Call for Posters: Northwest Archivists Annual Meeting

The Northwest Archivists 2025 Program Committee welcomes poster proposals in broad support of the Annual Meeting theme Redefining Resilience: Advocacy, Values, and Creative Solutions. The conference will be held virtually May 13-16, 2025.  In the past decade or more, archives have lost staff and funding but are continually asked to do the same amount of work or even add more work. It is time to reframe the conversation from “doing more with less” to “doing our best with less.” What core functions of archives should be prioritized? What can we let go of? As archivists, how are we finding tools and building skills to fill the gap of what has been lost? How do we empower representation while protecting personal and professional boundaries? This theme invites proposals that cover practical solutions to these problems, ideas for advocating and collaborating for more resources, and suggestions for how to incorporate the new realms of blockchain, artificial intelligence, and digital preservation into our work. Students, new professionals, first-time presenters, and those in allied professions are encouraged to submit proposals.

Posters can be used to convey a variety of outcomes and ideas related to practice, theory, or research. Examples include – but are not limited to – summarizing an internship project, highlighting a workflow, demonstrating the use of a tool or technology, conveying an outreach or advocacy strategy, getting feedback about projects in progress, or sharing research findings.

Submit your proposal using the 2025 Poster Proposal Form

Proposals will be evaluated on clarity, originality, relevance to the field, and relation to the annual meeting theme.

The deadline for proposals is March 14, 2025. Notification will be made the week of March 17.

Questions? Please contact Program Committee Co-Chairs Libby Hopfauf orBecky Butler Gallegos

Best,

Members of the Program Committee

Kaitlynn Anderson 

Erin Baucom

Becky Butler Gallegos (Co-Chair)

Megan Garbett-Styger

Libby Hopfauf (Co-Chair)

Alexandra Joyaux

Laury Loftis

Emily Moore

Elinor Robinson

CFP: “Stitched Together: Needlework Making and Research”

United Kingdom

Stitched Together: Needlework Making and Research
21st-22nd August 2025
Royal School of Needlework, Hampton Court Palace

CALL FOR PAPERS

Keynote speakers: Dr Lynn Hulse, Raisa Kabir, Rose Sinclair MBE, Hannah Sutherland ACR

The Royal School of Needlework and Pasold Research Fund invite papers for the Royal School of Needlework’s first conference on historical needlework, ‘Stitched Together: Needlework Making and Research’. This conference will imagine needlework in its broadest sense, classified as all art and craft involving a needle, hook, or shuttle. This includes embroidery, plain sewing, lace making, knitting, crocheting, and weaving.

Needlework is universal, made around the world in countless ways for nearly all of human history. Through needles, hooks, and shuttles, we see economic, social, political, religious, and cultural changes. Needlework demonstrates who had access to what materials, how designs and stitches travelled the world via the Silk Road and across oceans, how the rise and fall of empires affected design and resources, how technology influenced changing aesthetics and craft practices, and how people have spent their time in business and leisure. 

Though needlework has long been the subject of academic, socioeconomic, and object-centric study, there have been very few opportunities for those who create needlework and those who research needlework to collaborate and learn from one another. It is the hope that this conference will bridge the gap between visual and historiographical analysis and knowledge of the historical, socioeconomic, and literary contexts of needlework with embodied knowledge of materials, techniques, and artistic choices. 

This conference is a meeting place for anyone working on topics related to historical embroidery to present their work and research. This includes work happening in academia, museums and heritage institutions, art studios, classrooms, and independent research environments. We encourage proposals from established and emerging scholars, makers, curators, conservators, and anyone whose work is relevant to discussions about historical needlework in any capacity.  

We invite proposals for 15-minute presentations. These can take any format, such as academic papers, conversations between makers and researchers, or demonstrations. We are especially interested in presentations that explore the potential of collaboration between those who use historical needlework in different ways. Topics may include but are not limited to: 

  • New discoveries in the field of historical needlework 
  • The relationship between making and research
  • Conservation of historical needlework
  • Curating historical needlework
  • Marginalised needleworkers (race, gender, class, region, technique) 
  • Historic needlework networks, especially global ones 
  • Studying historical needlework through making 
  • Potential for collaboration between various stakeholders in the world of historical embroidery

Proposal deadline: Monday, 14th April 2025

Please send a paper title, abstract (maximum 250 words), and bio (maximum 50 words) to collection@royal-needlework.org.uk. Decisions will be made by mid-May.

The conference will allow for virtual attendance via Zoom webinar but only in-person presentations will be considered.

Contact Email

collection@royal-needlework.org.uk

URL: https://royal-needlework.org.uk/stitched-together-conference-call-for-papers/

CFP: ACRL Women and Gender Studies Section Research Committee – Virtual Program – May 21, 2025

The ACRL Women and Gender Studies Section Research Committee invites you to submit proposals for lightning talks that explore critical topics in library and information science, possible topics include but are not limited to:

  • Intellectual Freedom
  • Gender and Technology
  • Women’s Health
  • LGBTQ+ Experience, perspectives, support
  • Teaching and Learning

We seek dynamic, thought-provoking presentations that can spark discussions, share strategies, and inspire action within the library and information profession.

Date: Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Time: 2 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. EST

Location: Virtual via Zoom 

Submission Deadline: Monday, March 24, 2025 (Extended)

Submission link: ACRL Women and Gender Studies Section Research Committee Call for Lightning Talks 2025

Please reach out to the committee with any questions via email: wgssresearch@gmail.com

Warmly,

Melissa Chomintra

WGSS Research Committee Chair

New Issue: Archival Science

Archival Science 25, no. 1 (2025)

Breaking the boxes: archival praxes and dignity in messiness
Lingyu Wang

“Until dignity becomes customary” archiving the #28A strike in Colombia
Marta Lucía Giraldo, Sandra Arenas, Duan Ramirez

“Provenance informing restitution: the case of Isleta paintings”
Peter Botticelli

Permission to archive: curating and contesting Palestinian history
Anne Irfan, Jo Kelcey

Conceptualizing aggregate-level description in web archives
Emily Maemura

Divergence and dialogue: analyzing the linguistic turn of the archive in digital humanities research
Jiaqing Long, Viviane Frings‑Hessami, Huiling Feng

Archive and library special collections as proxy data: reconstructing the American chestnut blight through digitized collections
Nicole Wood

Introducing the legacies and trajectories of trauma to the archival field
Anna Sexton

An archival world turns: Armenian women’s archives in Southeast Michigan
Nazelie Doghramadjian, Patricia Garcia, Ricardo Punzalan

Seventy years of strenuous efforts: tracing the development of archival higher education in China (1952–2022)
Jiarui Sun

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Rebecca Carlson, Emily P. Jones, Christopher S. Wisniewski, Jennifer N. Wisniewski, Emma Barrett-Catton, Michael Wolcott, Fei Yu. “Librarians’ contributions to and impact on pharmacy scholarship: A bibliometric analysis using a systematic approach.” The Journal of Academic Librarianship, Volume 51, Issue 2, 2025

Fleischhacker, D., Kern, R. & Göderle, W. “Enhancing OCR in historical documents with complex layouts through machine learning.” International Journal on Digital Libraries 26, 3 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-025-00413-z

Books

Preservation in Perspective: International Strategies for the Preservation of Written Cultural Heritage
Edited by: Koordinierungsstelle für die Erhaltung des schriftlichen Kulturguts (KEK)
De Gruyter, 2024

The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities
Edited By Isabel Galina Russell, Glen Layne-Worthey
Routledge, 2024

Reconstructing Performance Art: Practices of Historicisation, Documentation and Representation
Edited By Tancredi Gusman
Routledge, 2024

Art Collecting and Gifts to Museums: An Anthropology of Donations
By Paul van der Grijp
Routledge, 2024

Collecting Practices and Opisthographic Collections in Qumran and Herculaneum
Ayhan Aksu
Brill, 2025

Trends in Archive Archaeology: Current Research on Archival Material from Fieldwork and its Implications for Archaeological Practice
Jon Frey, Rubina Raja (eds)
Brepols, 2024

Sonic Pasts: Acoustical Heritage and Historical Soundscapes
By Mariana J López
Routledge, 2024

Curating Worlds: Museum Practices in Contemporary Literature
by Emma Bond
Northwestern University Press, 2024

Working with Conservation Data
By Athanasios Velios
Routledge, 2024

UNESCO, Religious Cultural Heritage and Political Contestation: Conflict of Values or Values in Conflict?
Clizia Franceschini
Springer Nature, 2024

Streaming Media and Cultural Memory in a Postdigital Society
By Renira Rampazzo Gambarato, Johannes Heuman
Routledge, 2024

3D Research Challenges in Cultural Heritage V: Paradata, Metadata and Data in Digitisation
Marinos Ioannides, Drew Baker, Athos Agapiou, Petros Siegkas
Springer Nature, 2025

Visualizing Film History: Film Archives and Digital Scholarship
by Christian Gosvig Olesen
Indiana University Press, 2025

Collections, archives sonores et objets musicaux : un patrimoine à préserver
Europe-Amériques, XIX-XXIe siècles

Collections, sound archives and musical objects: a heritage to preserve
Europe-Americas, 19th-21st centuries

Rivalan Guégo Christine (dir.) , Borras Gérard (dir.) , Oleksiak Julie (preface)
Rennes University Press, 2025

Archival Research in Historical Organisation Studies: Theorising Silences
Gabrielle Durepos, Amy Thurlow
Emerald Publishing, 2025

Amending Our Pasts and Futures: Observing Media and Place as Means to Memory
Edited by Nina Gjoci
Rowman & Littlefield, 2024

Conference Proceedings

Document et Archivage: Pratiques Formelles et Informelles dans les Organisations
Document and Archiving: Formal and Informal Practices in Organizations
Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on digital documents (CiDE.23)
Laurence Balicco, Viviane Clavier and Aude Inaudi (under the direction)

Reports

Vanishing Culture: A Report on Our Fragile Cultural Record
by Luca Messarra; Chris Freeland; Juliya Ziskina
Internet Archive, 2024

Theses/Dissertations

Archiving Social Media: a Comparative Study of the Practices, Obstacles, and Opportunities Related to the Development of Social Media Archives
Beatrice Cannelli
Ph. D. Thesis (University of London)

Linked Open Usable Data for Cultural Heritage: Perspectives on Community Practices and Semantic Interoperability
Julien Antoine Raemy
Ph. D. Thesis (University of Basel)

CFP: ARMA InfoCon 2025

ARMA InfoCon 2025 is heading to Phoenix, Arizona, this October 19-22, 2025, and we’re thrilled to announce that the call for speaker proposals is officially open! As the largest Information Governance event of the year, InfoCon is where innovators, visionaries and industry experts converge to shape the future of our profession. We’re seeking fresh, groundbreaking presentations that will inspire and inform our audience of thought leaders, professionals and change-makers in the information governance space. This is your chance to showcase your expertise on the premier stage for information governance. By becoming a speaker, you’ll not only gain industry recognition but also position yourself as a leader and propel your career to new heights. Don’t wait — submissions are open now until April 1, 2025. Seize this opportunity to share your knowledge, engage with top minds and leave your mark on the InfoCon community. Submit your proposal today — we can’t wait to see what you bring to the table!

More information here.

Call For Chapter Proposals: Student Workers in Academic Libraries (ACRL Publication)

The editors of book project Student Workers in Academic Libraries, a forthcoming title from ACRL, invite library professionals from all levels – library student workers, library staff, librarians, and administration alike – to share their work and submit chapter proposals for the volume. 

Several years out from the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a renewed focus on mentorship, career readiness, pedagogical approaches, and empathy-forward leading when it comes to higher education and student employment in academic libraries. Student workers don’t fit a mold; they are a diverse group ranging from first generation students to student athletes to parents. Student workers are the heart of the library and integral to its operations. Student Workers in Academic Libraries serves as a community space to showcase the whole student worker experience and help readers create high-impact work experiences. 

We invite chapter proposals that can take a variety of forms: case studies, best practices, pedagogical theory, or novel and unique program models. Chapters are strongly encouraged to include practical sample documentation for readers to modify and adapt such as job descriptions, applications and interview questions, contracts, orientation and training plans, budget templates, as well as reflections from current or recent library student workers.  

Potential topics include, but are not limited to: 

  • Developing job descriptions, recruiting, and hiring  
  • Orientation and training 
  • Project management and creating meaningful work for student employees 
  • Budgeting for student worker programs including federal work-study and non-work-study students 
  • Communicating expectations, performance evaluations, coaching, and feedback 
  • Incorporating transferrable professional skills and career-readiness 
  • Scaffolded work experience 
  • A mentorship approach to supervision of student workers  
  • Leadership philosophy as a supervisor  
  • Connecting your student worker program to your institution’s goals 
  • Program models such as student supervisor programs, graduate student programs, or internships 
  • Case studies on student workers in different academic library departments such as: Reference, Access or Public Services, Special Collections, Technical Services, Archives 
  • Equity and accessibility in the workplace in the context of library student workers 
  • Working with and within labor unions 

Timeline: 

  • Chapter proposals due April 1, 2025 
  • Notifications sent by May 1, 2025 
  • Final chapters submitted July 11, 2025 
  • Feedback and revisions September and October 2025 

Chapter proposals should include the names of all contributing authors, a contact email for the main author, a working title, 3-5 keywords describing your proposed topic, a description of your proposed chapter that does not exceed 500 words, and a list of potential sample documents your chapter would include. 

In the proposal review process, we will prioritize practical applications of proposals that focus on critical perspectives such as (but not limited to): gender and sexuality theory, critical race and ethnicity studies, disability studies, neurodiversity, decolonization, and other perspectives and experiences underrepresented in both libraries and academia. We also encourage those new to publishing to submit. 

Chapters should be no more than 5,000 words in Times New Roman, 12-point font, double-spaced, and citations in Chicago Manual of Style notes and bibliography. 

If you are interested in submitting a chapter proposal, please fill out the Microsoft Form by April 1, 2025.  

Note: the editors of this book believe in compassion-based care, mentorship, and communication at all levels. We understand the stress and anxiety involved in submitting items for review and publication, and strive to ensure transparency, respect, and support to all who submit.

For any questions, please contact Maria Planansky, Mechele Romanchock, and Rai Yiannakos at studentworkersinlibraries@gmail.com.  

New/Recent Issues: Information & Culture

Information & Culture has posted several new issues from 2023-2024.
(subscription)

The most recent issue is Volume 59 Issue 3 (Dec 2024)

“My Word Is My Bond”: A Primer for Information Scholars on Accountability and Misinformation
by William Aspray

The Construction of the Virtual Museum in the Forbidden City of China
by Du Dalong

Readerly Cartography: Finding Fictional Places and Actual Readers on Digital Maps
by Jennifer Burek Pierce

Identity for Sale: Authenticity, Commodification, and Agency in YouTube Influencers
by Aysha M. Vear and Judith E. Rosenbaum

The Affect Lab: The History and Limits of Measuring Emotion by Grant Bollmer (review)
Sakshi Chanana

Discriminating Data: Correlation, Neighborhoods, and a New Politics of Recognition by Wendy Hui Kyong Chun (review)
Bea Wohl

Writing the Revolution: Wikipedia and the Survival of Facts in the Digital Age by Heather Ford (review)
Steve Jankowski

Data and Democracy at Work: Advanced Information Technologies, Labor Law, and the New Working Class by Brishen Rogers (review)
Christine T. Wolf

The Secret Life of Data: Navigating Hype and Uncertainty in the Age of Algorithmic Surveillance by Aram Sinnreich and Jesse Gilbert (review)
James J. Brown, Jr.

Repairing Play: A Black Phenomenology by Aaron Trammell (review)
Lindsay Grace

Call for Expressions of Interest for a new Judge – Mander Jones Awards

Do you love reading? Would you like to read and assess the latest archival publications?

Consider becoming a Mander Jones Awards judge! This is your chance to play a vital role in the ASA’s efforts to encourage, promote, and recognise excellence in archival publications.

Since 1996 the ASA has been awarding the Mander Jones Awards for publications in the field of archives and recordkeeping.

The Awards are judged by a team of three judges, which reports its recommendations to the ASA Council. The 2024 judges were Sarah Lethbridge, Christine Yeats, and Sarah Brown.

In 2025 Christine Yeats and Sarah Brown are continuing in this role, and Sarah Lethbridge has stepped down. The ASA Council is grateful to Sarah L for her service to the Awards and is now seeking a new Judge.

Eligible candidates must be an ASA Accredited Profession (ASAAP) and should have:

  • substantial experience as a practising Archivist
  • a relatively wide acquaintance with Australian recordkeeping and archival literature

Judges need to commit an estimated 15-20 hours per week from mid-March to the end of July each year (depending upon the timing of the ASA Conference), to read and assess the nominated works, prepare judges reports, liaise with other judges, and develop citations for winning nominations.

We particularly encourage archivists working in the small archive sector to apply.

Please address Expressions of Interest and any questions to the Mander Jones Awards
Secretary, Dr Louise Trott
: by 12 March 2025. 

You can learn more about the Mander Jones Awards here.

Call for Contributions to Notes from the Field: Spring 2025

Notes from the Field, a publication of the TPS Collective, is accepting submissions about teaching and working with primary sources for three series of peer-reviewed blog posts: “Paleography,” “Teaching with Born-Digital Materials,” and “Artificial Intelligence.”

These series were crowdsourced during the 2024 Notes from the Field TPS Fest session. Grounded in issues your colleagues in the field are exploring, this call is intended to highlight a broad range of voices from all sectors of the TPS community. Please see the calls below for more information.

Series One: Paleography

What tools, lesson plans, and/or activities surrounding teaching paleography and the reading of handwriting do you use? By leaving this call intentionally broad, we look forward to learning about a wide range of your ideas regardless of era (Medieval, Victorian, etc.), language (English, German, non-European languages, etc.), or audience receiving the instruction (K-12, graduate, general public, etc.). 

Series Two: Teaching with Born-Digital Materials

We want to hear about the ways you teach with born-digital materials. Do you introduce them in tandem with analog materials? How do you incorporate born-digital materials into sessions, and what instructional contexts do you use them in? Does teaching with born-digital materials inspires new sorts of collaboration with your colleagues?

Series Three: Artificial Intelligence

In this series, we are interested in the ways emerging AI tools are impacting your instruction experience. Are you incorporating AI into your lesson plans? Are students relying on generative AI to complete assignments? Are you working with faculty partners to differently shape instructional experiences in response to AI? Is it making things easier or more difficult?


Contributions should be 1000-1200 words and are subject to Notes from the Field’s peer review process.

Posts will be published on a rolling basis beginning in April 2025. Full submission information is available in the Notes from the Field author and peer review guidelines.

Any questions, expressions of interest, or submissions can be sent to the Notes from the Field Lead Editor, Anastasia Armendariz, at ajarm@uci.edu.