Posts Tagged as ‘archives month’

October 30, 2009

Non-custodial archiving: U Texas and Kigali Memorial Centre

Non-custodial archival practices and the UT Libraries Human Rights Documentation Initiative partnership with the Kigali Memorial Centre
By T-Kay Sangwand, Human Rights Archivist, Human Rights Documentation Initiative
University of Texas Libraries, University of Texas at Austin
With a generous grant from the Bridgeway Foundation, the University of Texas Libraries (UTL) launched the Human Rights Documentation Initiative (HRDI) [...]

October 28, 2009

Building a Network for Human Rights Archives and Archivists

By Valerie Love, Curator for Human Rights Collections
The Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut
In recent years, archival institutions and organizations have become increasingly concerned with issues regarding human rights records and archival collections. Questions of access, privacy, politics, trust, and ensuring the safety of those documenting abuses and potentially controversial records all [...]

October 20, 2009

The magic of documenting documentation

Guest post from Sarah Van Deusen Philips:
As the project coordinator for human rights at the Center for Research Libraries-Global Resources Network, my primary task is to engage with the life-cycle of human rights documents, which I do through our Electronic Resources Study.  In this study, I am busy speaking to human rights field workers, administrators [...]

October 20, 2009

Re-Stalinization and revisionism in Russia

Last week  Russian historian Mikhail Suprun was arrested by Russia’s FSB security service for – as Truthdig put it – daring to study Russian history; more specifically, Stalin’s gulags.  Suprun’s  archives were confiscated; a police official who provided access to archive documents about gulag victims was also arrested.  Suprun faces up to four years [...]

October 15, 2009

Mandela opens archives for new book

The personal archive of Nelson Mandela will be opened for a new memoir; rights the collection of diaries, letters and other writings were auctioned this week at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
From the Guardian UK:
“Mandela himself, who bestowed these “traces of my life and those who have lived it with me” on his eponymous foundation, hopes [...]

October 12, 2009

Archival access: ethics, rights, obligations

Access is a primary archival value, driven by many things: legal or organizational mandates, copyright, available technology and resources, a deep-seated belief that access to information is the foundation of a free and educated society, and, in fact, a right. With human rights materials the challenges are particularly acute, sometimes pitting personal safety, [...]

October 7, 2009

Archives & the problem of access in post-authoritarian regimes

Guest post from Bruce P. Montgomery, author of Richard B. Cheney and the Rise of the Imperial Vice Presidency:
As a matter of discussion, it may be instructive to look at how many post-authoritarian countries in Eastern Europe and elsewhere have addressed their archives of repression. In most cases, efforts to pass lustration laws and open [...]