sites of learning in and of themselves as well as key units within 
post-secondary institutions, have a responsibility and opportunity to contribute to reconciliation 
through collaborations and partnerships but also, and perhaps more importantly, through their 
own initiatives. The Canadian Federation of Library Associations (2016) recognizes this role, and 
has created a Truth and Reconciliation Committee to “promote initiatives in all types of libraries 
to advance reconciliation by supporting the TRC Calls to Action and to promote collaboration in 
these issues across the Canadian library communities” (p. 1). 

The University of Alberta, like many institutions, has taken up the Commission’s Calls to Action. 
The recently approved institutional strategic plan, For the Public Good (2016), affirms that the 
University is “committed to respectful relations with First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples” (p. 
8), and includes as an objective to “develop, in consultation and collaboration with internal and 
external community stakeholders, a thoughtful, respectful, meaningful, and sustainable response 
to the report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada” (p. 8). While the University 
of Alberta Libraries (UAL) has a long history of engaging with Indigenous individuals and 
communities in partnerships, service provision, and professional placements, we recognized one 
foundational aspect of our work which had yet to be fully interrogated with regard to improving 
service to our Indigenous users: our descriptive practices for all of our collections, including 
those locally digitized. 

Like most large academic libraries in North America, UAL currently relies heavily on Library of 
Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) and Library of Congress Classification (LCC) for subject access 
to both our print and digital collections. While the use of LC standards comes with many 

http://publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/,


Unsettling Our Practices 

The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion, 2(1-2), 2018 
ISSN 2574-3430, publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/ 

recognized advantages, it understandably causes challenges in terms of adequate and 
appropriate representation of the Canadian context. Increasingly, descriptive metadata is the 
first, most frequent, and in some cases the only interaction point between us and our users 
(Schaffner, 2009). And so it is vital that all of our users can see themselves appropriately and 
respectfully represented in our metadata records. The fact that this is not always the case, 
particularly with the use of standard vocabularies in describing Indigenous peoples, is certainly 

well documented (Duarte & Belarde-Lewis, 2015; Moulaison & Bossaller, 2016; Tomren, 2003). 

In the fall of 2016, UAL struck a Decolonizing Description Working Group to investigate, define, 

and propose a plan of action for how we could more accurately, appropriately, and respectfully 
represent Indigenous peoples and contexts through our descriptive metadata practices. The 
group included members from technical and public service, as well as UAL’s coordinator of 
Indigenous initiatives and an Indigenous intern (MLIS student). Over the course of its term 
(approximately seven months), the group undertook several core activities. A literature review 
sought out publications or presentations describing practical implementations of reformed or 
customized descriptive practices within an academic library. An environmental scan was aimed 
at discovering similar initiatives proposed or under way in institutions across Canada, and to seek 
opportunities for collaborations and partnerships. An analysis of metadata from the ILS and local 
digital/digitized collections was used to estimate the scope of work required to enhance existing 
metadata, and to revise workflows for metadata yet to be created. 

These activities revealed that while there were few examples of implementation of substantial 
reforms within Canadian academic libraries, the University of British Columbia’s substantial work 
at the Xwi7xwa Library being the exception, there was great interest in undertaking reforms, 
and a sense that the ground for such reforms is more fertile that it ever has been. The importance 
of focusing on one’s local context was recognized, and the notion of regional work combining 

into something national was often expressed. 

Armed with this enhanced understanding and seeing opportunities for collaboration, the Working 
Group will submit a set of recommendations to UAL’s senior leadership team this April. The 
symposium paper will provide an overview of the activities and findings of the Working Group, a 
summary of the recommendations and the rationale behind them, and report on projects and 

activities under way or planned since the group’s report was submitted. 

The following references were consulted in the preparation of the abstract and 
poster. 

Canadian Federation of Library Associations. (2016). Truth and reconciliation committee 
charter. Retrieved from http://cfla-fcab.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Committee-

Charter-Truth-and-Reconciliation-Committee-Approved.pdf 

Duarte, M. E., & Belarde-Lewis, M. (2015). Imagining: Creating spaces for Indigenous 

ontologies. Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 53(5/6), 677-702. 

Moulaison, S. H., & Bossaller, J. (2016, August). The moral imperative of subject access to 
Indigenous knowledge: Considerations and alternative paths. Paper presented at IFLA 
World Library and Information Congress. Columbus, OH. Retrieved from 

http://library.ifla.org/1327/ 

Schaffner, J. (2009). The metadata is the interface: Better description for better discovery of 
archives and special collections, synthesized from user studies. Dublin, OH: OCLC 

99

http://publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/,
http://cfla-fcab.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Committee-Charter-Truth-and-Reconciliation-Committee-Approved.pdf
http://cfla-fcab.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Committee-Charter-Truth-and-Reconciliation-Committee-Approved.pdf
http://library.ifla.org/1327/


Unsettling Our Practices 

 

The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion, 2(1-2), 2018 
ISSN 2574-3430, publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/ 

Research. Retrieved from 
http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/publications/library/2009/2009-06.pdf 

Sinclair, M. (n.d.). What is reconciliation? [video file]. Retrieved from 
https://vimeo.com/25389165 

Tomren, H. (2003). Classification, bias, and American Indian materials. Unpublished paper. 
Retrieved from http://ailasacc.pbworks.com/f/BiasClassification2004.pdf 

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. (2015). Calls to action. Retrieved from 
http://www.trc.ca/websites/trcinstitution/File/2015/Findings/Calls_to_Action_English

2.pdf 

University of Alberta. (2016). For the public good. Retrieved from 
https://d1pbog36rugm0t.cloudfront.net/-/media/isp/final-

doc/12885institutionalstrategicplan33final.pdf 

Sharon Farnel (sharon.farnel@ualberta.ca) is Metadata Coordinator at the University of Alberta 
Libraries, and a part-time Interdisciplinary PhD student researching the development of a 
framework for designing and applying culturally aware and appropriate metadata in digital 

libraries. 

Denise Koufogiannakis (denise.koufogiannakis@ualberta.ca) is Associate University Librarian 
responsible for Collection Strategies, Bibliographic Services, and Access Services at the University 
of Alberta. She holds an MLIS from the University of Alberta, and a PhD in Information Studies 
from Aberystwyth University. 

Ian Bigelow (bigelow@ualberta.ca) is the Cataloguing Coordinator at the University of Alberta 
Libraries and is currently a member of the Canadian Linked Data Initiative Metadata Working 

Group and the PCC Task Group on URI in MARC. 

Anne Carr-Wiggin (anne.carr-wiggin@ualberta.ca) is NEOS Manager, and coordinates Indigenous 
initiatives at the University of Alberta Libraries. She also serves on the Guiding Council of RISE 
(Reconciliation in Solidarity Edmonton) and is a team co-lead on the CFLA-FCAB Truth and 

Reconciliation Committee. 

Debbie Feisst (debbie.feisst@ualberta.ca) is Acting Head at the HT Coutts Education & Physical 
Education Library, University of Alberta, where she specializes in Secondary Education and the 

Faculty of Education’s Aboriginal Teacher Education Program (ATEP). 

Kayla Lar-Son (verbicky@ualberta.ca) is a Metis student currently enrolled in the Master of 
Library Studies, University of Alberta. Interested in issues of diversity, human rights, intellectual 
freedom, social responsibility and libraries, and alternative forms of knowing, Kayla is part of 
the de-colonizing description working group, which focuses on implementing the 
recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission within the UofA Libraries. She is 
also an Indigenous Intern in Rutherford Library, UofA, who works actively with Indigenous 
students through library information sessions at the Aboriginal Student Services Center and 
participates in Indigenous and diversity initiatives off-campus. She brings a treasured firsthand 

perspective into the discussion of diversity, empowerment, and traditional knowledge.  

Sheila Laroque (laroque@ualberta.ca) is an Academic Resident Librarian in Bibliographic 
Services at the University of Alberta Libraries. Sheila is originally from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 
where she finished her BA at the University of Saskatchewan in 2010. She finished her MI from 

100

http://publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/,
http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/publications/library/2009/2009-06.pdf
https://vimeo.com/25389165
http://ailasacc.pbworks.com/f/BiasClassification2004.pdf
http://www.trc.ca/websites/trcinstitution/File/2015/Findings/Calls_to_Action_English2.pdf
http://www.trc.ca/websites/trcinstitution/File/2015/Findings/Calls_to_Action_English2.pdf
https://d1pbog36rugm0t.cloudfront.net/-/media/isp/final-doc/12885institutionalstrategicplan33final.pdf
https://d1pbog36rugm0t.cloudfront.net/-/media/isp/final-doc/12885institutionalstrategicplan33final.pdf
mailto:sharon.farnel@ualberta.ca
mailto:denise.koufogiannakis@ualberta.ca
mailto:bigelow@ualberta.ca
mailto:anne.carr-wiggin@ualberta.ca
mailto:debbie.feisst@ualberta.ca
mailto:laroque@ualberta.ca


Unsettling Our Practices 

The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion, 2(1-2), 2018 
ISSN 2574-3430, publish.lib.umd.edu/IJIDI/ 

the University of Toronto’s iSchool in 2016. She is happy to be in Edmonton; a city with more 
than one professional sports team, but still back home in Treaty 6 territory. 

101

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	The following references were consulted in the preparation of the abstract and poster.