CFP: IASA–BAAC 2026 Joint Conference: Archives in Times of Peace and War

Archives in Times of Peace and War: Safeguarding Audiovisual Memory, Identity, and Authenticity

Audiovisual archives preserve the voices, images, and sounds that define our shared humanity—but these same records are among the first casualties when a crisis strikes. From the Baltic region to Ukraine and beyond, archives have become both witnesses and targets in conflicts that test the limits of cultural resilience, digital security, and professional ethics.

This joint conference of the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) and the Baltic Audiovisual Archival Council (BAAC) invites reflections on how we protect both people and collections before, during, and after conflict.

How do we prepare in peace for the realities of war? How do we preserve the authenticity of digital records in an era of AI-generated misinformation? And how do we ensure that the archives of vulnerable and marginalized communities—especially queer, feminist, and immigrant archives—are not erased when visibility becomes dangerous?

We invite proposals that explore theory, practice, and lived experience across the full spectrum of archival work: from technical preservation to ethical frameworks, from front-line documentation to digital forensics, from regional cooperation to global solidarity.

Conference Sub-Themes

Preparedness in Peace: Building Resilience Before Crisis

  • Integrating risk management and disaster planning into archival practice
  • Regional cooperation, mutual aid, and safe-haven networks
  • Training and simulation for emergency digitization and continuity of access

When War Comes: Protecting People, Collections, and Data

  • Evacuation vs. protection in place—decision frameworks under pressure
  • Staff safety, psychological resilience, and remote coordination
  • Encryption, offsite replication, and secure data handover

Targeted Community Memory: Queer, Feminist, Immigrant Archives Under Threat

  • Strategies for concealment, coded metadata, and distributed preservation
  • Community-based archives as resistance and survival
  • Ethics of visibility and consent under repressive regimes

The Archive as Witness

  • Audiovisual evidence in documenting war crimes and human-rights abuses
  • Chain of custody, verification, and legal admissibility of AV records
  • Preserving dignity and consent in survivor testimonies

Digital Authenticity in the Age of AI

  • Verification and chain of custody for audiovisual evidence
  • Deepfakes, metadata forensics, and watermarking
  • Building institutional capacity for trust and provenance validation

Technical Resilience and Preservation Refresh Strategies

  • Managing LTO transitions, file-format obsolescence, and checksum integrity
  • Balancing cloud, hybrid, and on-prem storage models under duress
  • Sustainable refresh cycles and energy-aware digital preservation planning

Reconstruction, Repatriation, and Healing

  • Restoring collections and infrastructure post-conflict
  • Reconnecting displaced archives and digital repatriation initiatives
  • The role of archives in reconciliation, justice, and cultural renewal

Learning from the Past, Planning for the Future

  • Lessons from conflict-zone archives worldwide
  • Updating archival standards and conventions for an era of uncertainty
  • Reimagining the ethics of stewardship in a volatile digital landscape

Transnational Collaboration and Shared Stewardship

  • Cross-border partnerships for digital preservation and capacity-building
  • Shared infrastructures for validation, metadata exchange, and redundancy
  • Diplomatic and legal frameworks for international cooperation in crisis
  • Collective advocacy for the protection of cultural heritage under threat

As a membership organization, IASA is open to all. We do ask participants to acknowledge and adhere to our code of conduct. We hope you’ll join us this year in Vilnius, to share your stories & lessons learned. 

Please submit your proposal in English, by completing the form below, before April 13th 2026.

Description of Formats

Peer-Reviewed Contributions

All contributions must report on novel efforts. We do appreciate an honest and investigative view on your process, learning from failures matters as much as, if not more than, celebrating success! While we welcome service providers to tell their story, we will prioritize presentations that include the story of an implementation from the patron’s perspective. Should you choose to participate from a distance, please kindly indicate so on the form. To support a collaborative conference atmosphere, we will prioritize a critical number of on-premises presentations.

Presentations

We invite two kinds of presentations:

  • Long presentations (60 mins. including Q&A) must be novel, reporting on previously unpublished work.
  • Short presentations (30 mins. including Q&A) focus on new challenges and work in progress. 

Panel sessions  

Proposals for thematic panels to be held during the main conference program. Panel proposals will be judged on the merits of the proposal and relevance for the expected audience. 

Please detail the subject and desired outcomes for the panel discussion as well as the proposed panelists in your proposal. The Program Committee may identify individual thematic papers and invite submitters to form a panel or invite panelists to join a thematic panel. We encourage and prioritize panel proposals and panelists that reflect our diversity, equity and inclusion commitment to broaden subject matter content.  A respectful debate panel structure on a theme or topic is also very much encouraged.

Posters

Posters are ideal for reporting on emerging issues and on works in progress. Your abstract should clearly describe the topic to be presented and states its unique contribution to the field. Posters should aim to improve knowledge, show new technical capabilities, or share solutions and experience in the field.

Workshops and Tutorials

We welcome proposals for workshops and/or tutorials that address the conference themes for IASA.

Workshops are intended to be hands-on and interactive, and proposers are free to decide how to structure and design them. Workshops usually involve the development of a skill, related to the topic covered in the workshop. While workshops involve more hands-on learning, they should also allow for discussion, interaction and debate on the topic of the class.

Tutorials should focus on a single topic and designate whether it aims at an introductory level or an expert level. Tutorials allow time for group discussion of content and debate on the themes and concepts covered in the class. Tutorials need not be hands-on. Proposers are free to decide how to structure them.

Process

The selection of presentations will be made by June 1st by the Programme Committee. The presenters will receive their notification via email after this selection. The Programme Committee reserves the right to propose to the candidates to present under the Conference or the Forum parts of the event and/or in a different format.

Please note: All presenters will be required to register before the early bird deadline.

Submission form.

CFP: Upgrade: Enhancing Library Services with Technology (Virtual – November 12th & 13th, 2026)

Submit your idea today for Upgrade 2026! Upgrade will be held virtually November 12-13 2026. Conference sessions can take one of several formats, and you are welcome to submit multiple proposals!

  • Lecture presentation: 45-minute presentation + 15 min Q&A
  • Panel Discussion: 2-4 presenters focused on one big topic and sharing their experience
  • Lightning talk: 5-8 minute mini presentation/demonstration 

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • OER
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Virtual reality
  • Cybersecurity and data privacy
  • Media labs and makerspaces
  • Social media
  • Media literacy
  • Podcasts
  • Digital collections
  • Equity, accessible and inclusive technology

Selected lecture and panel sessions will receive one complimentary conference registration. Selected lightning talk and roundtable presenters will receive a discounted conference rate. For more information, visit the conference website

CFP: FIAT/IFTA World Conference

FIAT/IFTA World Conference 2026
São Paolo, Brazil – October 6-9

Deadline: March 24, 2026

Screen Memories in Dialogue: Learning from Diversity Memórias Audiovisuais em Diálogo: Aprendendo com a Diversidade

Media archives operate today in an environment shaped by constant transformation. Technological change, evolving media ecosystems, shifting institutional frameworks and growing social expectations challenge how audiovisual memory is preserved, managed, accessed and understood. In this context, archives are not only repositories of content, but active spaces where knowledge, practices and perspectives meet.

Under the theme Screen Memories in Dialogue: Learning from Diversity, the FIAT/IFTA World Conference invites professionals, researchers and practitioners to reflect on audiovisual archives as spaces of exchange, collaboration and mutual learning. Dialogue is understood here as a working principle: between institutions and communities, between regions, between professional cultures, and between past experiences and future challenges.

Learning from diversity means recognising that valuable knowledge emerges from different contexts, scales and traditions of practice. Across the FIAT/IFTA community, archives operate under highly diverse institutional, technological and cultural conditions. These differences are not obstacles to be overcome, but sources of insight that can enrich global archival thinking, inspire adaptation and foster more resilient and inclusive practices.

The conference seeks to create a shared space where experiences from broadcasters, film archives, sound archives, community initiatives, research environments and hybrid institutions can be discussed on equal terms. By bringing together perspectives from Ibero-America and beyond, the conference encourages contributions that highlight situated practices, regional innovations and collaborative approaches, while engaging with broader questions relevant to the international audiovisual archival field.

Full Call for Papers

CFP: ThriveLib 2026 conference – Reimagining Library Culture

ThriveLib 2026 is now accepting proposals.

Our theme, Reimagining Library Culture (Together), is grounded in the belief that joy and sustainability cannot exist without safety, dignity, and care.

We are intentionally seeking proposals that center the experiences and voices of people from historically and currently underrepresented groups in librarianship, and that name how systems of oppression shape library work and well-being.

ThriveLib 2026 is taking place in a moment of widespread instability that is shaping the lives and work of many library workers. Some are carrying far greater risk, grief, and exhaustion than others. We invite proposals that acknowledge these realities and explore how library systems and expectations can either deepen harm or offer meaningful support.

We welcome proposals that:

·           Speak from lived experience

·           Name harm without requiring solutions

·           Explore collective, capacity-aware approaches to change

You do not need institutional backing, polished outcomes, or traditional credentials to submit.

Speaker honorariums and free registration are provided.

Proposals are due by 12:00 noon Central time on Friday April 10, 2026. CFP details and submission link: https://www.thrivelib.com/2026-cfpThe Contact email – ThriveLib@gmail.com

CFP: Children’s Tesmonies. Unveiling historical and art-historical archives

Conference at the University of Bonn/Center for Slavery and Dependency Studies (BCDSS) Oct 22nd -24th 2026

PDF of full CFP

Children around the world witness brutal violence: in wars, through displacement or migration, and increasingly also through climate disasters. At the same time, children worldwide are threatened by physical violence and experience it as emotional and psychological violence (distress). Children leave behind a wide range of testimonies of their experiences of violence, which are only belatedly becoming the focus of research and children are thus becoming increasingly important as witnesses to violence. This shift in the importance attached to children as witnesses affected by extreme violence has been aided by a revaluation of children as future adults. The planned conference aims to complement this contemporary observation with a historical dimension, bringing different approaches into dialogue with one another. Understanding children as witnesses inevitably raises methodological issues. These have been far less widely addressed in historical research than in law and psychology.[1] For this reason, the conference will be fullheartedly interdisciplinary and aims at visual, material, archeological and textual archives of childhood, trauma, and violence.

[1] fundamental: Gail S. Goodman, ‘Children’s Testimony in Historical Perspective’, Journal of Social Issues, 40.2 (1984), pp. 9–31; Yuille, John C.: THE SYSTEMATIC ASSESSMENT OF CHILDREN’S TESTIMONY. In: Canadian Psychology/Psychologie Canadienne, 1988, 29:3, S. 247-263.

Contact Information

The conference is held by Claudia Jarzebowski and Birgit U. Muench, both of the UNiversity of Bonn, at the University of Bonn’s Center for Slavery and Dependency Studies.

Contact Email: claudia.jarzebowski@uni-bonn.de

URL: https://www.dependency.uni-bonn.de/en/about-us/people/principal-investigators/claudia-jarzebowski

New Issue: South African Journal of Libraries and Information Science

Vol. 92 No. 1 (2026): Stewardship of Documentary Heritage in Lesotho: Reflections from the Basotho Bicentennial Conference
(open access)

Editorial
Stewardship of documentary heritage in Lesotho: reflections from the Basotho Bicentennial Conference

Research Articles
Preserving and indigenising chieftainship cultural heritage in Lesotho: the case of Royal Archives and Museum
Matseliso Moshoeshoe-Chadzingwa

Safeguarding Basotho heritage: the role of Lesotho National Library Srvices in the digital preservation of national collection
Wole Michael Olatokun, Mamoeletsi Cecilia Monyane

Preserving the past, present and future: the case of Lesotho National Broadcasting Services
Ts’epo Joseph Rafoneke

Cloud computing as a disaster management tool for documentary heritage management: reflections by the National University of Lesotho
Tahleho Tseole, Olefhile Mosweu

Preservation management framework in library and archival institutions: a conceptual framework
Thatayaone Segaetsho

Preserving language through digital neologisms: a study of word-formation processes in the digital age
Beatrice Ekanjume, Maboleba Kolobe, Thuso Leoisa

Language and translation as tools for the archiving and preservation of Indigenous knowledge: the case of Lesotho
Mosisili Sebotsa

A case for black sartorial history: the role of orality, archives, museums, and libraries
Khaya Mchunu, Maneo Ralebitso, Kiara Gounder

Generating knowledge for archives, libraries and museums: oral history research methodology in the twenty first century
Neo Lekgotla laga Ramoupi, Maneo Ralebitso

Orality as a mechanism of preserving SeMoshoeshoe Basotho History
Keneuoe Anacletta Motšoene

The complexities of shared digital curation: a case study relating to Lesotho material held in the Royal Commonwealth Society collection at Cambridge University Library
Sally Kent

Invitation to participate: Teaching with Primary Sources and New Information Professionals

My colleagues and I would like to invite you to participate in a short survey that focuses on the education and experiences of new professionals who teach with primary sources. 

The purpose of this study is to learn more about the training, if any, those who teach with primary sources receive formally in grad programs or informally through mentoring, workshops, etc. Anyone over the age of 18 who is a new library or archives professional (<5 years in the field) is eligible to participate. If you decide to participate, you will be asked to answer approximately 25 multiple choice and free-response questions, which should take about 15 minutes to complete. Please do not put any information in your response that could be used to identify you. The informed consent and survey are available at towson.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9FYnjm8mvfa5rQW.

Data gathered by this survey will be shared with the Society of American Archivists and we are seeking to publish the aggregate results. Anticipated benefits of this study include greater insight into the background and needs of new professionals in regards to pedagogical training for archivists and librarians. 

The survey will be live until mid-April 2026. If you have any questions, please contact the Principal Investigator, Ashley Todd-Diaz (atodddiaz@towson.edu). 

Sincerely,

Ashley Todd-Diaz (atodddiaz@towson.edu)

Abigail Nye (anye@uwm.edu)

Josue Hurtado (josue.hurtado@temple.edu)

Lindsay Anderberg (landerberg@nyu.edu)

Morgen MacIntosh Hodgetts (MMACINTO@depaul.edu)

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Ilona Pikkanen, Matti La Mela, Hanna-Leena Paloposki, Jouni Tuominen. “A Critical Collection History of Nineteenth-century Women’s Letters: Overcoming the Occluded Archive with Data-Driven Methods.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 19, no. 4 (2025).

Eric C. Weig. “Extracting A Large Corpus from the Internet Archive, A Case Study.” Code{4}lib Journal Issue 61, 2025-10-21.

Corey Davis. “Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Web Archives: A Comparative Study of WARC-GPT and a Custom Pipeline.” Code{4}lib Journal Issue 61, 2025-10-21.

Seth Shaw. “What it Means to be a Repository: Real, Trustworthy, or Mature?Code{4}lib Journal Issue 61, 2025-10-21.

Karen Long and Eric Yunes. “From Notes to Networks: Using Obsidian to Teach Metadata and Linked Data.” Code{4}lib Journal Issue 61, 2025-10-21.

Osborne, Rebecca. 2025. “Lucky, Liz, and the General Hospital Archives: Archival Processes and Efforts in Soap Opera Fan Spaces”. The IJournal: Student Journal of the Faculty of Information 11 (1). Toronto, Canada:99–120. https://doi.org/10.33137/ijournal.v11i1.46627.

McCrea, Donna E.; Godfrey, Bruce; and Singh-Search, Elizabeth (2026) “Providing Access to Historic Aerial Photographs at the University of Montana’s Archives and Special Collections,” Journal of Western Archives: Vol. 17: Iss. 1, Article 2.
DOI: 10.59620/2154-7149.1201
Available at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/westernarchives/vol17/iss1/2

Books

Object-Based Learning: Exploring museums and collections in education
Thomas Kador
University College London, 2025

Trespassing in the Archive: Poetry in Conversation with History
Kristina Marie Darling (Anthology Editor)
Bloomsbury, 2025

Artifact: Encounters with the Campus Shooting Archives
Julija Šukys
West Virginia University Press, 2025

White Work and Reparative Genealogy: Reckoning with Ancestral Debt as a Path to Racial Reparations
Mary Watkins
Palgrave Macmillan, 2025

Heritage Building Conservation: Sustainable and Digital Modelling
Edited By Mohamed Marzouk
Routledge, 2024

Worker Writers: Community Archiving in Action
Jessica Pauszek
National council of Teachers of English, 2025

Gathering Together, We Decide: Archives of Dispossession, Resistance, and Memory in Ndé Homelands
Editors: Margo Tamez, Cynthia Bejarano, Jeffrey P. Shepherd
The University of Arizona Press

Towards a Participatory Approach to Cultural Heritage Management: Insights from Chinese Practices
Ji Li
Springer Singapore, 2025

Living Indigenous Archives
Kirsten Thorpe
Routledge, 2025

The Digitalisation of Memory Practices in China: Contesting the Curating State
Edited by Maximilian Mayer and Frederik Schmitz
Bristol University Press, 2025

Facsimile: Making, Likeness, and Medieval Manuscripts
Siân Echard
University of Pennsylvania Press

9.5mm Film and Participatory Media Before the Digital Age
Edited By Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes, Zoë Viney Burgess
Routledge, 2026

Les archives en performance, la performance en archive: Action, méthode, recherche
Archives as performance, performance as archives: Action, method, research

Anolga Rodionoff, Ross Louis
Hermann, 2025

Case Study

Case #32: How Did We Get Here? Using Archives to Study College Selection and Belonging in the First-Year Experience
Ben Gebre-Medhin and Abigail Glogower
TPS Collective

Report

Kosta, Mary Grace, Archivists of Religious Collections Section, 2024, “Society of American Archivists- Archivists of Religious Collections Section Survey of Religious Archives, 2024”, https://doi.org/10.15139/S3/SWMC59, UNC Dataverse, V2

Podcast

Archives in Context: cohosts Lauren Kata and Emily Mathay speak with Christina Zamon about her book Alone in the Stacks: Succeeding as a Solo Archivist, an updated edition that tackles the complexities of solo archiving in the 2020s.

Novels

La Dernière archive/The Last Archive
Camille Sirieix

The Archivist
Ti Mikkel

Call for Contributors: forgingUS with the Center for Digital Editing

The Center for Digital Editing would like to invite you to take part in forgingUS, a new project that brings together leading documentary editing projects, scholars, educators, and technologists to expand access to primary sources from the Founding Era and Early Republic. Centered on the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, forgingUS aims to create a free, public website featuring curated, document-based exhibits, interactive maps and timelines, and more.

We’re already at work on several exhibits related to the Declaration of Independence, and we’ve tentatively identified future areas of interest, including the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and Phillis Wheatley. That said, we’re very much open to new ideas discussing historical documents, individuals, and events between the dates of 1770 and 1812. We welcome any topics where your expertise can illuminate how documents were produced, circulated, revised, and remembered.

Participation in forgingUS is a paid opportunity. Content creators receive an honorarium of $1000 for their work on an exhibit. As an exhibit creator, you would be asked to:

  • Propose a topic.
    • Successful exhibits will be framed around a central, compelling question like “Why did the founders edit Jefferson’s draft of the Declaration of Independence?” or “How did colonists respond to the Declaration of Independence?”
  • Break the exhibit topic down into an outline of 3–7 short sections that contextualize the key topics, individuals, events, and documents related to the exhibit topic. Then, prepare the text.
    • Successful exhibits will include short, digestible segments written in language easily understood by the casual, history-loving public. Most importantly, it AVOIDS a “wall of text.”
  • Suggest ideas for engaging or interactive elements to be featured within the exhibit, like timelines, maps, image hotspots, short videos or sound clips.
  • Create a list of people, places, and events that you think readers might need to know to understand the exhibit.
  • Identify essential external resources that readers may use to explore a topic further.

Throughout the content development process, our team will support you in thinking through engaging ways to frame and present your digital exhibit. We will also handle the technical build and integration, allowing you to focus on scholarly input rather than platform mechanics.

If you are interested in participating, we invite you to submit your exhibit idea(s) here: https://forms.gle/X1kBCakDnfUvpQ8a9. For more information on what a forgingUS exhibit may look like or what the content submission process entails, please visit: https://sites.google.com/virginia.edu/forgingus.

New Issue: Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals

Collections- Volume: 22, Number: 1 (March 2026)

Introduction
Introductory Letter from the New Editor: A Tribute to the Editor Emeritus and a Gesture to the Future of Collections
Victoria Van Orden Martínez

Articles
Between the Shovel and the Showcase: Contextualizing the Categorization of Indus Valley Seals from Artifacts to Art
Swati Chandra and Koumudi Patil

Reimagining Zimbabwe’s Heritage in the Post-colonial Era: Navigating the Efforts and Challenges in Decolonizing the Zimbabwe Museum of Human Science (1980–2024)
Thubelihle Rejoyce Mnkandla, Tariro Zhou, Jonathan Nhunzvi, Shelvin Tapuwa Mapiti and Portia Mlambo

Handkerchiefs as Memorabilia at the Crystal Palace (1851): Addressing Gaps in Museum Object Descriptions
Sandi Stewart

Case Study
Visualizing the Sudan United Mission: Moving from Lists to Graphical Representations of Special Collections
Obinna Nwokike

Book Reviews
Book Review: Art as Asset: Preserving Your Investment
Dee Stubbs-Lee

Book Review: Museum Studies for a Post-Pandemic World: “Mentoring, Collaborations, and Interaction Knowledge Transfer in Times of Transformation”
Arunima Baiju