Recent issue: Arbido : revue professionnelle pour archivistes, bibliothécaires et documentalistes

Arbido : revue professionnelle pour archivistes, bibliothécaires et documentalistes
Arbido : professional journal for archivists, librarians, and information specialists

Editorial

Rölli Daniela
Zwischen Outsourcing und selbst machen: Web- und Social-Media-Archivierung im Stadtarchiv Bern

Smirnova Tatiana
The memory of the Fête des Vignerons and the challenges of its archiving in the age of digital platforms

Cannelli Beatrice
Navigating legal concerns in social media archiving

Marquet Andreas
Werkstattbericht zum Stand der Social Media-Archivierung im Archiv der sozialen Democracy

Forget Camille
Collecting social media data in Luxembourg: a collaborative approach

Signori Barbara
The Swiss Web Archive

New Issue: VRA Bulletin

Vol. 53 No. 1 (2026): Spring/Summer
(open access)

Association News

State of the Association
Xiaoli Ma

Fiscal Year 2025 Visual Resources Association Treasurer’s Report
Will Fenton

2025 VRA Awards Recipients & Recognition
Presented at the 43rd Annual Conference in Portland, Oregon
Ann McShane, April Martin

Perspectives

Remaining Resilient
Reflections on the Visual Resources Community
Allan T. Kohl, Lael J. Ensor-Bennett, Sara Schumacher

Feature Articles

Imagining Impossible Virtual Worlds
Final Fantasy XI Private Servers as Imagined Living Community Archives
Lucas McGill

Digitizing and Enhancing Dry Plate Glass Negatives
A Guide for Under-Resourced Archives
John Macdonald, Paige Harris

New Issue: RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage

Vol 27, No 1 (2026)
(open access)

Editor’s Note

Editor’s Note: Organization
Diane Dias De Fazio

Articles

Algae in Special Collections: Making Room for STEM
Lucy Perrin

The Ordinary Numinosity of the Book: A Framework for Understanding Affective Encounters in Book Exhibition Contexts
Susana Sanchez-Gonzalez

Widening the Poison Books Scope: Addressing Bibliotoxicology at a Medium- Sized Public University Library
Judith L Silva, Zachary Voras

Anthology: Papers from “The Power of New Voices”

Cataloging a Life’s Work: Notes from the George Bixby James Baldwin Collection
Indica Mattson

Book Reviews

What Primary Sources Teach: Lessons for Every Classroom
Laura French

Futures of Digital Scholarly Editing
Chelcie Juliet Rowell

From the Editorial Board

On Crafting a Policy: Reflections on Membership and Community
Sarah Allison, Anne Bahde, Jeremy Brett, Juli McLoone with Diane Dias De Fazio

New Issue: Journal for the Preservation of Library and Archival Material

Volume 47, Issue 1 2026
(open access)

Original Works

Effects of Stone-Calendering on Traditional Handmade Paper: Mechanical Properties and Shape Stability
Dongyoung Yoo, Yumei Tang, Decai Gong

Dimensional Stability of Sanskrit Manuscript Supports Exposed to Environmental Humidity: Tibetan Paper, Palm Leaf, and Birch Bark
Bing Li, Chen Yu, Meifang Zhang, Danrui Cao

Historic Tibetan Manuscripts in Border Monasteries: Current State and Conservation Challenges
Ze Wan, Tiancai Li

New Issue: Archival Science

Volume 26, Issue 2 June 2026

Music as cultural representation of the archival profession: a reflexive textual analysis
Dwi Ridho Aulianto

Archival time simultaneity (ATS): a post-linear temporal framework for record ontology in the digital era
Abderrahmane Kalem

Evaluating usability in digital humanities features for archival retrieval systems
Chiao-Min LinYu-Ting Huang

A prospetto of 1803: records classification from Austrian Lombardy to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy
Dan Farrell

Advancing archives as agents of change: paradigmatic tensions and professional identity
Geerd De Ceulaerde

Diasporic archive and archival diaspora: negotiating collective identity through community audiovisual archiving among Polish Highlanders in Chicago
Agata Zborowska

Collecting evidence of counter-narrative: the unspoken labor of archiving justice & recovering the material wages owed
Sydney M. Triola

Archives, archival bond, and digital representation: a case study with the International Image Interoperability Framework
Martin Critelli

Migrating memory, diasporic counter archives, and transnational reckoning with repressed past
Karolina Koziura

Positioning the archives: a strategy based on the survey of visit motivations to cultural heritage institutions
Gyubin YoonBonJin KooDurk Hyun Chang

“You can read their words and see they fight for the same things”: strategies of social movement archivists for coalition building
Maciej KowalewskiIzabela Kujawa

A kind of personal paper and ephemera: hotel stationery accommodation, communication, art and memory
Hakan Anameriç

Conceptualising archival literacy as an organisational capability
Primus Sanbein

Global context and diversity of community archiving: memory, identity, and representation in community digital archives of the South Asian Diaspora
Sushanta BaruaProf. Mainak Ghosh

Echo after presence: performing Derrida in the archive
Mahsa AkbarabadiMohammad Ali Safoora

CfP: History of Disaster in Libraries

History of Disaster in Libraries
CILIP Library & Information History Group Annual Conference 2026
Newnham College, Cambridge, Tuesday 8 December

Libraries have historically been destroyed, rebuilt, and recovered from disaster. Whether from flood, fire, theft, war, or individual bad actors, salvage has always formed a part of heritage and conservation, and libraries have regularly adapted to new sites and tasks in disastrous conditions. This conference will explore the history of catastrophic events and the libraries that survived them. 

The Library & Information History Group invites potential speakers to submit an abstract (500 words or less) and short biography (100 words or less) by the closing date of Friday 31 July.

Suggested topics are:

  • Case studies of historic disasters affecting libraries
  • Historical accounts of disaster recovery and salvage operations
  • Historical accounts of theft, forgery, or other malpractice
  • Analyses of libraries operating in adverse circumstances
  • Alternative uses of library spaces in historic disasters

Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes in length, and we ask potential speakers to be mindful of the historical angle of the conference. Therefore, we will not consider any paper for which the primary focus is later than the turn of the twenty-first century. 

This is an in-person conference and will not be recorded, though a summary will follow in the Library & Information Group newsletter. Please submit all abstracts and any queries to Eve Lacey at eve.lacey@newn.cam.ac.uk

Contact Email

eve.lacey@newn.cam.ac.uk

URL

https://www.cilip.org.uk/members/group_content_view.asp?group=201304&id=698161

Attachments

CfP History of Disaster in Libraries

2026 SAA Research Forum Now Available

The 2026 Research Forum Committee is excited to announce that the 2026 Research Forum Agenda is now available online! 

This year’s SAA Research Forum will be conducted as two Zoom-based virtual sessions, each four hours long, on Wednesday, July 8 from 12:00 – 4:00 pm CT and Wednesday, July 15 from 12:00 – 4:00 pm CT. Both days will feature a mix of 10-minute platform presentations and 5-minute lightning talks, and a full breakdown of each day’s schedule can be found on the 2026 Agenda page

Registration is also open for Day One and Day Two of the 2026 Research Forum: 

July 8th (12-4pm CT)Day One Registration

July 15th (12-4pm CT)Day Two Registration

Registration is free, and you do not need to be a member of SAA to attend. We hope to see you there! 

Best, 

Emily Lapworth and Jane Fiegel

2026 SAA Research Forum Coordinators

CFP: 21st International Digital Curation Conference

The 21st edition of the International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC27) will take place in LisbonPortugal between 9-12 February 2027.

​Call for Submissions extended for Papers and Lightning Talks!

The new deadline for papers and lightning talks are 24 July 2026.

This year we will accept submissions in five formats:

  • Papers, Lightning Talks, Posters, Demos (new to IDCC27), and Workshops

Explore the Call for Submissions and submit your proposals now. 

Conference Theme

The main theme for the conference is: FAIR DO’s: Centring People in the Stewardship and Curation of Digital Objects. The theme of this year’s conference acknowledges the crucial role of people in the work of making digital objects FAIR.

Learn more about the theme on the Conference Theme subpage.

What’s next?

  • Registration will open in late September 2026
  • The conference programme will be announced in early October 2026

About the IDCC 

The IDCC is an established annual event with a unique place in the digital curation community, reaching out to individuals, organisations and institutions across all disciplines and domains involved in curating data and providing an opportunity to get together with like-minded data practitioners to discuss policy and practice. 

Code of Conduct  

Everyone taking part in IDCC27 is expected to show respect and courtesy to others throughout their participation. Please see our full code of conduct for details of our policy. 

Follow us on LinkedInBlueSky and Twitter/X or subscribe to our Pipeline newsletter to be the first one to learn about IDCC27 news and updates. 

CFP: Photography, Archive, and Political Imagination (online, 23-25 Sep 26)

Deadline: Jul 15, 2026

Visual Thinking and Futures of Democracy. Photography, Archive, and Political Imagination.

7th edition of REFRAMING THE ARCHIVE: International Conference on Photography and Visual Culture.

How do images shape democratic life? Not only as records of politics, but as forces that constitute visibility, authority, and participation?

This conference examines photography and archival practices as contested sites where democracy is made, negotiated, and disrupted: between evidence and control, memory and exclusion, protest and institutional power.
We invite contributions from researchers, artists, and practitioners engaging with photography, archives, activism, and visual culture across historical and contemporary contexts.

KEYNOTE & GUEST SPEAKERS
DR NONI STACEY, Cultural Historian, United Kingdom
DR TOM ALLBESON, Cardiff University, United Kingdom
DR ÖZGE ÇELIKASLAN, Visual Artist, Researcher, Activist, Turkey/Germany
MARCELO BRODSKY, Visual Artist, Argentina

This conference proceeds from the premise that photography and archival visual practices do not simply document democratic life, but actively participate in the production of its conditions. Rather than treating images as representations of political reality, it approaches visual practices as sites in which subjects relations of recognition, authority, and participation are constituted and contested. Photography is thus understood not as a neutral medium of documentation, but as a dispositif through which subjects are rendered visible, legible, and governable, while simultaneously sustaining forms of civic address and political agency (Azoulay, 2008, 2019).

This ambivalence is not incidental. Since its emergence, photography has been bound to competing and often contradictory political functions: as a technology of exposure and a mechanism of control; as a means of rendering injustice visible and as an instrument in the administration of populations; as a vehicle for democratic communication and as a support for imperial, colonial, and capitalist orders. The persistent alignment of photography with accessibility, transparency, and evidentiary truth has contributed to its enduring association with democratic ideals, even as these same attributes underpin its authority within regimes of surveillance, classification, and governance (Mirzoeff, 2011, 2017).

Central to this problem is the epistemological status of the image. Photography has historically operated through an assumed equivalence between visibility and knowledge, whereby seeing is aligned with knowing and presence with recognition. This equivalence underwrites the image’s authority as evidence while obscuring the conditions of its production, circulation, and interpretation. It is precisely this instability that enables photography to function simultaneously as a site of political claim-making and as an instrument through which such claims are regulated, mediated, or foreclosed.

Within this framework, archives cannot be understood as neutral repositories of the past. They are epistemic and political infrastructures that organise what becomes historically legible, delimiting the field of visibility within which subjects and events acquire meaning. As systems of selection, classification, and preservation, archives structure the conditions under which recognition is granted or withheld, and thus play a constitutive role in the production of political reality. Their apparent function as guarantors of memory and access is inseparable from their role in stabilising authority and reproducing regimes of knowledge.

At the same time, visual practices operate within sites of conflict, dissent, and uprising. Images do not simply represent political struggle; they participate in it. They condense and transmit gestures of resistance, circulate affects, and intervene in the temporalities of political action, reactivating past struggles within present contexts (Didi-Huberman, 2016). Yet these same images are also subject to processes of capture, circulation, and institutional framing that re-inscribe them within dominant visual orders. The political force of images thus resides not in their capacity to reveal truth, but in their unstable position within competing regimes of visibility.

In recent decades, this dynamic has become particularly visible in the convergence of artistic practice and activist mobilisation. From the visual cultures of uprisings and occupations to ongoing movements such as Black Lives Matter and Rhodes Must Fall, images have circulated across streets, networks, and institutions, often exceeding or displacing conventional sites of artistic display. These practices not only mobilise visual forms but reconfigure the spaces in which they operate, challenging the authority of museums, galleries, and archives while exposing their entanglement in broader political and economic structures. In this sense, activist aesthetics does not simply intervene in existing regimes of visibility, but calls into question the institutional and spatial frameworks through which such regimes are sustained.

Alongside these dynamics of conflict and contestation, recent forms of practice have foregrounded the role of participation, imagination, and collective engagement in reconfiguring democratic life. Participatory and socially engaged artistic practices increasingly operate as sites in which publics are not only represented but constituted through processes of interaction, collaboration, and shared authorship. Such practices extend beyond institutional or policy-driven models of participation, cultivating dispersed and open-ended forms of engagement that unfold across everyday spaces and mediated environments. In doing so, they contribute to the formation of a reflective and imaginative public sphere, in which alternative social and political possibilities can be articulated, negotiated, and rehearsed (Cunningham & Hammond, 2026). This shift raises the question of whether democratic transformation emerges not only through opposition to existing structures, but through the creation of new forms of collective experience and political imagination.

This instability is further intensified in contemporary conditions, where digital infrastructures and algorithmic systems reorganise the circulation, visibility, and legibility of images at scale. The promise of expanded access is entangled with new forms of extraction, surveillance, and control, raising renewed questions about the relationship between visibility, power, and democratic participation. At stake, then, is not only how images function within democratic contexts, but how particular understandings of photography have been historically bound to the very idea of democracy itself. Visual media have played a central role in shaping the terms of political recognition, in constituting and fragmenting communities, and in mediating both consensus and conflict within contemporary democratic formations (Stacey, 2020).

The conference invites contributions from researchers, scholars, visual artists, practitioners, and cultural professionals at any stage of their careers, that critically engage with photography and archives as sites in which democratic relations are produced, mediated, and contested. Particular attention is given to practice-led artistic and curatorial work, as well as collaborative and community-based projects, that engage archives and visual media as sites of intervention, reworking historical materials and visual regimes in ways that challenge dominant narratives and open alternative political imaginaries.

We welcome proposals for 15-minute theory, practice-led, and performative presentations (followed by 15-minute panel discussion) from various disciplines, including: photography, art history and theory, anthropology, museology, philosophy, cultural studies, visual and media studies, and related areas. These presentations should offer an in-depth investigation into the conference topic. Please note that the conference will be conducted in English.

Submissions may address, but are not limited to, the following lines of inquiry:

1. ARCHIVES, POWER, AND THE PRODUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE
Examines how photographic archives organise regimes of visibility and historical knowledge, shaping political recognition, belonging, and exclusion.

2. COUNTER-ARCHIVES, ACTIVISM, AND PRACTICES OF REPAIR
Focuses on practices that mobilise images and archives to intervene in dominant visual orders, including reappropriation, restitution, removal, and repair.

3. REACTIVATING THE ARCHIVE: AESTHETICS, ETHICS, POLITICS
Addresses artistic and curatorial engagements that reconfigure archival materials and raise questions of authorship, ownership, and responsibility.

4. IMAGES AS EVIDENCE, IMAGES AS POLITICAL ACTION
Considers the role of images as evidentiary forms and as instruments of intervention within legal, civic, and political contexts.

5. DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURES AND ALGORITHMIC VISIBILITY
Explores how digital platforms and algorithmic systems reorganisation of regimes of visibility, access, and circulation.

6. AESTHETICS, ACTIVISM, AND POLITICAL IMAGINARIES
Investigates how images operate within protest, dissent, and participatory practices, and how they contribute to the formation of collective imaginaries and forms of democratic engagement.

7. MUSEUMS, INSTITUTIONS, AND THE POLITICS OF DISPLAY
Examines how museums, galleries, and cultural institutions shape regimes of visibility and public memory through exhibitionary and curatorial practices, and how these processes are contested, reconfigured, or displaced by artistic and activist interventions.

SUBMISSION
Applications must be sent via email to info@reframingthearchive.com no later than July 15, 2026, by 11:59:00 p.m. WEST.
Applicants should submit one proposal only, in English.
Presentations have a duration of 15 minutes and should adhere to one of the following formats:

INDIVIDUAL PAPERS
Applicants are required to submit the information listed below in one PDF file:
— Author information (name, email, affiliation, ORCID)
— Paper title, abstract (300 words max), and keywords (maxi 5),
— Bibliographical references (max 5),
— Author short biographical note (written in third person, 100 words).

This information must be gathered into one PDF document with the filename saved as: FirstnameLastname-RTA2026.pdf. The applicant should indicate in the subject line: IND Application for RTA 2026 Conference.

PRE-CONSTITUTED PANELS
Submission of proposals for pre-constituted panels should consist of three papers. The corresponding candidate is required to submit a panel proposal that includes:
— Panel title and abstract (250 words)
— Information regarding the three speakers and their individual papers, as described in the guidelines for individual papers above.

​This information must be gathered into one PDF document with the filename saved as: FirstnameLastname-RTA2026.pdf. (name of the corresponding applicant)
The applicant should indicate in the subject line: PAN Application for RTA 2026 Conference.

SELECTION PROCESS
The submitted proposals will undergo a peer-review process, and candidates will be notified of the results of their proposals by September 4, 2026.
Selected speakers must confirm participation in the conference and complete registration within one week of receiving the selection notification.

PUBLICATION
Extended versions of the presented papers should be submitted for publication by 17 Oct 2026 via Archivo Papers manuscript system at http://www.archivopapers.com.
Following a double blind peer-review process, the papers will be featured​ ​in​ ​an​ ​edited​ ​volume of Archivo Papers, co-edited by Ana Catarina Pinho, Laura Singeot, and Jane Simon, to be published in 2027.

IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline​ ​for​ ​submission:​ ​Jul 15,​ ​2026
Notification​ ​of​ ​selected speakers:​ Sep 04,​ ​2026
Deadline​ ​for​ ​speakers​ ​registration:​ ​one week after confirmation of acceptance
Conference:​ ​Sept 23-25,​ ​​2026 (Online)
Manuscript submission for publication:​ ​Oct 17,​ ​​2026

Org. Committee
Dr Ana Catarina Pinho, IHA, Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal
Dr Laura Singeot, Tours University, France
Dr Jane Simon, Macquarie University, Australia

Call for Proposals: Libraries and Archives in the Anthropocene Colloquium II (LAAC II)

The Libraries and Archives in the Anthropocene Colloquium II (LAAC II)sponsored by Library Juice Press,will take place at University of California, Davis on March 24 and 25, 2027.

Proposals for LAAC II should pull on collective wisdom to address the intersection of information science and the environmental crisis. We encourage submissions that explore how we can channel joy and passion into our work on climate, conservation, and sustainability while navigating the logistical and ethical complexities of the Anthropocene and generating new questions.

Possible topics includebut are not limited to:

  • Intersectional Environmentalism: Centering equity, justice, and diverse voices in library and archive climate action.
  • Technological Impacts: Fostering literacy regarding the environmental costs (water, power, and waste) of AI and large-scale digital infrastructure, cycles of obsolescence, and AI.
  • Grassroots & Community Efforts: Highlighting local initiatives and radical collaborations outside of traditional institutional frameworks.
  • Resilience & Restoration: Strategies for disaster preparedness, recovery of cultural heritage, and institutional sustainability.
  • Radical Imagination: Shifting our professional paradigms to “see things differently” and move beyond a business-as-usual approach.
  • Questioning Worldviews: Deep questioning of worldviews that may have implications for our guiding assumptions as information professionals.

Proposals should include:

  1. a title
  2. a 300-word abstract
  3. preferred session format (see below for details)

We particularly welcome proposals that emphasize a connection to the natural environment and foster communal learning.

Session Formats

We invite proposals for a variety of session types to ensure a dynamic and inclusive program:

  • Full Sessions: (1–1.5 hours): In-depth presentations, panel discussions, or interactive workshops.
  • Lightning Talks: Brief, high-impact presentations (5–10 minutes) on specific projects or “seed” ideas.
  • Breakout/Roundtable Sessions: Facilitated discussions focused on collective problem-solving.
  • Poster Sessions: Visual displays of research or case studies to be shared during dedicated networking time.
  • Tours & Site Visits: Proposals for guided explorations of relevant local sites or ecological features.

Proposals Due: August 1, 2026

For more information see https://libraryjuiceconnections.org/events/laac-ii/ (More details coming soon)