Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland. / Johnston, Jamie; Mierzecka, Anna ; Tóth, Máté; Paul, Magdalena; Kisilowska-Szurmińska, Małgorzata ; Khosrowjerdi, Mahmood; Vårheim, Andreas; Rydbeck, Kerstin; Jochumsen, Henrik; Rasmussen, Casper Hvenegaard; Pálsdóttir, Ágústa ; Olson, Anna; Skare, Roswitha; Høj Mathiasson, Mia.

In: Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, 05.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Johnston, J, Mierzecka, A, Tóth, M, Paul, M, Kisilowska-Szurmińska, M, Khosrowjerdi, M, Vårheim, A, Rydbeck, K, Jochumsen, H, Rasmussen, CH, Pálsdóttir, Á, Olson, A, Skare, R & Høj Mathiasson, M 2024, 'Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland', Journal of Librarianship and Information Science.

APA

Johnston, J., Mierzecka, A., Tóth, M., Paul, M., Kisilowska-Szurmińska, M., Khosrowjerdi, M., Vårheim, A., Rydbeck, K., Jochumsen, H., Rasmussen, C. H., Pálsdóttir, Á., Olson, A., Skare, R., & Høj Mathiasson, M. (Accepted/In press). Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland. Journal of Librarianship and Information Science.

Vancouver

Johnston J, Mierzecka A, Tóth M, Paul M, Kisilowska-Szurmińska M, Khosrowjerdi M et al. Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland. Journal of Librarianship and Information Science. 2024 May.

Author

Johnston, Jamie ; Mierzecka, Anna ; Tóth, Máté ; Paul, Magdalena ; Kisilowska-Szurmińska, Małgorzata ; Khosrowjerdi, Mahmood ; Vårheim, Andreas ; Rydbeck, Kerstin ; Jochumsen, Henrik ; Rasmussen, Casper Hvenegaard ; Pálsdóttir, Ágústa ; Olson, Anna ; Skare, Roswitha ; Høj Mathiasson, Mia. / Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland. In: Journal of Librarianship and Information Science. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{ba9dcb83c7574490b92f953cb5543354,
title = "Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland",
abstract = "The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 led to Europe's largest displacement of people since World War II, with significant numbers of Ukrainian refugees seeking shelter in neighbouring countries. International research attests to the crucial roles public libraries can play in the reception and integration of refugees. However, diverse professional and geographical contexts, as well as sociopolitical landscapes in which libraries work to support refugee reception and integration processes, necessitate ongoing and renewed focus on the topic. Therefore, this study examines how public libraries in Hungary and Poland responded to the influx of Ukrainian refugees, investigating their roles, programs, and partnerships. Using mixed methods, the study analyzes previously unexamined 2018 questionnaire results and conducts 12 subsequent interviews with library staff. Findings reveal that libraries addressed a spectrum of user needs, which fell into three broad phases. Initially, they focused on primary needs during the first phase, transitioning to settlement-related needs in the second phase. Variances between Poland and Hungary emerged during this phase, with Hungary primarily serving transient refugees and those with Hungarian backgrounds, while Poland saw a higher number of refugees of Ukrainian background settling. In the final phase, libraries emphasized literacy, integration, and cultural support, aligning with reading and collection-oriented services. Service provision was characterized by nontraditional services in the first phase, non-collection-oriented services in the second phase, and collection-oriented services in the third phase, with information provision central to all three phases. The study underscores public libraries' role in addressing community needs, rooted in their core values of inclusivity and community engagement. However, their effectiveness hinges on inclusion in community-level efforts, awareness among new groups, and securing economic and political support. Further research is warranted to explore library services to refugees globally amid increasing global migration and to understand the experiences of refugees using library services.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Public Libraries, Refugees, Library Development, Librarianship, Hungary, Poland",
author = "Jamie Johnston and Anna Mierzecka and M{\'a}t{\'e} T{\'o}th and Magdalena Paul and Ma{\l}gorzata Kisilowska-Szurmi{\'n}ska and Mahmood Khosrowjerdi and Andreas V{\aa}rheim and Kerstin Rydbeck and Henrik Jochumsen and Rasmussen, {Casper Hvenegaard} and {\'A}g{\'u}sta P{\'a}lsd{\'o}ttir and Anna Olson and Roswitha Skare and {H{\o}j Mathiasson}, Mia",
year = "2024",
month = may,
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Librarianship and Information Science",
issn = "0961-0006",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Public Libraries' Role in Supporting Ukrainian Refugees: A Focus on Hungary and Poland

AU - Johnston, Jamie

AU - Mierzecka, Anna

AU - Tóth, Máté

AU - Paul, Magdalena

AU - Kisilowska-Szurmińska, Małgorzata

AU - Khosrowjerdi, Mahmood

AU - Vårheim, Andreas

AU - Rydbeck, Kerstin

AU - Jochumsen, Henrik

AU - Rasmussen, Casper Hvenegaard

AU - Pálsdóttir, Ágústa

AU - Olson, Anna

AU - Skare, Roswitha

AU - Høj Mathiasson, Mia

PY - 2024/5

Y1 - 2024/5

N2 - The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 led to Europe's largest displacement of people since World War II, with significant numbers of Ukrainian refugees seeking shelter in neighbouring countries. International research attests to the crucial roles public libraries can play in the reception and integration of refugees. However, diverse professional and geographical contexts, as well as sociopolitical landscapes in which libraries work to support refugee reception and integration processes, necessitate ongoing and renewed focus on the topic. Therefore, this study examines how public libraries in Hungary and Poland responded to the influx of Ukrainian refugees, investigating their roles, programs, and partnerships. Using mixed methods, the study analyzes previously unexamined 2018 questionnaire results and conducts 12 subsequent interviews with library staff. Findings reveal that libraries addressed a spectrum of user needs, which fell into three broad phases. Initially, they focused on primary needs during the first phase, transitioning to settlement-related needs in the second phase. Variances between Poland and Hungary emerged during this phase, with Hungary primarily serving transient refugees and those with Hungarian backgrounds, while Poland saw a higher number of refugees of Ukrainian background settling. In the final phase, libraries emphasized literacy, integration, and cultural support, aligning with reading and collection-oriented services. Service provision was characterized by nontraditional services in the first phase, non-collection-oriented services in the second phase, and collection-oriented services in the third phase, with information provision central to all three phases. The study underscores public libraries' role in addressing community needs, rooted in their core values of inclusivity and community engagement. However, their effectiveness hinges on inclusion in community-level efforts, awareness among new groups, and securing economic and political support. Further research is warranted to explore library services to refugees globally amid increasing global migration and to understand the experiences of refugees using library services.

AB - The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 led to Europe's largest displacement of people since World War II, with significant numbers of Ukrainian refugees seeking shelter in neighbouring countries. International research attests to the crucial roles public libraries can play in the reception and integration of refugees. However, diverse professional and geographical contexts, as well as sociopolitical landscapes in which libraries work to support refugee reception and integration processes, necessitate ongoing and renewed focus on the topic. Therefore, this study examines how public libraries in Hungary and Poland responded to the influx of Ukrainian refugees, investigating their roles, programs, and partnerships. Using mixed methods, the study analyzes previously unexamined 2018 questionnaire results and conducts 12 subsequent interviews with library staff. Findings reveal that libraries addressed a spectrum of user needs, which fell into three broad phases. Initially, they focused on primary needs during the first phase, transitioning to settlement-related needs in the second phase. Variances between Poland and Hungary emerged during this phase, with Hungary primarily serving transient refugees and those with Hungarian backgrounds, while Poland saw a higher number of refugees of Ukrainian background settling. In the final phase, libraries emphasized literacy, integration, and cultural support, aligning with reading and collection-oriented services. Service provision was characterized by nontraditional services in the first phase, non-collection-oriented services in the second phase, and collection-oriented services in the third phase, with information provision central to all three phases. The study underscores public libraries' role in addressing community needs, rooted in their core values of inclusivity and community engagement. However, their effectiveness hinges on inclusion in community-level efforts, awareness among new groups, and securing economic and political support. Further research is warranted to explore library services to refugees globally amid increasing global migration and to understand the experiences of refugees using library services.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Public Libraries

KW - Refugees

KW - Library Development

KW - Librarianship

KW - Hungary

KW - Poland

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Librarianship and Information Science

JF - Journal of Librarianship and Information Science

SN - 0961-0006

ER -

ID: 391213140