Call for Papers – Journal Open Access No. 9 (Jan-June 2018) – Dossier “threatened Heritage”

Please note: this is a Google translated message.

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It is a popular saying that Brazil is a country without memory. Although we can criticize this famous maxim, the fact is that the country is full of endangered cultural assets, a patrimony that risks being lost forever. Whether due to lack of money, interest of the authorities or lack of knowledge of the population, several assets that make up the Brazilian cultural heritage are at high risk of loss of equity value. In various parts of Brazil, archival documents, books, buildings, public spaces, museum collections, practices, knowledge, languages ​​are in a state of deterioration or in danger of disappearing. Not to mention other parts of the world, where fragile state structures or wars endanger a priceless heritage for all mankind. To open a debate on this very important issue,

Papers will be received that contemplate a wide range of discussions about assets threatened, both empirically and theoretically, the risks to material and non-material assets, the treatment given to the issue in Brazil and in other countries, actions of multilateral institutions, as well as successful examples of reconstruction, revitalization or recovery. Also will be received free articles, translations, interviews and reviews. The submission deadline is April 13, 2018.

Submissions should be sent to the e-mail revista.acessolivre@gmail.com

New Recent Scholarship: Other Publications

Proceedings of the Association for Library and Information Science Education Annual Conference: ALISE 2018

The Copyright Permissions Culture in Software Preservation and Its Implications for the Cultural Record
Association of Research Libraries

Archiving Content from Mobile Devices: Challenges and Strategies,” SAA Case Study
Laura Alagna

Inserting librarians into the Canadian oral history conversation
Holly Hendrigan

Research and Learning Agenda for Archives, Special, and Distinctive Collections in Research Libraries” OCLC Research Report
Chela Scott Weber

The Many Faces of Digital Visitors and Residents: Facets of Online Engagement” OCLC Research Report
Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Vanessa Kitzie, Erin M. Hood, and William Harvey

 

OCLC Research and ALISE name recipients of 2018 Library and Information Science Research Grants

OCLC Research and the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) have awarded research grants for three projects to be conducted by five researchers. The awards were presented February 8 at the ALISE 2018 Annual Conference Awards Luncheon in Denver, Colorado.

  • Rachel Clarke, Syracuse University, will investigate means for wider, more systematic approaches to promoting diverse reading materials in libraries, furthering encouragement of and advocacy for diverse reading and media consumption, especially by those people who might not otherwise be inclined to pursue such resources. This project aims to allow library users to think in new and unexpected ways about resources from populations traditionally marginalized in literature and publishing through new developments in knowledge organization that serve traditional library services.
  • Violeta Trkulja and Juliane Stiller, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, will examine the information seeking behavior of refugee migrants in Germany, while pursuing a job, a training position, or following an educational path on the Internet. Their study will contribute to a better understanding of the varying degrees of digital skills of migrant refugees that can be used to design targeted courses and curricula that address online deficits.
  • Alexander Voss and Anna Clements, University of St Andrews, will perform a study to characterize the adoption of ORCID iDs, the use cases and perceptions of the system among researchers in different research communities, barriers to uptake the possible interventions. This work will deliver unique insights into how the envisaged direct benefits of the use of ORCID iDs are materializing for those stakeholders who, by signing up and maintain their record, have to carry out the work that is essential for its success.

OCLC/ALISE Library and Information Science Research Grants support research that advances librarianship and information science, promotes independent research to help librarians integrate new technologies into areas of traditional competence, and contributes to a better understanding of the library environment.

Full-time academic faculty (or the equivalent) in schools of library and information science worldwide applied for these grants of up to $25,000. Proposals were evaluated by a panel selected by OCLC and ALISE. Supported projects are expected to be conducted within approximately one year from the date of the award and, as a condition of the grant, researchers must furnish a final project report at the end of the grant period.

A list of previous OCLC/ALISE Library and Information Science Research Grant recipients is at www.oclc.org/research/grants/awarded.html.

Library Publishing Forum 2018

Registration is now open for the 2018 Library Publishing Forum (May 22-23), Owned by the Academy: A Preconference on Open Source Publishing Platforms (May 21), and the KairosCamp Editors Workshop (May 20-21).

Registration Instructions 

Instructions and fees are detailed on our website. New this year: Special discounted rates for students and attendees from low- and middle-income countries!

First-Time Attendee Scholarships 

The Library Publishing Coalition is delighted to announce a new program of scholarships for first-time attendees, with an emphasis on bringing new and diverse perspectives to the community. Two scholarships are available for 2018, each of which will cover up to $1,000 of registration and travel expenses. The application deadline is March 16thLearn more.

LPC-AUPresses Cross-Pollination Registration Waivers

The Library Publishing Coalition and the Association of University Presses have teamed up this year to offer four registration waivers to our conferences (two for the Library Publishing Forum and two for the AUPresses Annual Meeting), designed to promote greater interconnectivity between our communities. The application deadline is March 1stLearn more.

New Issue: Archival Science

Volume 18, Issue 1, March 2018
(subscription)

“If there are no records, there is no narrative”: the social justice impact of records of Scottish care-leavers
Heather MacNeil, Wendy Duff, Alicia Dotiwalla, Karolina Zuchniak

A call to rethink archival creation: exploring types of creation in personal archives
Jennifer Douglas

Archives in the trenches: repatriation of African National Congress liberation archives in diaspora to South Africa
Mpho Ngoepe, Sidney Netshakhuma

Imagining transformative spaces: the personal–political sites of community archives
Michelle Caswell, Joyce Gabiola, Jimmy Zavala, Gracen Brilmyer…

New Issue: International Journal on Digital Libraries

Volume 19, Issue 1, March 2018
(subscription)

Guest editors’ introduction to the special issue on web archiving
Edward A. Fox, Martin Klein, Zhiwu Xie

Focused crawler for events
Mohamed M. G. Farag, Sunshin Lee…

API-based social media collecting as a form of web archiving
Justin Littman, Daniel Chudnov…

ArchiveWeb: collaboratively extending and exploring web archive collections—How would you like to work with your collections?
Zeon Trevor Fernando, Ivana Marenzi…

Quantifying retrieval bias in Web archive search
Thaer Samar, Myriam C. Traub…

Avoiding spoilers: wiki time travel with Sheldon Cooper
Shawn M. Jones, Michael L. Nelson…

The colors of the national Web: visual data analysis of the historical Yugoslav Web domain
Anat Ben-David, Adam Amram, Ron Bekkerman

New Issue: The American Archivist

The American Archivist Volume 80 Issue 2 Fall/Winter 2017
(member, subscription)

FROM THE EDITOR
A Quick Six Years
Gregory S. Hunter

ARTICLES
Surveying Archivists and Their Work toward Advocacy and Management, or “Enterprise Archiving”
Sarah Buchanan, Jane Gruning, Ayse Gursoy and Lecia Barker

Harold T. Pinkett and the Lonely Crusade of African American Archivists in the Twentieth Century
Alex H. Poole

The Archive of Place and Land Art as Archive: A Case Study of Spiral Jetty
Elizabeth England

Exhibits as Scholarship: Strategies for Acceptance, Documentation, and Evaluation in Academic Libraries
Elizabeth A. Novara and Vincent J. Novara

Sweeping out the Capitol: The State Archives and the Politics of Administration in Georgia, 1921–1923
Ciaran B. Trace

#MPLP Part 1: Comparing Domain Expert and Novice Social Tags in a Minimally Processed Digital Archives
Edward Benoit III

Sex in the Archives: The Politics of Processing and Preserving Pornography in the Digital Age
GVGK Tang

ARTICLES
Pedagogies of the Image: Photo-archives, Cultural Histories, and Postfoundational Inquiry
Katrina Windon

Office of the Secretary: Evaluation of Email Records Management and Cybersecurity Requirements, ESP-16-03
David Bearman

Teaching with Primary Sources
Rachel M. Grove Rohrbaugh

Building Trust in Information: Perspectives on the Frontiers of Provenance
Creighton Barrett

Preserving Family Recipes: How to Save and Celebrate Your Food Traditions
Kira A. Dietz

Digital Preservation Essentials
Daniel W. Noonan

City of Remembering: A History of Genealogy in New Orleans
Tanya Zanish-Belcher

Rogue Archives: Digital Cultural Memory and Media Fandom
Jeremy Brett

Module 8: Becoming a Trusted Digital Repository
Sibyl Schaefer

Privacy and the Past: Research, Law, Archives, Ethics
Elena S. Danielson

New Issue: SYNOPTIQUE: An Online Journal of Film and Moving Image Studies

Vol 6, No 1: Institutionalizing Moving Image Archival Training: Analyses, Histories, Theories

Editorial
Introduction
Christian Gosvig Olesen, Philipp Dominik Keidl

Is Film Archiving a Profession Yet? Reflections 20 years on

Is film archiving a profession yet? A reflection – 20 years on
Ray Edmondson

What Price Professionalism?
Caroline Frick

Interdisciplinarity, Specialization, Conceptualization
Eef Masson, Giovanna Fossati

What Do We Profess To?
Benedict Salazar Olgado

The History of The L. Jeffrey Selznick School of Film Preservation: Changing the Field
Caroline Yeager

Articles

Multiplying Perspectives
Alejandro Bachmann

Learn then Preserve
Simone Venturini

The Current Landscape of Film Archiving and How Study Programs Can Contribute
Adelheid Heftberger

Forum Section

A Look Back: The Professional Master’s Programme in Preservation and Presentation
Thomas Elsaesser

Minding the Materiality of Film: The Frankfurt Master Program
Sonia Campanini, Vinzenz Hediger, Ines Bayer

The Materiality of Heritage: Moving Image Preservation Training at HTW Berlin
Ulrich Ruedel, Martin Koerber

Upholding Tradition: The MA Program at the Film University Babelsberg KONRAD WOLF
Oliver Hanley

Education Through International Collaboration: The Audiovisual Preservation Exchange (APEX) program
Pamela Vizner, Juana Suarez

Learning From the Keepers: Archival Training in Italian Cinematheques
Rossella Catanese

Book Reviews

Review of Film History as Media Archaeology
Giuseppe Fidotta

Review of Hollywood and the Great Depression
Andrée Lafontaine

Notes on Contributors

Notes on Contributors

New Publications: Articles

Preserving cultural heritage: A new approach to increase the life expectancy of optical discs” Journal of Cultural Heritage
Goffredo, Hausa; Ciro, Polizziab; AndreaViscontia

Documenting Local History: Using the Library of Congress Site, Primary Sources, and Community Resources for Teaching Social Studies” The Councilor Vol. 78 no. 2
Mary Ann Hanlin, Chris Herridge, Katie Janovetz, Cindy Alcaraz, David McMullen, Dean Cantu, Sherrie Pardieck

The Current Situation and Countermeasures of the Construction of Archives Talents in Colleges and Universities” Social Science, Education, and Human Science
Youming Zhu

Records in Contexts: the road of archives to semantic interoperability” Program
Dunia Llanes-Padrón, Juan-Antonio Pastor-Sánchez

Evolving Roles of Preservation Professionals: Trends in Position Announcements from 2004 to 2015” ALCTS: Association for Library Collections & Technical Services Vol. 61 no. 4
Mary M. Miller, Martha Horan

Nikîkîwân: Contesting Settler-Colonial Archives through Indigenous Oral History” Canadian Literature: A Quarterly of Criticism and Review No. 230-1
Dallas Hunt

Cultural heritage as digital noise: nineteenth century newspapers in the digital archive” Journal of Documentation Vol. 73 no. 6
Johan Jarlbrink and Pelle Snickars

On designing an oral history search system” Journal of Documentation Vol. 73 no. 6
Iain Walker and Martin Halvey

Bringing Content into the Picture: Proposing a Tri-Partite Model for Digital Preservation” Journal of Library Administration
Heather Moulaison Sandy & Edward M. Corrado

The Importance of History and Historical Records for Understanding the AnthropoceneBulletin of the Ecological Society of America, Vol. 98 no. 1 (January 2017)
Sharon Kingsland

Bringing Content into the Picture: Proposing a Tri-Partite Model for Digital Preservation” Journal of Library Administration, Vol. 58 no. 1 (2018)
Heather Moulaison Sandy ORCID Icon & Edward M. Corrado ORCID Icon

Presidential research resources: A guide to online information
College & Research Library News, Vol. 79 no. 2 (2018)
Lisa DeLuca

 

 

CFP: Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Innovative Pedagogy (SOTLIP) – New OA Journal

With recent activity about teaching with primary sources, this may be a good opportunity.

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Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Innovative Pedagogy (SOTLIP)
Vol. 1 (Fall 2018) Deadline: May 5, 2018

Interested in publishing an article about teaching and learning or innovative pedagogy? The world should know about the great learning experiences you are creating for students.

Academic Technology and the Library at Humboldt State University are pleased to invite you to consider publishing in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Innovative Pedagogy (SOTLIP). SOTLIP is an interdisciplinary open-access journal of discovery, reflection, and evidence-based higher education teaching/learning methods and research, focusing on innovative pedagogy.

The purpose of SOTLIP is to facilitate systematic inquiry into teaching practices of all types, and publish the work of faculty, staff, and students. Peer review for select articles is available.

Benefits of SOTLIP include
– improving teaching, pedagogy expertise;
– increased student learning;
– sharing and collaboration, in the study of teaching and learning; and
– a publishing platform with statistical analysis of article use and downloads.

Details about this journal and submission guidelines are available at
digitalcommons.humboldt.edu/sotl_ip. Or contact us at hsupress@humboldt.edu.