Renewable knowledge in socio-technical systems: a service science perspective on public information infrastructures

dc.contributor.authorCrihană, Ioanacs
dc.contributor.authorSgârciu, Valentincs
dc.contributor.authorRebenda, Josefcs
dc.coverage.issue4cs
dc.coverage.volume35cs
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-06T08:53:41Z
dc.date.issued2025-12-12cs
dc.description.abstractAmid the accelerating digital transition, the knowledge systems face growing risks of fragmentation and epistemic discontinuity. To address these challenges, the public libraries are increasingly recognized as strategic socio-technical infrastructures that sustain the recovery, renewal, and long-term preservation of knowledge. Building on the view of knowledge as a renewable resource - one that can be created, reinterpreted, and recombined across social contexts - this paper introduces the concept of renewable knowledge, defined as the dynamic property of knowledge to be continuously updated, co-created, and adapted through human-service-technology interaction for public value creation. Anchored in the Service Science and Knowledge Commons theory, the study examines how public libraries operate as aggregators of renewable knowledge through the open data mediation, big data valorisation, and AI-assisted information services. Employing a mixed-methods design (survey and structured interviews across Romanian and European public libraries), the empirical results identify six conceptual clusters reflecting how libraries enact renewable knowledge via creation, utilization, organization, and distribution. Findings demonstrate that libraries move beyond static information management toward participatory knowledge stewardship, fostering resilience, sustainability, and collective intelligence within socio-technical ecosystems.en
dc.description.abstractAmid the accelerating digital transition, the knowledge systems face growing risks of fragmentation and epistemic discontinuity. To address these challenges, the public libraries are increasingly recognized as strategic socio-technical infrastructures that sustain the recovery, renewal, and long-term preservation of knowledge. Building on the view of knowledge as a renewable resource - one that can be created, reinterpreted, and recombined across social contexts - this paper introduces the concept of renewable knowledge, defined as the dynamic property of knowledge to be continuously updated, co-created, and adapted through human-service-technology interaction for public value creation. Anchored in the Service Science and Knowledge Commons theory, the study examines how public libraries operate as aggregators of renewable knowledge through the open data mediation, big data valorisation, and AI-assisted information services. Employing a mixed-methods design (survey and structured interviews across Romanian and European public libraries), the empirical results identify six conceptual clusters reflecting how libraries enact renewable knowledge via creation, utilization, organization, and distribution. Findings demonstrate that libraries move beyond static information management toward participatory knowledge stewardship, fostering resilience, sustainability, and collective intelligence within socio-technical ecosystems.en
dc.formattextcs
dc.format.extent35-50cs
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfcs
dc.identifier.citationRomanian Journal of Information Technology and Automatic Control-Revista Romana de Informatica si Automatica. 2025, vol. 35, issue 4, p. 35-50.en
dc.identifier.doi10.33436/v35i4y202503cs
dc.identifier.issn1220-1758cs
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0003-2139-7652cs
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0003-3356-4825cs
dc.identifier.other200001cs
dc.identifier.researcheridF-2117-2013cs
dc.identifier.researcheridA-6926-2013cs
dc.identifier.scopus35085237600cs
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11012/255774
dc.language.isoencs
dc.relation.ispartofRomanian Journal of Information Technology and Automatic Control-Revista Romana de Informatica si Automaticacs
dc.relation.urihttps://rria.ici.ro/en/current-issue/renewable-knowledge-in-socio-technical-systems-a-service-science-perspective-on-public-information-infrastructures/cs
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Internationalcs
dc.rights.accessopenAccesscs
dc.rights.sherpahttp://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/issn/1220-1758/cs
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/cs
dc.subjectService Scienceen
dc.subjectRenewable Knowledgeen
dc.subjectService Ecosystemen
dc.subjectKnowledge Assetsen
dc.subjectKnowledge Stewardshipen
dc.subjectService Science
dc.subjectRenewable Knowledge
dc.subjectService Ecosystem
dc.subjectKnowledge Assets
dc.subjectKnowledge Stewardship
dc.titleRenewable knowledge in socio-technical systems: a service science perspective on public information infrastructuresen
dc.title.alternativeRenewable knowledge in socio-technical systems: a service science perspective on public information infrastructuresen
dc.type.driverarticleen
dc.type.statusPeer-revieweden
dc.type.versionpublishedVersionen
sync.item.dbidVAV-200001en
sync.item.dbtypeVAVen
sync.item.insts2026.01.06 09:53:41en
sync.item.modts2026.01.06 09:32:14en
thesis.grantorVysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta elektrotechniky a komunikačních technologií. Ústav matematikycs

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