Abstract:
The study aims to assess performance of TRs as a channel of information for development in
the Lesotho context. It concurrently evaluates how a specialized information unit of ISAS has
performed in its obligation to devise adequate mechanisms for managing the report literature
and meeting the development-related needs of users. In order to achieve that aim, the study
contextualized development as a process, state, and condition and highlighted some
development indicators for Lesotho. Agriculture and gender were selected as sectors of
development. Global conferences, as one of the many development strategies that generate
TRs heavily, were used as a benchmark. In the performance and impact assessment
methodologies, case study techniques were applied with ISAS as a site and one unit of
analysis. TRs on Lesotho were studied. Triangulation approaches were applied in sourcing
data. The academics, information workers, government officials, NGOs and aid agencies
based in Lesotho were surveyed. Research questions that guided the study centred on the
productivity, distribution of TRs, their management by intermediaries, use, non-use and the
effects thereon.
Seven types of TRs feature in the development process, namely Academic, Project,
Conference, Survey, Enquiry, Official and Special Committee Reports. TRs are produced at
varying levels depending on needs and approaches to development by producers or
commissioning bodies. Academic Reports are authored mostly by the academics. The
Government, Aid agencies and NGOs produce widely through external consultants/experts,
who utilize centres such as ISAS where commissioning bodies do not have information
services. TRs productivity is high and diverse in Lesotho, but capacity to manage the output is
seemingly low, and hence under-utilization results; ISAS’s out-dated mission, lack of, or
limited resources and de jure national support in the form of acts and statutes affect the
Institute’s TRs’ services. Production is gender biased, thus making for imbalance in reporting
on development. Agriculture as a sector is heavily researched and reported about, with little or
no commensurate benefits to the populace. Restricted materials are estimated at 30%, but most of the TRs are unaccounted for. Hoarding and poor records or information management leave
a vacuum that leads to a duplication of previous studies and production.
The study confirmed that TRs are required by all the surveyed groups. TRs are not of a
transient nature even though they reach a peak of topicality and use at certain periods. Where
the channel conveys factual data timeously, there are developmental benefits. Low or non-use
is common where there are no specialized information services especially within the civil
service. Such negative factors cause delays and infrequent currency, inadequate reporting and
erroneous budgetary allocations, for example. Seemingly there is no clarity on what restricted,
secret and limited materials mean. Major recommendations were made One concerned an
integrated approach to managing the channel. This would involve preparing a Manual for the
production of TRs which would clarify how to prepare them; for instance, the calibre of
personnel/experts who should author reports, the conditions to be observed, the timeliness
production, reliability of data used, and centres that would be acknowledged to then qualify for
commensurate financial and other support. The other proposes that the envisaged National
Research Council be given the powers to enforce the guidelines of the manual and related
functions. The last recommends assigning to the documentalists for classified TRs, the role of
managing classified items. Consideration should also be given to important issues raised in
the study, being the role of ICTs, sectors of development to be attended to, training and
networking in TRs. Further studies are also recommended mainly for the causes and effects of
the closures of information services that managed TRs’ in southern Africa; longitudinal studies
on the impact of non-use of technical reports in major sectors of development like Agriculture;
comparative studies on the impact of specialized centres in the developed and developing
countries. Further action is urged under the aegis of bodies like the Standing Conference of
Eastern, Central and Southern African Librarians (SCECSAL), Standing Conference of
National and University Libraries (SCONUL) and the International Federation of Library
Associations and Institutions (IFLA).
Description:
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy in Information Studies (School of Human and Social Studies),
University of Natal, University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, January 2002