Reiterating Visibility: Canadian Librarians’ Experiences of Racial Microaggressions via Findings from a Minority Librarians Network Redux Survey

Yanli Li, Maha Kumaran, Allan Cho, Valentina Ly, Suzanne Fernando, Michael David Miller
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Abstract

Based on the data from the Visible Minority Librarians of Canada 2021 Redux Survey, this study examines experiences of racial microaggressions among visible minority librarians in Canada. This research fills the gap in the library and information science (LIS) literature regarding racial microaggressions in librarianship in the Canadian context. Of the 148 respondents, 69% (n=102) experienced at least one stated racial microaggression. The result of a Kruskal-Wallis H test revealed a significant association between years of experience as a librarian and a librarian’s overall experiences with microaggressions. A post hoc test based on Bonferroni correction was run, which indicated that librarians with less than five years of work experience encountered microaggressions less frequently compared to those with 11–15 years of experience. For the ten stated types of racial microaggressions, the most frequently reported type was “I was told that people of all racial groups face the same barriers in employment or promotion,” and the least frequently reported type was “A colleague claimed that he/she felt threatened because of my race.” Fisher's exact tests were further performed to examine how the respondents differed in their experiences of each microaggression. The test results revealed that the librarians with different personal attributes (ethnicity, disability status, gender identity, language used) and employment attributes (librarian experience, management position, library type) had significantly different encounters with eight forms of microaggression. Professional library associations and libraries must strengthen education about racial microaggressions and offer support to visible minority librarians when they are confronted with microaggressive behaviours.
重申可见性:通过少数族裔图书馆员网络再调查的结果了解加拿大图书馆员遭受种族微冒犯的经历
基于加拿大2021年Redux调查的有色人种图书馆员的数据,本研究调查了加拿大有色人种图书馆员的种族微侵犯经历。本研究填补了加拿大图书馆工作中种族微侵犯的文献空白。在148名受访者中,69% (n=102)至少经历过一次公开的种族微侵犯。Kruskal-Wallis H测试的结果显示,作为图书管理员的年数与图书管理员对微侵犯的总体经历之间存在显著关联。一项基于Bonferroni纠错的事后测试表明,工作经验少于5年的图书馆员遭遇微侵犯的频率低于有11-15年工作经验的图书馆员。在10种种族微侵犯类型中,最常见的类型是“我被告知所有种族的人在就业或晋升方面都面临同样的障碍”,最不常见的类型是“一位同事声称他/她因为我的种族而感到威胁”。Fisher的精确测试被进一步执行,以检验被调查者在每一种微攻击的体验上有何不同。结果显示,不同个人属性(种族、残疾状况、性别认同、语言使用)和工作属性(图书馆员经验、管理职位、图书馆类型)的图书馆员在8种微攻击行为中的遭遇显著不同。专业图书馆协会和图书馆必须加强关于种族微侵犯的教育,并在少数族裔图书馆员面临微侵犯行为时向他们提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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