6a Anti-Racist Archival Description
Tracks
Collaboration and Advocacy
Tuesday, October 18, 2022 |
1:15 PM - 2:45 PM |
Presentation Type
Traditional Paper -- Moderator: Dr. Louise Curham
Session Information
Perspectives On Access: The three speakers in session 6 have three different standpoints on access. Their topics range through anti-racist description, the consequences of access restrictions for a particular group of users, and a multi-facetted programmatic approach to decolonisation. Overall the session will be a principled and practical approach on improving one of the most fundamental archival purposes, one to which significant resources and processes are devoted.
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Angela Schilling
Collections Archivist
Lutheran Archives
Anti-Racist Archival Description
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For those whose stories are in the archives, we know that accessing them can bring about a swathe of emotions and reactions. There are many things we can do as archivists and archival institutions to make this process easier, more accessible, and safer for those who suffer from direct or intergenerational trauma. The profession has access to a growing selection of tools to guide our protocols and practices, such as the Tandanya Declaration, the ATSILIRN protocols and UNDRIP, as well as case studies for high-level institutional changes and cultural shifts, though we have only begun this process. However, there are often immediate and practical ways in which we can implement anti-racist archival practice, including the way we describe archival materials.
This paper will discuss practical ways in which archivists can undertake actively anti-racist description work, and why it is imperative that this work becomes a priority in our collection management work. It will draw on the comprehensive document Anti-Racist Description Resources, authored by the Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia’s (A4BLiP) Anti-Racist Description Working Group, as well as other standards and sources.
This paper will discuss practical ways in which archivists can undertake actively anti-racist description work, and why it is imperative that this work becomes a priority in our collection management work. It will draw on the comprehensive document Anti-Racist Description Resources, authored by the Archives for Black Lives in Philadelphia’s (A4BLiP) Anti-Racist Description Working Group, as well as other standards and sources.
