“…Kwanya et al (2015, 4) note the 2.0/3.0 shift from information as commodity to 'information as conversation', reflected in the ACRL (2015) Framework for Information Literacy ('scholarship as conversation'); Hvenegaard Rasmussen (2016) describes the participatory library shifting from collections to connections, from access to participation, from one-way communication to dialogue and from clients to partners; while Nguyen's (2015) model has three central components (Community, Empowerment and Experience) and the eight subcategories include connection, sharing and partnering. The legacy of the participatory library is manifest in a renewed interest in internal, local and global collaboration, including 'all-in' deep and radical models (Atkinson, 2018;Horton, 2013;Neal, 2011), a strategic focus on engagement and embedded librarianship (Díaz, 2014;Schlak, 2018;Shumaker, 2012) and growing deployment of participatory design methods, library anthropologists/ethnographers and user experience (UX) librarians (Fried Foster, 2014;Priestner and Borg, 2016).…”