The Use of LAM-institutions in the Digital Age
Abstract
We analyze how user characteristics, such as country, gender, age, education, income, urban/rural, immigration status, and home Internet access correlate with the digital service usage in LAM institutions. By comparing patterns of use as reported by users in six European countries, we examine variation in patterns of digital use between the countries. Do differences indicate different trajectories of development towards multiple LAM futures, or do they indicate national LAM systems on different stages of development towards a shared future of LAM use? The lack of time-series data makes it difficult to conclude on whether national systems have changed and how they have changed, and calls for future data collection, preferably at five-year intervals. At this point, we present data from a survey to representative samples of the Hungarian, Swiss, German, Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian populations conducted in June 2017. The national samples vary from 1,002 respondents up to 1,021. Altogether, we have 6,050 respondents (see Audunson et al. (2019) for more information about the data collection process). This analysis is based on quantitative and qualitative data on digital use from the survey.
First, the chapter contains a review of professional and scholarly debates on LAM institutions and digital development; second, a presentation of the findings from the survey on the use of digital services in LAM institutions; third, a presentation of free-text analysis of the user responses on content accessed and activities engaged through digital LAM services; fourth, based on the findings we discuss the relevance of the LAMs as digital public sphere institutions today and implications for future LAM adaptation in the digital age.