Recent Issue: Archival Science

Archival ScienceVolume 17, Issue 3, September 2017
(subscription)

Agency in the archive: a model for participatory recordkeeping

Gregory Rolan

Democratising or privileging: the democratisation of knowledge and the role of the archivist

Craig Gauld

The personal versus the institutional voice in an open photographic archive

Karin Wagner

Investigating original order with cybernetics and community detection algorithms

K. S. Chandler

Privacy as an archival problem and a solution

Pekka Henttonen

CFP Extended: Provenance

Provenance is extending the CFP for its upcoming issue to September 15, 2017. Please share with any colleagues who may have a paper or research project that could be converted into an article for publication. The board and editors of Provenance are happy to work with authors to encourage their contribution to professional scholarship. Do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions.

CFP: 2017 issue of Provenance

Provenance: The Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists, a peer reviewed academic publication, seeks articles on archival theory and practice for the 2017 issue. Please note that the content of the journal is not limited to the state of Georgia, and articles of regional or national significance are welcome. First-time authors are especially encouraged to submit articles for consideration. As evidenced by the forthcoming audiovisual issue, composed of video, audio, and traditional article formats, Provenance is also interested in innovative and unique methods for presenting scholarly content.

Articles on archival topics outside of theory and practice which meet publication standards will also be considered. Typical papers should be a Word document, 10-20 pages, double spaced, and formatted according to the 16th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style. Please review information for contributors: http://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/provenance/policies.html.

Articles are to be submitted utilizing Provenance’s new online system: http://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/provenance/.

For additional information contact Editor Heather Oswald at: provenance@soga.org. Deadline for contributions is September 15, 2017.

Gracy Award 

Each year the SGA awards the Gracy Award, a $350 prize which recognizes a superior contribution to Provenance. Named for David B. Gracy II, founder and first editor of Georgia Archive, the award began in 1990 and is judged by the editorial board.

*Back issues of Provenance and Georgia Archive available online*

Table of Contents for the 2016 issue:

2016 Society of Georgia Archivists and Society of Florida Archivists Joint Annual Meeting Keynote Address

Defining Archives: Ingenuity, Innovation, and New Perspectives
Dr. Meredith Evans

Articles

“I Go to School, But I Never Learn What I Want to Know”: Archival Advocacy and Outreach as Expressed in Formal Educational Settings
Jeremy Brett, Jasmine Jones, and Leah Edleman

A Shared Space: The Collaborative Alliance Between the College of Charleston Special Collections and the South Carolina Historical Society Archives
Mary Jo Fairchild, Joshua Minor, and Molly Inabinett

Reviews 

Becoming a Trusted Digital Repository
Reviewed by Katy Sternberger

Digital Preservation Essentials
Reviewed by Brandon Wason

Teaching with Primary Sources
Reviewed by Donnie Summerlin

Donors and Archives: A Guidebook for Successful Programs
Reviewed by Joshua Minor

Archives in Libraries: What Librarians and Archivists Need to Know to Work Together
Reviewed by Amanda Pellerin

Adjusted Margin: Xerography, Art, and Activism in the 20th Century
Reviewed by Erin Lawrimore

Appraisal and Acquisition Strategies
Reviewed by Carol Waggoner-Angleton

Conceptualizing 21st Century Archives
Reviewed by Anne Graham

Perspectives on Women’s Archives
Reviewed by Katy Sternberger

 

Recent Issue: RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage

RBM, Vol 18, No 1 (2017)
(open access)

Editor’s Note
Jennifer K. Sheehan

Research Articles

Distortion of Content and Endangered Archives: A Case Study of a Donation to the American University of Beirut, Lebanon
Mariette Atallah

“It’s Not Human!”: Another Example of Anthropodermic Bibliopegy Discredited
Gerald Chaudron

Social Media as Entrée into Special Collections Reference Works
Jason W. Dean, Emily Grover

Spies in the Archive: Acquiring Revolutionary War Spy Letters Through Community Engagement
Kristen J. Nyitray, Sally Stieglitz

Book Reviews

Kate Vieira. American by Paper: How Documents Matter in Immigrant Literacy.
Mary A. Caldera

Forging the Future of Special Collections, edited by Arnold Hirshon, Robert H. Jackson, and Melissa Hubbard.
Jolie Braun

G. Thomas Tanselle. Portraits and Reviews.
Daniel J. Slive

New Issue: Records Management Journal

Records Management Journal, Volume 27 Issue 2
(subscription)

Practice theory: a new approach for archival and recordkeeping research
Asen Ognyanov Ivanov

Towards interoperable recordkeeping systems: A meta-model for recordkeeping metadata
Gregory Rolan

The challenges presented to records management by open government data in the public sector in England: A case study
Katherine Mary Chorley

Recordkeeping and research data management: a review of perspectives
Rebecca Grant

Exploring digital preservation requirements: A case study from the National Geoscience Data Centre (NGDC)
Jaana Pinnick

Metadata and video games emulation: an effective bond to achieve authentic preservation?
Giovanni Carta

Recruitment of records management practitioners in Jamaica’s public sector and its implications for professional practice
Kaydene Duffus

Methods, methodology and madness: Digital records management in the Australian government
Katharine Stuart

Guest editorial
Fiorella Foscarini , Donald C. Force

Recent Issue: Records Management Journal

Records Management JournalVolume 27 Issue 1, 2017
(subscription)

Survey research on tasks and competencies to inform records management education
Sarah A. Buchanan , Caroline Stratton , Yalin Sun , Ankita Chaudhary

The impact of an IT governance framework on the internal control environment
Michele Rubino , Filippo Vitolla , Antonello Garzoni

Corporate governance and records management in private and public hospitals in Ghana
Kingsley Opoku Appiah , Kon-Naah Moomin Amos , Jebuni Bashiru , Palamin Habib Drammeh , Sharita Tuffour

Embedding a records manager as a strategy for helping to positively influence an organization’s records management culture
Lynne Bowker , César Villamizar

Managing electronic records across organizational boundaries: The experience of the Belgian federal government in automating investigation processes
Laurence Maroye , Seth van Hooland , Fiona Aranguren Celorrio , Sébastien Soyez , Bénédicte Losdyck , Odile Vanreck , Cécile de Terwangne

The implementation of electronic recordkeeping systems: An exploratory study of socio-technical issues
Weimei Pan

Call for Contributors: bloggERS! Archiving Digital Communications Series

Archives have long collected correspondence, but as communication has shifted to digital platforms, archivists must discover and develop new tools and methods.  From appraising one massive inbox to describing threaded messages, email has introduced many new challenges to the way we work with correspondence. Likewise, instant messaging, text messaging, collaborative online working environments, and other forms of digital communication have introduced new challenges and opportunities.

We want to hear how you and your institution are managing the acquisition, appraisal, processing, preservation and access to these complex digital collections.  Although the main focus of most programs is email, we’re also interested in hearing how you manage other formats of digital communication as well.

We’re interested in real-life solutions by working archivists: case studies, workflows, any kind of practical work with these collections describing the challenges of the archival processes to acquire, preserve, and make accessible email and other forms of digital communication.

A few potential topics and themes for posts:

  • Evaluating tools to acquire and process email
  • Case studies on archiving email and other forms of digital communication
  • Integrating practices for digital correspondence with physical correspondence
  • Addressing privacy and legal issues in email collections
  • Collaborating with IT departments and donors to collect email

Writing for bloggERS!

  • Posts should be between 200-600 words in length
  • Posts can take many forms: instructional guides, in-depth tool exploration, surveys, dialogues, point-counterpoint debates are all welcome!
  • Write posts for a wide audience: anyone who stewards, studies, or has an interest in digital archives and electronic records, both within and beyond SAA
  • Align with other editorial guidelines as outlined in the bloggERS! guidelines for writers.

Contact ers.mailer.blog@gmail.com with any questions or to discuss proposals.

CFP: Digital Humanities – The Shifting Contexts

Although this call does not specifically mention archives, it might be of interest for those who work with digital humanities projects.

This special edition of Digital Library Perspectives focuses on the topic of Digital Humanities, with emphasis on the shifting framework of scholars and practitioners who do not necessarily identify themselves digital humanists but use Digital Humanities tools and practices in their work. The Guest Editors of this issue include Dr. Megan Meredith-Lobay (University of British Columbia) and Allan Cho (University of British Columbia).
The co-editors invite contributions on the following, as well as other related topics:

  • Role of LIS in supporting non-traditional DH areas of scholarship, i.e. New Media  Studies, Musicology, Archaeology, non-textual DH
  • Emerging areas of research, teaching, learning in the digital scholarship in the social sciences and humanities
  • Beyond “What is DH?” – exploring “Why DH?”
  • Non-traditional DH practice and practitioners: inclusion and exclusion
  • DH in non-western contexts
  • The intersections between DH and digital social science
  • Digital Humanities as Data Science

Important Dates:
Deadline for submission: December 2017
Notification of acceptance: April 2018
Deadline for final paper submission: June 2018

Submission Instructions:
Papers should be no more than 6000 words
Submissions to Digital Library Perspectives are made using ScholarOne Manuscripts, the online submission and peer review system. Registration for an account needs to be created first: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/dlp

Call for Articles: The Journal of Archival Organization

The Journal of Archival Organization is an international, peer-reviewed journal encompassing all aspects of the arrangement, description, and provision of access to all forms of archival materials.

JAO addresses a broad range of issues of interest to the profession including archival management and staffing, archival technologies, the arrangement and description of records collection, collection growth and access, grant-funding, and institutional support. Articles addressing academic, public and special/corporate libraries, museums, and governmental agencies are all welcome.

How to submit:

Manuscripts should be submitted electronically to Marta Deyrup  martadeyrup@gmail.com

The separate abstract page should be single-spaced to include a 100-word abstract, list of keywords for indexing purposes, and author(s) footnote (name, title, affiliation, address, and email address), with identification of the corresponding author.

References, citations, and general style of manuscripts should be prepared in accordance with the APA Publication Manual, 6th ed. Cite in the text by author and date (Smith, 1983) and include an alphabetical list of references at the end of the article.

For more information about the Journal of Archival Organization, please visit the journal’s webpage: www.tandfonline.com/WJAO

Fonds d’Archives Call for Papers

The Archives Society of Alberta is pleased to announce that the inaugural issue of Fonds d’Archives is now available at http://www.fondsdarchives.ca. In keeping with its focus on archival issues from a practical, working-level perspective, the first issue features articles on outreach and decolonisation activities at archival institutions. For further information about the journal, please visit the “About the Journal” page located here: https://fondsdarchives.ca/index.php/fondsdarchives/about.

Although papers on all aspects of archival practice are welcome, the next issue will focus on Indigenizing archival institutions. Articles can focus on Canadian or international contexts and topics to consider can include relationship-building with Indigenous communities, repatriation of Indigenous records, institutional responses to the TRC Calls to Action, case studies relevant to the theme, or similar topics. Emphasis should be on working-level archival practice (i.e. what have or your institution done to Indigenize your archives, what has worked, what has failed, what’s next, etc.).

The next issue will be published in February, 2018. Submissions on the theme or other topics related to archival practice should be submitted no later than October 16, 2017.

Please consult the Submissions page (https://fondsdarchives.ca/index.php/fondsdarchives/about/submissions) for further information about the process.

Help OCLC With Their Research Agenda

Dear Colleagues,

OCLC Research is currently shaping our next research and learning agenda to address challenges and opportunities for special collections, archives and distinctive collections in research libraries. Led by our Practitioner Researcher in Residence, Chela Weber, we are taking a transparent, iterative approach to building this agenda by seeking substantial input from the OCLC Research Library Partnership (RLP), as well as the broader archives and special collections community. An early-stage draft was workshopped with representatives from RLP institutions and other invited professionals at the RBMS Conference last month in Iowa City, and a similar workshop will focus on the current draft at Archives 2017, the annual meeting of the Society of American Archivists this month.

We are inviting you today to play a role in the next steps of shaping the agenda, and asking for your feedback on the current draft of the agenda by August 28thWe are happy to hear thoughts on any element of the draft agenda, but in particular, are interested in hearing comments on the following questions:

  1. Proposed Research Activities: do you have ideas for activities in areas that are left blank in the current draft? Are there other research activities or questions you would like to see addressed within each of the outlined topical areas of investigation?
  1. Relevant Existing Work in the Community: Is there current or early-stage work going on that addresses any of the topical areas of investigation and that we should be aware of?
  1. Priorities for OCLC: OCLC Research will be able to address only a small portion of the issues and activities outlined in the agenda, and wants to put its resources and expertise to best use. Which of the topical areas of investigation and proposed research activities would you most like to see OCLC take on, and where do you think they can make most impact?

Please find the draft agenda either as a Google Doc or as a PDF. You are welcome to add comments in the Google Doc itself, or submit comments via email to RLPStrategy@oclc.orgWe welcome feedback and comments through August 28th.

Jackie Dooley
Program Officer, OCLC Research
office/home 949-492-5060
mobile 949-295-1529
dooleyj@oclc.org