CFP: Ozarks Studies Association Meeting

The Ozarks Studies Association (OSA) invites presentations, papers, and posters for its fifth annual meeting in Springfield, Missouri on April 3, 2026. Presentations from across the disciplines on broad array of issues related to any aspect of Ozarks life throughout Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas are invited. 

We invite proposals 

  • of complete panels (with or without a chair) or individual papers
  • by scholars, archivists, museum staff, independent scholars, and graduate students
  • in the fields of anthropology, archelogy, biology, environmental studies, engineering, geography, geology, history, literature, museum design, pedagogy, preservation, urban studies, zoology, etc.

To be considered, submit

  • an abstract 
  • a two-page CV
  • label it as paper or poster

To Dr. Jared Phillips at jmp006@uark.edu

All materials must be received by January 16th, 2026. Notifications will be made by February 6th, 2026. 

If you would be willing to chair a panel, submit a two-page CV Dr. Jared Phillips by March 6th, 2026.

All inquiries should be sent to Dr. Jared Phillips at jmp006@uark.edu

Contact Information

Jared Phillips

President, Ozarks Studies Association

Department of History

University of Arkansas

Contact Email

jmp006@uark.edu

URL

https://www.ozarks-studies-assoc.com/about-6

Call for Abstract Submissions: The 18th Annual Bridging the Spectrum Symposium on Scholarship and Practice

About the Symposium

Bridging the Spectrum: A Symposium on Scholarship and Practice in Library and Information Science offers a knowledge-sharing forum and meeting place for practitioners, students, and faculty in Library and Information Sciences and Services. Presentations are selected to showcase innovative practices, projects, and research activities in a variety of library, archives, or information services activities. Because students, faculty, and practitioners all share their work, the Symposium encompasses many different aspects and points of view on library and information professional work. The program’s goal is to foster unexpected connections across the spectrum of the information professions. 

Proposal Submission

Proceedings (including abstracts and select full-text or full-image presentations and posters) from Bridging the Spectrum symposia are published  in the open-access institutional repository powered by JSTOR. This reflects the symposium’s ongoing commitment to advancing scholarship,  practice, and conversation in the information professions.

We are now accepting abstract submissions for 2026 symposium presentations (250-300 words). The Symposium will include three types of presentations: individual papers, posters, and panels.

  • Individual papers are 15-minute presentations of an innovative practice, project, or research activity.
  • Posters are visual representations of a practice, a project, or research findings.
  • Panels are one-hour group discussions by several speakers centered on a specific topic, followed by Q&A or interactive engagements.
  • Participants may propose their own format, including workshops, un-conference sessions, and so on. 

Proposals can be submitted on any topic relevant to library and information science and archival practice or research. Below are some examples (but not an exhaustive list!):

  • Community engagement and outreach, including marketing and advocacy for library and information services.
  • Services for children and/or young adults in libraries.
  • LIS and international migration.
  • Reading practices across the lifespan.
  • Information services against misinformation and propaganda.
  • New developments in information organization (linked data, semantic web, etc.).
  • Preservation and management of born-digital and digitized resources.
  • Management and analysis of data and information.
  • Library networks and international collaboration.
  • Technology trends and their impact on information services.

Please submit your proposals at the Symposium submission portal.
Before you access the submission portal, please be prepared to enter the following information:

  • Your name and affiliation
  • Your email 
  • Your abstract of the required length (250-300 words)
  • Technical requirements that will facilitate your presentation
  • Accessibility requests if you have any

Important Dates

  • Submission of the Abstract: December 15, 2025
  • Notification of acceptance: January 15, 2026
  • Submission of presentation slides and posters for archiving on JSTOR (optional): February 27, 2026

Sponsorship and Partnership

Accommodations

Please include any accommodation requests when you register, or contact the Symposium committee at CUA-slis-symposium@CUA.edu or 202-319-5085. In all situations, a good faith effort (up until the time of the event) will be made to provide accommodations. 

Symposium Committee

Maria Mazzenga (chair), Keren Dali, Shane MacDonald, Heather Wiggins
Committee shared email address: cua-slis-symposium@cua.edu 

SAA Awards: Nominations Open

The Society of American Archivists is in search of excellence! Do you know of an individual or organization that has made an outstanding contribution to the archives profession? Or promoted greater public awareness of archives? Have you published a groundbreaking book, written an outstanding article, or developed an innovative finding aid? Click on the links below to learn more about the below awards and nominate a deserving colleague—or yourself! Please consult the specific award for submission requirements and nomination form. Note that you can apply or be nominated for multiple awards in a single cycle, but may only receive one. The deadline for nominations is February 28. 

New Issue: Collections

Collections- Volume: 21, Number: 4 (December 2025)
(partial open access)

Notes from the Field

Introduction to the Focus Issue “Re-Collections 2025”: Reflections on Collections
Juilee Decker

Affective Collecting: Ethics, Emotions, and Collecting the Holocaust
Victoria Van Orden Martínez

Blackness for Sale: Collections, Auction Block, and (Anti)racist (Counter)framing in Cyber Marketplace
Paul Akpomuje

Making Deafness Visible: Preserving Deaf History in the Deaf Catholic Archives
Lisa M. Villa and R. A. R. Edwards

Rethinking Digital Collections: A Personal Reflection
Martha A. Anderson

Historic Buildings as Living Collections: Cities as Museums of Cultural Narratives
Sanaeya Vandrewala

Library and Archives Conservation: A Re-Collection Retrospection (2005–2025)
Whitney Baker

“Re-Collections” on Conservation
Dee Stubbs-Lee

Preventive Conservation’s Evolution: A Brief Reflection
Mary Coughlin

A Historical Perspective on Collecting and Sorting Methods: Key Issues in the Development of a Small Local Museum’s Policy
Efrat Haberman and Assaf Selzer

Reimagining the World Wildlife Gallery, Kendal Museum: A Community Engagement and Reinterpretation Project
Joseph Rigby, Lavinia Haslam, Ila Colley and Peter Lincoln

Curating the Invisible, the Mundane, the Intimate: On VHS Home Movie Collections
Ursula-Helen Kassaveti

Finding Lived Experiences in Historic Zooarchaeological Museum Collections: A Brief Case Study from Jamestown, Virginia
Magen Grayce Hodapp

From Shells to 3D Printed Art Models: Digitizing David Brown’s Collection of Medically-Important Snails
Adam P. Cieplinski, Jonathan D. Ablett and Aidan M. Emery

The Sanguinetti House Museum and Gardens: Past, Present, and Future of Their Collection
Isabel Allen

Lost Afterlife: Collections and Preservation at Pioneer Cemetery
Alexandra Zoellner

A Journey Through the Past, Present, and Future of Natural History Museum Treasures
Consuelo Sendino

Twenty Years of a World Culture Museum: Between Wonder, Discomfort, and Repair
Adriana Muñoz

Training for the Curatorial Endeavor
Nancy Bryk

Collecting from the Future: Embedding Strategic Foresight in Museum Collections Development
Sandro Debono

Announcement
Introduction of New Editor
Juilee Decker

CFP: RBMS 2026 “Advocacy: Finding Your Voice”

RBMS 2026 is coming up June 23-26, 2026, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and online. Special collections and archives are evolving fast—new technologies, new audiences, new challenges. How do we make our voices heard, tell our stories, and secure the support we need? This year’s conference explores advocacy at every career stage, from speaking up as a newcomer to driving change as a leader. Join us to find inspiration, share strategies, and leave ready to amplify your impact.

The RBMS Conference Program Planning Committee enthusiastically invites you to contribute to an exploration of “Advocacy: Finding Your Voice.” Special collections and archives are transforming. Digitization, collaboration, expanded instruction, community engagement, and new approaches to stewardship are reshaping how we work and who we reach. In this moment of change, advocacy is more important than ever.

The committee invites proposals that explore advocacy in all its dimensions. How do you raise awareness, build support, or create change? What strategies help you amplify your voice—or the voices of others? How do you engage your communities, connect with donors, or make your case to decision-makers? Proposals that share successes, challenges, and lessons learned are also welcome. Together, we’ll explore how advocacy empowers us to move beyond sustaining our work to strengthening and reimagining it.

Join us in inspiring colleagues at every level to find their voice—and make it heard. The proposal deadline is December 12, 2025, and complete details are available on the conference website.

CFP: Istanbul: Cultural Pasts – Urban Futures

Full call and more information here. Abstracts due Dec. 15, 2025.

Definitions of heritages, cultural pasts and urban futures are intrinsically linked. They cross disciplines, geographies and times. They can be complex, contradictory and often contested. As a result, when we think about heritage we must think holistically. UNESCO is explicit about this. Heritage is related to place and the traditions of its peoples. The future of a city is connected to the history on which it was built. Questions of contemporary culture are always aligned with their past, and their future. In this context, heritage, culture and place are all entwined.

To understand this interconnection requires historical knowledge, social context and an awareness of art and design, whether that be related to a community narrative or a global movement. It needs to be viewed through artworks, buildings, cities and objects, both ‘universal’ examples of architecture and sculpture, and more understated design vernaculars and local crafts. It needs to be seen as something ‘intangible’ – a sense of place and identity or the meaning ascribed to a city, neighborhood or local artwork. In short, it needs to be examined across disciplinary boundaries and scales.

Seeking to engage with the varied ways in which we understand heritage, cultural pasts and urban futures then, this conference asks how we interpret these themes locally, regionally and internationally. It does so while seeing the host city, Istanbul, as a place that typifies the varied questions at play.

Historically seen as the meeting point of Europe and Asia, Istanbul was an imperial capital for the Byzantine, Roman and Ottoman Empires. One of the most visited cities in the world, it was European Capital of Culture in 2010. With the centre of the city classified a UNESCO World Heritage Site in its own right, it boasts iconic examples of both art and architecture, the Hagia Sophia and the Grand Bazaar being just two of the most famous examples. Home to cutting edge design, digital art, modern architecture and music, it is seen as a centre of contemporary culture.

Located in this iconic setting, the Cultural Pasts – Urban Futures conference is expressly international and welcomes perspectives from across a range of fields: the humanities and the social sciences; architecture, urban planning and landscapes; heritage studies and design, and more. As such, it is open to local, regional and international discussions of art historical research, building renovation projects, digital art and heritage, anthropological study and socio-cultural critiques – past, present and future….

Reflecting the interests of Işık University and AMPS, presentations will be loosely organized around several strands, including but not limited to:

Architecture & Design – papers on the diversity of research in the fields of architectural, landscape, urban planning and design theory | Digital Heritage – questions and cases studies of technologies and medias such as film, laser scanning, VR and data mapping in the heritage sector | Socio-Cultural Studies – critiques of the socio-cultural issues that comes into play when thinking about culture, place and heritage | Art History – discussions on art historical projects, theories and practices internationally | Historical Conservation– considerations on sites of heritage, whether from the fields of archaeology, museology & conservation, or social questions of heritage led gentrification or regeneration | Art & Design – examinations of how contemporary artists, architects, and designers engage with context and heritage.

CFP: Librarians to Write About Digital Tools for IT (Information Today) Magazine

Information Today (IT) magazine (https://www.infotoday.com/it/) is seeking feature article writers for its Insights on Content: Making Sense of the Digital Maze section. If you’re a library worker who engages with digital tools and/or e-resources and you have knowledge you’d like to share, please reach out to editor in chief Brandi Scardilli (bscardilli@infotoday.com) with your topic idea(s). You can propose one article or multiple. Articles will appear in the quarterly issues of 2026, and they should be a maximum of 800 words. IT pays $200 per article.

Brandi Scardilli
she/her | Muck Rack
Editor in Chief, Computers in Libraries
Editor in Chief, Information Today
Editor in Chief, ITI NewsBreaksITI NewsLink
Contributor, Streaming Media
Ebook Coordinator, ITI/Plexus

Call for Chapters: Routledge Handbook of Oral History Theory

Co-editors George Severs and Amy Tooth Murphy are inviting expressions of interest to contribute chapters to the forthcoming Routledge Oral History Theory Handbook. The Handbook will consist of between 35 and 40 chapters in English which aim to reflect on and advance the field of theory within oral history. Despite its usefulness and importance, theory remains under-examined and under-appreciated within oral history. In dialogue with each other, the chapters of the Handbook will situate and make a case for theory as a crucial and productive component of oral history work, both within and beyond the academy. Across all stages of the oral history process, from conception to analysis and dissemination, theory is vital. To that end, the editors invite a wide range of contributions which centre theoretical frameworks, approaches, developments and provocations.

Theory is a live and dynamic process. As such, contributors to this volume are not expected to make definitive or ‘final’ pronouncements. Rather we encourage submissions which propose new and emerging concepts, actively engage with ongoing theoretical developments, and impact future practice. In doing so, the editors seek to stage work by an international range of authors, including but not limited to early career and established scholars, oral history practitioners, public historians, archivists and activists. This volume will be global in scope and the editors encourage submissions from a wide range of geographic contexts. We particularly encourage submissions from authors working in the geopolitical south and/or whose work foregrounds theories and questions of decolonisation and/or indigeneity.

We are seeking chapters of 8000 words. Authors are encouraged to submit abstracts of 250-300 words to the editors via ohtheoryhandbook@gmail.com along with a short biography by January 31st 2026. Authors are reminded that theory should form the core of the proposed chapters. We appreciate that case studies may feature but these should be used to evidence or inform the theoretical interventions at the hearts of chapters. The editors will respond with their decisions on submitted abstracts by the end of February 2026 and first draft chapters will be expected by the end of December 2026.

To learn more, please see the full Call for Chapters here.

New Issue: Museum Worlds

Museum Worlds is a part of the Berghahn Open Anthro subscribe-to-open Collection: https://www.berghahnjournals.com/page/berghahn-open-anthro  

Museum Worlds: Advances in Research 
Volume 13 (2025) 
Table of Contents 

Editorial 
Alison K. Brown and Conal McCarthy 

I. Articles 
Finding a Form: A short account of a Small Voluntary Group Working with the National Trust on the Care and Return of the Māori Ancestress Hinemihi 
Haidy Geismar 

Making Archaeological Parks in China 
Shu-Li Wang 

Dizzying Endings: On the Multiple Alterlives of a Living Exhibition 
Martin Grünfeld 

Eclectic Collections: Un-disciplining the Museum 
Jordan Kistler and Will Tattersdill 

II. Special Section 
Editorial Introduction: Making Museum Professionals 
Kate Hill and Claire Wintle 

“An Excellent Guide to Her Own Museum”: The Intersection of Race, Gender, and Professional Roles on a Visit from Scotland to Trinidad, 1898 
Kirsty Kernohan 

Precarity, Resilience, and Chen Wanli’s Museum Career in Twentieth-Century China 
Feng Schöneweiß 

“Men! Let’s Stick Together This Time”: A Review of Collective Action in US Art Museums, 1930s–Present 
Amanda Tobin Ripley 

In Conversation: Museum Activism for Democracy and Anti-Racism in South Africa: A Career in District Six 
Bonita Bennett and interviewed by Claire Wintle 

Problems of Ecological Excess: Necro-economies of Pest Management in the Museum 
Nushelle de Silva 

“Ready for Anything”: Front-of-House Staff and Mediating Controversy 
Laharee Mitra 

In Conversation: Museum Work and Experiences of Restitution 
Calixte Biah and interviewed by Bénédicte Savoy 

III. Research in Other Forms: Articles, Reports, Conversations etc. 
African Collections in Scottish Museums: Material Evidence of Scotland and Empire 
John D. Giblin, Nikki Grout, and Zachary Kingdon 

Exploring Digital Exhibitions: Typologies, Design Strategies, and Visitor Engagement 
Martin Siefkes and Julia A. J. Pfeiffer 

A Whare Taonga for Perth: Collaborative Pacific Displays at Perth Museum 
Amber Aranui, Dougal Austin, Migoto Eria, Mark Hall, Kirsty Kernohan, JP Reid, Pauline Reynolds, Awhina Tamarapa, Kararaina Te Ira, Te Kenehi Teira, and Anna Zwagerman 

Forum or Assembly?: Governance and Diplomacy at the Humboldt Forum, Berlin 
Anthony Alan Shelton and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas 

Armenian Woman: Victim and Heroine of the Armenian Genocide: Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, Yerevan, Armenia 
Gevorg H. Vardanyan and Seda A. Parsamyan 

IV. Teaching and Learning in Museums, Museum Studies, and Related Fields 
Museum-Based Learning for Online Collections Students: Is It Possible? 
Luke Keogh, Ashleigh Giffney, Molly Culbertson, and Lorinda Cramer 

A Co-constructive Pedagogy for Early Childhood Art Education in the Art Museums of Aotearoa New Zealand 
Esther Helen McNaughton and Lisa Terreni 

Perspectives on Co-production of Knowledge in Fieldwork Experience for 3D Preservation of Indigenous Heritage 
Addison Vallier, Lily McEwen, Abigail Bailey, Brennan Meyerhoff, Peyton Smith, Alexandra Taitt, Lisa Ellanna, Julie Raymond-Yakoubian, and Medeia Csoba Dehass 

V. Review Essays 
Pauline Reynolds, Dipti Sherchan, Julia Richard, and Paride Bolletin 

VI. Exhibition Reviews 
Amanda Thompson, Peter Brunt, Yahao Wang, Xiyuan Cai, and Ann Marie Peña 

VII. Performance Review 
Faovale Imperium: James Nokise and DJ Don Luchito Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford, 5 September 2024 
Arjunvir Singh 

VIII. Book Reviews 
Chanté St Clair Inglis, Stacy L. Boldrick, Jaimie Luria, Emma Martin, and Nicole Anderson 

Sign up for Email Updates: http://bit.ly/2SmixtG  

Please support the Subscribe-to-Open initiative and recommend Museum Worlds to your institution’s library by filling out this one-step web form: https://museum-worlds.berghahnjournals.com/library-recommendation 

CFP ‘Instrumenta altaris’. Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy

In the Middle Ages, Christian liturgy was far more than a sequence of prayers and ceremonies: it structured religious practice, shaped sacred space, and gave material form to the expression of faith. Objects, vestments, and books played a central role in this framework, endowed with a visual, tactile, and symbolic language that embodied the theology of the sacred. The International Conference Instrumenta altaris: Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy seeks to refocus attention on the material dimension that, throughout the medieval centuries, rendered the invisible visible and preserved —often in fragmentary form— a tangible legacy of devotion.

For several decades, medieval art historiography has moved towards a reassessment of what was once pejoratively labelled as “minor arts”, no longer regarded as decorative appendices to the dominant monumental tradition, but as essential components for understanding the spaces, gestures, and imagery that shaped Christian liturgy. This shift owes much to the work of scholars such as Colum Hourihane, Eric Palazzo, Cécile Voyer, Klaus Gereon Beuckers, and Elisabeth Crouzet-Pavan, who have drawn attention to the luxurious, performative, and sensory dimensions of medieval liturgical art.

Organised by the research project Thesauri Rituum at Rey Juan Carlos University (Madrid), this conference focuses on three main categories of liturgical artefacts: ritual objects —sacred vessels, reliquaries, crosses, censers— whose craftsmanship reveals a theology of materials; sacred vestments, textiles that not only clothed liturgical ministers but transformed them into figures of transcendence endowed with graces bestowed through ordination; and liturgical books, often illuminated manuscripts, which contained not merely the order of prayer but a spiritual choreography of Christian time. These elements were not autonomous but interdependent, belonging to a practice in which art was not simply contemplated, but activated and handled within liturgical performance —something difficult to reconstruct solely from written sources.

The International Conference Instrumenta altaris: Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy is therefore also an invitation to reconsider the status of medieval art through the vitality of liturgical practice. It calls for a dialogue between form and function, between aesthetics and rituality, between the history of images and the presence of objects. This approach reflects a historiographical sensibility that no longer accepts the nineteenth-century hierarchy between the “major arts” and objects of worship, but instead pays renewed attention to those voices excluded from traditional academic classifications. For in the Middle Ages, the sacred was not confined to grandeur; it was equally revealed in the refinement of the minute and in the quiet eloquence of material signs that accompanied each rite, gesture, and ceremony.

Preferred Thematic Lines

The International Congress ‘Instrumenta altaris’: Ritual Objects and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy accepts proposals for on-site presentations in Spanish, English, Italian, or French that may be framed within the following lines:

1. Historiography and Theory of Medieval Sumptuary and Liturgical Arts

Proposals consisting of historiographical approaches to the study of sumptuary arts, with special attention to their revaluation within medieval art history. Also included will be studies addressing Christian liturgy as an aesthetic, performative, and spatial category, from interdisciplinary methodological perspectives (art history, theology, anthropology, musicology, philology, or cultural history, among others).

2. Materiality and Agency of Liturgical Objects

Presentations addressing questions centered on the matter, technique, use, and circulation of ritual objects: sacred vessels, ritual artifacts, vestments, and liturgical manuscripts. Both case studies and comparative approaches to ecclesiastical treasuries, relics, or sacred textiles will be considered, paying attention to their symbolic construction, cultic functionality, and artistic value.

3. Image of Objects and Objects in Images

Studies addressing the visual representation of liturgical objects in manuscripts, wall paintings, sculpture, or any figurative medium, as well as research on how these artifacts were visualized, interpreted, and re-signified in artistic productions from later periods, from the Early Modern era to the present.

4. Anthropology of Sacred Objects

Analyses focused on the social, symbolic, and ritual contexts of creation, use, and transformation of liturgical objects. Special consideration will be given to studies addressing processes such as copying, dismemberment, transfer, donation, inheritance, reuse, or re-signification of these pieces in scenarios different from those for which they were originally conceived.

5. Current Presence and Musealization of Medieval Liturgical Art

Presentations addressing the place and treatment of medieval liturgical objects in current museums, collections, and heritage institutions. Included are both innovative curatorial proposals and the ethical, hermeneutic, and pedagogical dilemmas posed by exhibiting decontextualized ritual artifacts, now detached from their original cultic function.

Travel Grants for Master’s and Doctoral Students

To encourage young researchers’ participation, the congress organizing committee will award four grants to cover national or European travel expenses to the best presentation proposals submitted by master’s or doctoral students.

These grants will only cover travel expenses to the congress city (Madrid), excluding accommodation, meals, or local transportation. They will be awarded based on criteria of academic quality, originality, and relevance among applicants.

Requirements to apply for the grant:

  • Being enrolled in a master’s or doctoral program at the time of proposal submission.
  • Explicitly indicate in the submission form the intention to apply for the travel grant.
  • Traveling from within Spain or Europe.

Key Dates Summary

  • Deadline for presentation proposal submissions: October 1, 2025  →  EXTENDED UNTIL OCTOBER 15
  • Notification of acceptance: November 1, 2025
  • Early registration deadline: November 15, 2025 *
  • Congress dates: January 20-22, 2026

At least one author per presentation must register for the conference in the corresponding category once they have received acceptance of the paper. Only properly registered participants will receive congress certifications and documentation.

Contact Information

https://eventos.urjc.es/go/instrumentaaltaris

Contact Email

proyecto.thesaurirituum@urjc.es

URL

https://eventos.urjc.es/go/instrumentaaltaris