DLMay 12

The Future of Scholarly Blogs: Scholarly Bloggers' Perspectives on Long-Term Preservation

arXiv:2605.1190228.2
AI Analysis

For scholarly bloggers and information infrastructure providers, this paper identifies preservation challenges and requirements, but the findings are incremental and based on a small qualitative study.

This study investigates challenges German scholarly bloggers perceive regarding long-term blog preservation and their requirements for a sustainable information infrastructure, finding a structural deficit in institutional support and heterogeneous needs that suggest a decentralized infrastructure is needed.

Scholarly blogs have become an important venue for scholarly communication, yet they remain insufficiently integrated into digital research and information infrastructures, which places their long-term preservation and citability at risk. This study investigates what challenges German scholarly bloggers perceive concerning blog preservation and what requirements they articulate for a sustainable information infrastructure. Drawing on Star and Ruhleder's (1996) dimensions of information infrastructure as a theoretical lens, we conducted and qualitatively analyzed 13 semi-structured interviews with scholarly bloggers. The analysis reveals three connected themes. First, bloggers perceive a structural deficit in institutional responsibility and support: the long-term preservation of blogs is not systematically assumed by libraries, universities, or platforms, while bloggers are not sufficiently supported by their affiliated institutions. Second, bloggers articulate heterogeneous requirements like persistent identifiers, structured metadata, technical interoperability, and organizational sustainability. Third, governance preferences are characterized by distrust toward commercial and public infrastructures, compounded by concerns about geopolitical dependencies on non-European platforms. These findings demonstrate that no single centralized infrastructure can adequately address the diverse and context-dependent needs of bloggers. We argue for a decentralized information infrastructure for scholarly blogs and offer concrete recommendations for information infrastructure facilities, platform providers, bloggers and research performing organizations.

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