Call for Chapters: Archival Pedagogies

Archival Pedagogies

Editors: James Lowry (City University of New York), Tshepho Mosweu (University of Botswana), Pimphot Seelakate (Chulalongkorn University, Thailand), Magdalena Wisniewska-Drewniak (Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland).

In 2011, the Pluralizing the Archival Curriculum Group (PACG) of the Archival Education and Research Institute noted that “Archival studies education programs are conceptualized in strikingly similar ways worldwide, largely because of the overarching bureaucratically- and legally-centered paradigms developed and exported from Europe through colonialism, evangelism, mercantilism, and technological developments, and later codified through national and international standards and terminologies” (PACG, “Educating for the Archival Multiverse”, The American Archivist, 2011:74, pp.69-101). 

While the work to critique dominant archival paradigms, recuperate subjugated memory and information epistemologies and practices, and create new archival modes in response and anticipation of social and technological change has been fostered in research and articulated in the realm of theory in major collections such as Research in the Archival Multiverse, and new monographs and journals, and operationalized in policies, procedures, and practices, the pedagogical implications of changing archival thought have been under-explored. Important developments in the teaching of archival studies are sometimes unpublished, and the extant literature on archival education per se has a relatively small footprint. 

This edited collection seeks to bring archival pedagogy into sharp focus, asking: What is the state of the art in archival education today? What are the histories and futures of archival education in different parts of the world, and how do they interact in global discourses and knowledge/power relations? What now constitutes the body of professional knowledge, the essential skills and competencies of the archival curriculum, in which places and why? What modes and methods are being developed and applied to the education of archivists, and within what structures and systems of professionalism, higher education, neoliberalism, etc? How do Indigenous, computational and other technologies of record-making and keeping factor into the content and delivery of archival education?

Although the book will be published in English, the editors are hopeful that students and teachers of archival theory and practice worldwide will consider contributing. To that end, we will explore translation options with prospective authors writing in languages other than English.

The chapters in this book will consider the histories and futures of archival education, the essential knowledge for records work in rapidly changing environments, means and methods for designing and delivering archival education, and the technologies of archive. Chapters in the volume might pose and seek to answer such questions as:

·       How has or can archival education respond to shifts in archival theory over recent years?

·       How has the landscape of archival education changed over recent years?

·       What can archival pedagogy contribute to the development of theory and practice? What does archival pedagogy as theory and practice look like?

·       How has the COVID-19 pandemic altered teaching and learning for archival studies and research? How will archival pedagogy look in the post-pandemic era? What will be the post-pandemic challenges for archival education?

·       Where do today’s norms of archival education come from and do they work for us?

What has been the role of archival education in propagating harmful or beneficial ideas and practices?

·       How have disciplinary inheritances shaped archival education and what results from interdisciplinarity in teaching?

·       What could developments in educational theory, practice and technology mean for archival studies? How might archival studies contribute to the broader field of education?

·       What is the place of archival education in the university? Are current pathways through education and training useful, limiting or exclusionary? What can critical or abolitionist university studies help us imagine for archival pedagogy?

·       Do apprenticeships and other workplace-based educational approaches disrupt, unsettle or complement undergraduate and post-graduate education? How do they benefit the record-keeping mission, and do they threaten notions of professionalism?

·       How have notions of professionalism and professional identity aided or hindered efforts to prepare record-keepers for the socially important work of record-keeping? What part has pedagogy played in this?

·       What are the current approaches to and priorities of continuing professional development and accreditation systems? 

·       What do changing job markets, exploitative labour practices and job and economic precarity mean for archival education? What should they mean for archival education?

·       What do environmental, social and political changes suggest for the archival workforce of tomorrow? How should archival education respond?

Guidance for Prospective Authors

Please submit manuscripts to Magdalena Wiśniewska-Drewniak magwis@umk.pl by 1 October 2023.

Referencing style: APA (American Psychological Association) 7th Edition

Word range: 5,000 – 6,000 words

The book manuscript will be submitted to Tampere University Press, where it will be peer reviewed, with a view to publishing it as a Diamond Open Access book, possibly in a new open access Information Studies book series.

CFP: AERI

The School of Library & Information Science (SLIS) at Louisiana State University (LSU) is proud to host the fifteenth annual Archival Education and Research Institute (AERI), the first to be held in-person and in-hybrid formats since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. AERI will be held from June 19 through 23, 2023 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on the LSU campus.

We invite proposals for contributions that fit within AERI’s goals. These could include short papers (15 minutes), panels (1.5 hours, with 3 or more speakers), pedagogical, curricular, methodological, and technological workshops (half day or full day), posters, works in progress, or lighting talks (students only). Proposals should include an abstract of between 300 and 500 words, plus a short biographical note about the presenter(s). For panels or group activities, each participant should submit a proposal with the same title and abstract. Since this is a working institute, all participants, with the exception of students who are about to commence their studies, are expected to contribute in some way to the working meeting. This might be in a variety of roles including, but not limited to presenters, instructors, mentors, chairs, and AERI initiative leaders.

AERI 2023 will accept a limited number of virtual presentations in order to create participation options for those who cannot attend the Institute in person. Due to the significant labor and costs involved in offering a fully hybrid conference, virtual options will be limited to those who can present synchronously. AERI 2023 will provide live and recorded access to all plenaries and one track of presentations per day.

Complete your application here.

Timeline for Applications

December 16, 2022 – CFP opens for applications
February 3, 2023 – Deadline for submissions
March 3, 2023 – Applicants notified of admission/registration open
May 1, 2023 – Registration deadline
June 19-23, 2023 – AERI

Frequently Asked Questions

How much will AERI 2023 cost?

The registration rates will be finalized and provided within the acceptance notice in March. The current draft rate ranges are $550-$650 (USD) for non-students and $350-$450 (USD) for students. The rates will include housing and several meals. The final rates may be lower due to sponsorships and other outside funding.

Do all co-presenters need to submit an application/proposal?

Yes, we are collecting contact information, a personal statement, and a data release for each presenter in this process.

I cannot travel to LSU for AERI 2023, can I still participate?

AERI 2023 will accept a limited number of virtual presentations in order to create participation options for those who cannot attend the Institute in person. Due to the significant labor and costs involved in offering a fully hybrid conference, virtual options will be limited to those who can present synchronously. AERI 2023 will provide live and recorded access to all plenaries and one track of presentations on per day.

For more information, please contact:

Dr. Edward Benoit, III
Associate Director & Associate Professor
ebenoit@lsu.edu

CFP: Archival Education and Research Institute

The ninth annual Archival Education and Research Institute (AERI) will be held at the University of Toronto in Toronto, Canada from July 10-14, 2017. Previous institutes were held at UCLA (2009, 2012), the University of Michigan Ann Arbor (2010), Simmons College (2011), the University of Texas Austin (2013), the University of Pittsburgh (2014), the University of Maryland, College Park (2015), and Kent State University (2016).

These week-long Institutes, held every summer, are designed to strengthen education and research and support academic cohort-building and mentoring. Institutes are open to all academic faculty and students working in archival studies, both nationally and internationally, as well as others engaged in archival education, research and scholarship, broadly conceived.

AERI SEEKS TO ADVANCE THE FIELD OF ARCHIVAL STUDIES BY:
  1. Creating a dynamic community of researchers, teachers, and students to help mentor doctoral students and faculty in areas such as thesis preparation, grant writing, publishing, and career development.
  2. Advancing curriculum development in archival studies.
  3. Furthering current research development through paper presentations, posters, and workshop activities.
  4. Fostering interest in future collaborations both nationally and internationally.

The specific theme of AERI 2017 is Windows, Frames, Landscapes. We invite proposals for presentations, posters, and workshops that fit within AERI’s goals and, if possible, that engage, either singly or in combination, with the metaphors of windows (e.g. openings, opportunities, spaces), frames (e.g. disciplinary, conceptual, methodological, socio-political, technological), and landscapes (real and imagined).


TIMELINE FOR PARTICIPANTS IN THE INSTITUTE:

The deadline for applications is February 28, 2017.

Applicants will be notified by March 15 of their acceptance into the institute and will then be required to submit registration information and payment.

Full-week registration will be open between March 1 and April 25.