Skip to content

Commit c95e0bd

Browse files
committed
update to a workshop
1 parent e5cad00 commit c95e0bd

2 files changed

Lines changed: 41 additions & 3 deletions

File tree

_data/speakers.yml

Lines changed: 32 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -512,3 +512,35 @@
512512
institution:
513513
bio:
514514
slack:
515+
- id: edward-corrado
516+
last: Corrado
517+
name: Edward Corrado
518+
pronouns:
519+
position-title:
520+
institution:
521+
bio:
522+
slack:
523+
- id: kirsta-stapelfeldt
524+
last: Stapelfeldt
525+
name: Kirsta Stapelfeldt
526+
pronouns:
527+
position-title:
528+
institution:
529+
bio:
530+
slack:
531+
- id: mark-swenson
532+
last: Swenson
533+
name: Mark Swenson
534+
pronouns:
535+
position-title:
536+
institution:
537+
bio:
538+
slack:
539+
- id: péter-király
540+
last: Király
541+
name: Péter Király
542+
pronouns:
543+
position-title:
544+
institution:
545+
bio:
546+
slack:

_posts/2026-03-05-hybrid-future-of-code4lib-journal.md

Lines changed: 9 additions & 3 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -13,7 +13,13 @@ location:
1313
room:
1414
speakers:
1515
- mark-eaton
16-
speaker-text: Mark Eaton
17-
title: "Hybrid: Future of Code4Lib Journal"
16+
- edward-corrado
17+
- kirsta-stapelfeldt
18+
- mark-swenson
19+
- péter-király
20+
speaker-text: Mark Eaton (in person); Edward Corrado, Kirsta Stapelfeldt, Mark Swenson, and Péter Király (online)
21+
title: "Hybrid: Future of Code4Lib Journal"
1822
---
19-
I represent five people who are the current active editors of Code4lib Journal (Edward Corrado, Kirsta Stapelfeldt, Mark Swenson, Mark Eaton, and Péter Király) and we are proposing that there be a conversation about the future of Code4lib Journal based on our email and the subsequent responses we received on the Code4lib mailing list in mid-November 2025. However, none of us can come to the conference. We are seeking a on-site person who could actually facilitate this discussion, which we would propose attending remotely, but wanted to get this idea in before the workshop proposals closed. Very open to a different forum, but it seems like there is appetite for discussing this as part of the conference program.
23+
Code4Lib Journal has long occupied a distinctive space within library technology publishing, offering an open, community-driven venue for practitioner scholarship that does not fit comfortably within traditional academic journals. As the journal has grown in visibility and scope, however, its largely informal structures—editorial, technical, and organizational—have come under increasing strain. Recent challenges, including a high-profile incident involving the accidental publication of personally identifiable information, have further highlighted the limitations of the journal’s current model and the need for more deliberate governance and shared responsibility.
24+
This post-conference workshop reflects on Code4Lib Journal’s evolution and situates the journal at a genuine crossroads. Drawing on the experiences of current editors and the community discussion initiated on the Code4Lib mailing list in November 2025, we review the journal’s origins, editorial aims, infrastructure, and recent crises, with an emphasis on lessons learned and future opportunities. The session invites participants to engage directly in the work of editorial planning: brainstorming paper and special issue ideas, drafting policy responses to emerging technologies such as AI, and considering alternative organizational structures for the journal. Our hope is that the workshop will encourage participants to seek to be involved with the journal going forward.
25+
Rather than proposing a single solution, this presentation frames the future of Code4Lib Journal as a collective project. It argues that sustainability, ethical publishing, and editorial resilience depend on broader participation, clearer structures, and an honest accounting of capacity and risk. Attendees will leave with a clearer understanding of how community-run journals function in practice, where they are most vulnerable, and how they can be strengthened through shared stewardship.

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)