Dear community,
The
Digital Preservation Outreach and Education Network (DPOE-N) is excited to announce a
virtual workshop, titled
Reframing Digital Preservation Through An Anti-Racist Lens, co-led and co-developed by Elvia Arroyo-Ramirez and Sofia Leung.
The workshop will be held Thursday, March 31st, 2022 from 1pm-4:30pm EST on Zoom. While our January iteration of this workshop was open to everyone, this one is BIPOC only please. See below for a full workshop description and instructor bios.
All DPOE-N workshops are free of charge thanks to the generous support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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Reframing Digital Preservation Through an Anti-Racist Lens
As
digital preservation and curation practices reach operational maturity among cultural heritage institutions, discussion about
anti-racism and
digital preservation seems to be at its nascent stages. From the systems archivists use to capture content for long-term care, to the ways we provide access to born-
digital materials,
digital preservation practices when left unchecked can replicate the same harms witnessed in the physical realm. What are some practical ways archivists can apply
anti-
racist frameworks to
digital preservation activities and approaches?
This three-hour workshop is designed to provide an understanding of how white supremacy underpins library and archive systems and practices and offers an introduction to
anti-
racist frameworks as groundwork for better practices in
digital preservation. Attendees will learn about current projects, related literature, and case studies in the field.
This workshop is ideal for all who acquire, maintain, or provide access to born-
digital and digitized archival materials.
Instructors:
Sofia Leung (she/her) is a first-generation Chinese American librarian, facilitator, and educator and the principal of Do Better, Be Better LLC. Her work attempts to center the experiences and knowledges of Black, Indigenous and People of Color. Sofia is a founding editor at
up//root: a we here publication and the co-editor of Knowledge Justice: Disrupting Library and Information Studies
Through Critical Race Theory (2021). You can find out more about Sofia at her website:
https://www.sofiayleung.com/.
Elvia Arroyo-Ramírez (she/her) is a queer Latinx daughter of immigrants working in the field of archives. She is the co-editor to an upcoming special issue on “Radical Empathy in Archival Practice” in the Journal for Critical Library and Information Science (JCLIS). Her practice and scholarship are grounded in a feminist ethic of care, and works to expose and repair archival practices rooted in systemic biases that perpetuate harm to BIPOC and other marginalized communities.
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Anthony Cocciolo | Dean, School of Information
PRATT INSTITUTE
Pronouns: he, him, his
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