CFP: Artefacts XXXI: “Trust and Objects”

With pleasure, the Science History Institute, along with the American Philosophical Society and  the Mütter Museum at The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, announces that the next and 31st meeting of ARTEFACTS will be held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19-21 October 2026.

Today, many museums aligned with the history of science (very broadly defined) are being called upon to help build, restore, or grow “trust in science” among their audiences. As historians of science and museum professionals, the organizers share the concerns motivating such calls, yet also recognize that “trust in science” is itself an object of historical inquiry. 

Such tensions within the history of science are, of course, not new. Since museums and historians often must reconcile such tensions in public-facing projects (and recognizing that we serve many different “publics,” across and within institutions), we have the opportunity to explore how scientific objects can be mobilized to bring audiences into a more critical history of science. Objects are on one hand epistemologically and ontologically flexible; their meanings and identities come from those who study and interpret them. At the same time, for the public, objects are material, “real,” and carry an aura of authority. In the American Alliance of Museums’ Spring 2021 report on Museums and Trust, respondents identified the fact that “Museums present real/original/authentic objects” as the second-most cited measure of their trustworthiness. (For further analysis, see the essay “History Museums and Trust” from the American Association for State and Local History.)

The theme of the 2026 meeting is TRUST AND OBJECTS. We encourage proposals that explore how museums and academic institutions use material culture to build “trust in the history of science” in multiple ways. How do we use objects to negotiate the different meanings of “science” for audiences? In what ways can objects be deployed programmatically and interpretively to raise critical and generative questions about science, and its relationships to politics, culture, and economy? How can the seemingly inert nature of material culture be used to cultivate values of care, empathy, and understanding? 

In keeping with the theme, we especially encourage proposals from individuals working on or with public-facing projects using material culture. This could include museum professionals, as well as historians who study museums, public displays, or interpretation within the history of science. 

Examples might include, but are not limited to:

  • Case studies of museum exhibitions or interpretive projects that illustrate the role of museums and/or material culture in exploring trust in science
  • Discussions about how to negotiate among internal and external stakeholders in defining “science,” the goals of the history of science, or how to connect with different audiences
  • Challenges posed by interpreting material culture unfamiliar to visitors, or “unappealing” due to  its visual character or technical complexity
  • Historical perspectives on the interpretation of material culture in the history of science 
  • Discussions of objects that challenge definitions of science and define the edges of an institution’s collecting scope

Please remember that the focus of presentations should be on artefacts.

ARTEFACTS will once again offer two tracks for submissions: (1) works to be considered for publication (a pre-circulated paper and a longer presentation based on the paper) and (2) works-in-progress (shorter presentations without a paper). Abstracts for track 1 should be 500-1000 words; abstracts for track 2 should be 200-300 words. They should be accompanied by a 75-word author biography and sent to artefacts@sciencehistory.org by April 30. We aim to notify accepted participants by May 31.

Registration will open formally when the program is announced in June, but in the meantime informal queries should be directed to artefacts@sciencehistory.org.

Contact Email

artefacts@sciencehistory.org

URL https://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/sites/default/files/2026-03/ArtefactsCallforPapers.pdf

New Issue: Preservation, Digital Technology & Culture

Volume 54, Issue 4
(open access)

Editorial

Reshaping Cultural Preservation, Digital Innovation, and Technological Advancement: PDT&C 54-4 Editorial
Bogdan Trifunović

Articles

Transforming Physical Archives into Searchable Digital Libraries with Optical Character Recognition
Sivankalai Sivankalai, Shanmugam Balachandran

3D Modelling as an Effective Way to Visualize the Archaeological Monument with the Sequential Changes: A Case Study on the Itakhola Mound Temple
Nazmul Alam Ridoy, Mohammad Mahmudul Hasan Khan

Designing Integrated Online Finding Aids: Leveraging Content Analysis and Design Thinking for Effective Site Navigation and Wireframe Development
Pitchai Arumugam, Singarayar Jayachristrayar, Rajendran Rega, Jesus Rayar

Towards AI-Assisted Preventive Conservation in Libraries: Deep Learning for the Detection of Insect and Mold Damage in Ancient Manuscripts
Irhamni Ali, Ellis Sekar Ayu

Culture Meets Design: Visualizing the Evolution of Taige Studies Through a Design Lens
Ruiying Kuang, Olena Kolosnichenko

Breaking the Silo: The Crucial Role of Leadership and Advocacy in Digital Preservation Programs
Rafiq Ahmad, Muhammad Rafiq, Muhammad Fahad Khalil, Muhammad Haris Khalil

Mapping the Preprint Landscape: A Bibliometric Analysis of Global Research Dissemination (2015–2024)
A. Subaveerapandiyan

CFP: “Capturing Violence Against Women and Children in Oral History Interviews” (due April 8)

We are looking for participants for a panel for the ESSHC (European Social Science History Conference) titled “Capturing Violence Against Women and Children in Oral History Interviews”.

The conference will be held in Lyon, France, from 21–24 April 2027.

The panel addresses the methodological and ethical challenges of identifying and interpreting experiences of violence against women and children in oral history interviews, particularly in the context of the Second World War and the immediate postwar period.

The panel will feature the following speakers:

  • Marta Pawlińska (University of Warsaw, Poland), examines narratives of violence experienced by Polish forced labourers, especially young women who worked as domestic servants in German households. 
  • Jakub Gałęziowski (University of Warsaw, Poland), works with individuals who were born as a consequence of forced labour during the war or shortly after its end and who often grew up without parental care as so-called unaccompanied children. 
  • Maria Buko (University of Konstanz, Germany), collects narratives of war orphans who, for various reasons, were left without family as a result of the war. 

In each of the presented cases, different forms of violence are present, yet they are not always articulated explicitly. Rather, they often emerge indirectly and must be carefully identified within lengthy personal narratives.
This panel therefore reflects on the methodological and ethical questions involved in recognizing and interpreting such experiences of violence, as well as on responsible approaches to addressing violence both during the interview process and in subsequent analysis.

We invite scholars with corresponding interests to join this panel.
 

Submission Details

Please send:

  • a proposal for your presentation, and
  • a short academic CV

by 08 April 2026 to: ma.pawlinska@uw.edu.pl

We are looking forward to hearing from you!

Marta Pawlińska, Jakub Gałęziowski, Maria Buko

Contact Email

ma.pawlinska@uw.edu.pl

CFP: Material Matters: It’s in the Details 2027 Virtual Conference

Call for Papers

Material Matters: It’s in the Details

January 23, 2027

The vast majority of participants in the military events of the long 18th century left no written traces of themselves. Fortunately for scholars, and the public, evidence of their presence survives in material form. From the arms they carried, to the archaeological evidence of their presence, the material experience of soldiering extensively survives if we look carefully. Often seen as mementos or souvenirs of war, or as distinct areas of avocational collecting, military material culture is pervasive, yet understudied, as a rich body of material culture.

However, “military material culture” is not limited to the weapons men wielded or the uniforms they wore. The dense networks of manufacturing supporting early modern militaries connected civilians across the world and expands our definition of this area of study. Furthermore, militaries left their impact on societies through the appropriation and re-use of materials, as well as physically on landscapes shaped by the presence, or absence, of soldiers. Thus, material culture provides a unique and compelling way to engage with topics and individuals for which no written sources survive.

The Fort Ticonderoga Museum seeks papers relating broadly to material culture made, used, or altered in a military context. From soldier’s encounters with domestic furnishings on campaign, to the weapons designed and built for battle. We are seeking new research from established scholars in addition to graduate students, professionals, and artisans that relate to material culture made, used, or altered in a military context between roughly 1609-1815. Papers may engage but are not limited to: 

  • Objects made for military purposes 
  • Civilian objects used in military contexts 
  • Archeological research into sites of military occupation 
  • Ephemeral material cultures such as food or fuel
  • Military material culture crossing cultural, national, and geographic lines 
  • Construction and fabrication of material culture 
  • Craft, trade, experimental archeology, or living history perspectives on material culture 
  • Art and representations of material culture in military contexts 

This conference takes place online, using Zoom Webinars, on Saturday, January 23, 2027. Sessions are 30 minutes in length, followed by 10 minutes for audience questions. Traditional illustrated papers, combined with live or recorded videos of trade practice or object analysis, will all be accepted for consideration. Fort Ticonderoga may provide speakers with an honorarium. Please submit a 300-word abstract and CV by email by July 1, 2026, to Richard M. Strum, Director of Academic Programs: rstrum@fort-ticonderoga.org

Contact Information

Rich Strum, Director of Academic Programs

Fort Ticonderoga 

rstrum@fort-ticonderoga.org

Contact Email

rstrum@fort-ticonderoga.org

Website https://fortticonderoga.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Material-Matters-2027-CFP.pdf

New Issue: Journal of Archival Organization

Journal of Archival Organization, Volume 22, Issue 3-4 (2025)

Articles

Repatriating Indigenous Knowledge in U.S. Archives: A Paradigm and Practice Toward Cultural Heritage Justice
Kristen J. Nyitray

Practices and Challenges of Preserving Audio-Visual Records at Tanzanian Television Stations
Shanel Clodwick Komba & Sydney Enock Msonde

Archives and UX: Exploring Simplified Interfaces to Promote Understandability
Anthony Cocciolo

Hollinger’s Edge: The Retrieval Object at the Margins of the Archival Ontology
Regine Heberlein & Ruth Kitchin Tillman

Case Reports

Better Late than Never: A Retrospective Accessioning Case Study
Amy L. Allen & Katrina Windon

Factors Affecting University Archiving Performance in Central Java
Agung Kuswantoro, Maman Rachman, S Martono & Muhsin

Research Article

Preserving Indonesian Architectural Education Through the Archives of Suwondo Bismo Sutedjo
Hedista Rani Pranata & Adelia Andani

New Issue: ARSC Journal

ARSC Journal 56.2 (Fall 2025)
(subscription)

Original Articles

“Misirlou” and Beyond: The Impact of Nicholas Roubanis on Global Music
Maria Kapkidi

Ampex Master Equalization (AME)
Gary A. Galo

“Buried Deep”: George W. Broome, A Lost Pioneer of Black Culture and Sound
Tim Brooks

Audio Tape: An Introduction to Analogue Magnetic Tape Recorders for Archivists and Audiophiles
Harold Tichenor

Louisville Lockout
Ron Geesin

Book Reviews

Hanna-Barbera: The Recorded History (From Modern Stone Age to Meddling Kids), by Greg Ehrbar, with foreword by Tim Matheson and preface by Leonard Maltin (University Press of Mississippi)
Cary Ginell

Lou Reed: The King of New York, by Will Hermes (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Matt Chiu

The Evolution of Chinese Popular Music: Modernization and Globalization, 1927 to the Present, by Ya-Hui Cheng (Routledge)
Ted Liebler

Early Jazz: A Concise Introduction, From Its Beginnings Through 1929″ by Fumi Tomita (State University of New York Press)
Monk Rowe

Soon and Very Soon: Transformative Music and Ministry of Andraé Crouch, by Robert F. Darden and Stephen M. Newby. Foreword by Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (Oxford University Press)
Robert M. Marovich

See That My Grave Is Kept Clean: The World and Music of Blind Lemon Jefferson, by Alan Govenar and Kip Lornell (La Reunion/Deep Vellum)
Edward Komara

Ink: The Indelible J. Mayo Williams, by Clifford R. Murphy (University of Illinois Press)
Edward Komara

Paramount 12000/13000 Series. Second, revised edition, by Max Vreede and Guido van Rijn (Agram Blues Books)
Edward Komara

Sounding Human: Music and Machines 1740-2020, by Deirdre Loughridge (University of Chicago Press)
Edward Komara

Sound Recording Reviews

Gloria Gaynor: Love Tracks (Polydor)
Lawrence Schulman

Johnny Mercer Sings Johnny Mercer (Everest Records/43 North Broadway); Fats Waller: Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Olympic Records/43 North Broadway; Cy Coleman: If My Friends Could See Me Now (Columbia – Legacy)
Lawrence Schulman

Judy Garland: At The Palace Closing Night 1952 – The Bravo Series (BFD1011) (1 CD); Judy Garland: At The Palace Closing Night 1952 – The Bravo Series (BFD1012) (2 x LP); Judy Garland: At The Palace Closing Night 1952 – The Bravo Series (16-Bit/44.1 kHz)
Lawrence Schulman

Patsy Cline – New Mono to Stereo Mixes (PRS/Voice Masters/Good Music, 1 CD, 2024); Patsy Cline – The Complete Studio Recordings (Enlightenment Records, EN3CD9240, 3 CDs, 2025); Patsy Cline – Imagine That: The Lost Recordings (1954-1963) (Deep Digs/Elemental Music Records); Patsy Cline – Imagine That: The Lost Recordings (1954-1963) (Deep Digs/Elemental Music Records, 180-Gram Double LP, 2025)
Lawrence Schulman

The Mills Brothers: World Broadcast Recordings (Circle Records CCD-195, 24-Bit/96 kHz FLAC download, 2024); Tiger Rag: Mills Brothers – The Singles Collection Vol. 1 1931-47 (Acrobat, 4 CDs, 2024); Tiger Rag: Mills Brothers – The Singles Collection Vol. 2 1947-60 (Acrobat, 4 CDs, 2024)
Lawrence Schulman

The Songs of Vincent Youmans: Tea for Two, his 27 finest, 1925-1951 (Retrospective RTR 4424, 2025, 1 CD)
Lawrence Schulman

Wham! – Make It Big (Sony Music – 19658870759, Epic – 19658870759, SDE Surround Series – 20, High Fidelity Pure Audio, Blu-ray, Blu-ray Audio, Album Limited Edition, Reissue, Stereo, Multichannel, 1984/2024); Wham! – Fantastic. (Sony Music – 19658870749, Epic – 19658870749, SDE Surround Series – 19, High Fidelity Pure Audio, Blu-ray, Blu-ray Audio, Album, Limited Edition, Reissue, Stereo, Multichannel, 1983/2024)
Lawrence Schulman
Regular Sections

Current Bibliography
edited by Tim Brooks

New Special Issue: MUSICultures: The Journal of the Canadian Society for Traditional Music / La revue de la Société canadienne pour les traditions musicales

MUSICultures: The Journal of the Canadian Society for Traditional Music / La revue de la Société canadienne pour les traditions musicales. Volume 52, 2025.
(open access)

From the Editor / Mot du Rédacteur en Chef
Gordon E. Smith

Articles: Archives, Access, and Ethnomusicology / Archives, Accès et Ethnomusicologie

Introduction: Archives, Access, and Ethnomusicology
Laura Risk et Janice Esther Tulk

Dirna arrun “We Hold It”: Rematriating Junba with Archival Collections and Living Knowledge in the Kimberley, Northwest Australia
Pete Myadooma O’Connor, John Nyunjuma Divilli, Rona Goonginda Charles et Sally Treloyn

Heterophonic Mayhem in the Archive: The Poetics, Surprises, and Disruptions of Animating the Arab Musical Diaspora
Anne K. Rasmussen, Jared Holton, Anne Elise Thomas et Albert Agha

Digital Ethnomusicological Research Data and the Institutional Repository
Farzaneh Hemmasi et Hannah M. Brown

Archival Knowledge, Indigenous Knowledge, and Challenges in Collection Management: An Australian Case Study
Peter Toner

Epistemologies of Access: Hugh Tracey’s Organizing Principles at the International Library of African Music (ILAM)
Nicole Madeleine Pooley

Cultures of Sound Network: The Genesis of an International Alliance
Marcia Ostashewski, Harris M. Berger, Darrell Bernard Sr., Logan E. Clark, Michael Frishkopf, Judith Klassen, Maureen Loughran et Graham Marshall

Finding What Is Lost: The Intangible Archive of València’s Falles Festival
Rachel Horner

Articles: Voices / Voix

Canadian Music Studies and/under the Second Trump Presidency
Robin Elliott

Articles: Open Topics / Hors Thème

Twerking, Alcohol, Ordination: Rethinking Sacred and Secular with Rot Hae’s Mobile and Participatory Performances in Thailand
Nattapol Wisuttipat

Developing a Community-Engaged Research-Creation Methodology through the Resonance Project
Ellen Waterman et Gale Franklin

Navigating Power and Positionality in Ethnographic Spaces
Tracey Mia Stewart

Book Reviews / Comptes Rendus de Livres

Stock, Jonathan P. J., with Chou Chiener. 2021. Everyday Musical Life among the Indigenous Bunun, Taiwan
Tangmuyang Zhang

Martin, Denis-Constant. 2020. Plus que de la musique… Musiques, sociétés et politique, Caraïbes, États-Unis, Afrique du Sud
Marie-Christine Parent

Stanbridge, Alan. 2023. Rhythm Changes: Jazz, Culture, Discourse
Robbie MacKay

Donaghy, Joseph Keola. 2024. Mele on the Mauna: Perpetuating Genealogies of Hawaiian Musical Activism on Maunakea
Kati Szego

Pilzer, Joshua. 2023. Quietude: A Musical Anthropology of “Korea’s Hiroshima”
Benjamin Tausig

Jacobsen, Kristina. 2024. Sing Me Back Home: Ethnographic Songwriting and Sardinian Language Politics
Felicia K. Youngblood

Exhibition Reviews / Comptes Rendus d’Expositions

Yamaima Hilwa: As sung by Salim Doumani with Takht Naim Karakand
Daoud Husni, Muhammad Younis Al-Kady, Anne K. Rasmussen et Anne Elise Thomas

Il-Ḥilwa Dī (“This Beautiful Girl”)
Badi‘ Khayri, Sayyid Darwish et Jared Holton

Yā Ghazālan (“Oh Gazelle”): موشّح (muwashshaḥ)
Jared Holton

Call for Participation: FIAT/IFTA Survey on Archives & Ethics

The FIAT/IFTA Value, Use and Copyright Commission has launched a new project focusing on ethical issues related to archival content – both in connection with republication online and in relation to metadata containing terms that are now considered harmful or inappropriate.

The discussion on this topic began at the World Conference in Rome in October 2025, with an expert roundtable featuring an open exchange on ethical considerations.

The next steps in the project are this survey, which explores how you address ethical questions in your work, followed by an Online Experts Roundtable on May 19, 2026 at 14:00 CEST, with archive experts who engage with ethical issues in their professional practice.

Your participation is essential to help us understand current practices and guide future discussions. The survey should take around 15 minutes to complete.

We ask for your email address to be able to contact you if we have any additional questions in relation with your answers. We will not share your email address with anyone or use it on mailing lists without your permission.

Thank you for your valuable input. You can contact FIAT/IFTA at: office@fiatifta.org

Link to survey

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Travouillon, K., & Lemay-Hébert, N. (2026). Activating archives for the practice turn in International Relations. European Journal of International Relations, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661251408736

Ilona Pikkanen, Matti La Mela, Hanna-Leena Paloposki, Jouni Tuominen. “A Critical Collection History of Nineteenth-century Women’s Letters: Overcoming the Occluded Archive with Data-Driven Methods.Digital Humanities Quarterly 19, no. 4 (2025).

Jennifer Neville. “Tattoo Archives: A Collection Analysis,” SLIS Connecting: Vol. 13: Iss. 1, Article 7.
DOI: 10.18785/slis.1301.07
Available at: https://aquila.usm.edu/slisconnecting/vol13/iss1/7

Daines, J. Gordon III; Lee, Ryan K.; and Nimer, Cory L. “Creating an Identity: Analyzing the Journal of Western Archives,” Journal of Western Archives: Vol. 17: Iss. 1, Article 1.
DOI: 10.59620/2154-7149.1202
Available at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/westernarchives/vol17/iss1/1

Preservation and Representation of National Cultural Heritage by Archival and Library Institutions in the Context of Russia’s War Against Ukraine (2022–2025)
http://au.archives.gov.ua/index.php/au/article/view/299/262

E.M. Lewis-Jong. “Cultural Heritage and AI: How Institutions Can Reclaim Control of Their Data.” Mozilla Data Collective, March 3, 2026.

Books

Governance, Ignorance, and Archives: Sharing Critical Information in Contemporary Japanese Society
Editor: Keiji Fujiyoshi
Springer Singapore, 2025

Collecting Social Media in Museums
Craig Middleton, Caroline Wilson-Barnao
Routledge, 2025

Padfield on Copyright for Archivists and Records Managers
Tim Padfield, Victoria Stobo
Facet Publishing, 2026

Artistic Provenance Research
Tal Adler / Sharon Macdonald (Eds.)
Independent Academic Publishing, 2026

Intelligent Computing for Cultural Heritage: Global Achievements and China’s Innovations
Edited By Xiaoguang Wang, Marcia Lei Zeng, Jin Gao, Ke Zhao
Routledge, 2025

The Museum Environment Revisited: Managing Heritage Environments in the 21st Century
Edited By Jane Thompson Webb, Meagen Smith
Routledge, 2026

Retour vers le vivant: Valoriser les archives filmiques et sonores des arts du spectacle
Back to life: Promoting film and sound archives of the performing arts

Edited by Romain Bionda, Danielle Chaperon
EPFL Press, 2026

Indigenous Archives: The Maya Diaspora and Mobile Cultural Production
Floridalma Boj Lopez
Duke University Press, 2026

AI and Digital Leadership: Transforming Libraries, Archives, and Museums for the Future
Angela I. Fritz (Author)
Bloomsbury, 2026

Collecting the North
Series: Arctic Humanities, Volume: 2
Volume Editors: Janicke S. Kaasa, Ulrike Spring, and Lene Liebe Delsett
Brill, 2026

New Directions in Digital Textual Studies: Book History, Scholarly Editing and Curation in Conversation
Christopher Ohge (Anthology Editor) , Kristen Schuster (Anthology Editor)
Bloomsbury, 2026

Oral History Handbook
Beth Robertson
Oral History Australia, 2025

Organizing Archival Records: A Guide for Both Physical and Digital Collections
David W. Carmicheal, Adam T. Bentz
Bloomsbury, 2026

Safeguarding Cultural Heritage and Promoting Economic-Cultural Growth in the Digital Era
Yonglin Huang
Springer Singapore, 2026

Practical Heritage Management: A Reasonable and Good Faith Effort
Scott F. Anfinson
Bloomsbury, 2026

Inclusive Heritage: Hidden Pasts, Reconciling Presents, Diversifying Futures
Editors: Amanda L. Capern, Rebecca Haboucha, Sarah Pymer
Palgrave Macmillan Cham, 2026

Reports

Art Museum Director Survey 2025: Museum Strategy and Operations
Deirdre Harkins, Ioana G. Hulbert, Ellen Carroll
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18665/sr.324844
Ithaka S+R, 2026

Guidelines for Inclusive Library Services for Persons with Print Disabilities
IFLA, 2025

Colavizza, Giovanni, and Lise Jaillant. AI Preparedness Guidelines for Archivists. February 2026. Archives & Records Association (UK & Ireland).

Card Game

Records in Context Card Game (Version 1)
http://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1QK8URh8VDhldGSYM4NlFDYPvKjlk9OCC

Call for Presenters: RAO Marketplace of Ideas

The RAO Section will once again host its Marketplace of Ideas during the Section’s annual meeting on Monday, May 4 at 12pm EST. The meeting will be held virtually and is free to attend.  

For those unfamiliar with the Marketplace of Ideas, this is a fun and interactive way for archivists to discuss and exchange innovative ideas and practical approaches to many of the challenges faced in reference, access, and outreach. Multiple small breakout rooms are created, and, at 15-minute intervals, attendees can virtually travel from one breakout room to another to engage in conversation with colleagues. In this virtual marketplace, the connections extend beyond walls and geography, creating an open, inclusive forum where ideas are exchanged, refined, and shared with the entire community. 

We are looking for people who are interested in serving as presenters in the Marketplace! As a presenter, you will be the host of your own breakout room. You will provide attendees with a short (3-5 minute) presentation or overview of the topic or theme of your choice and facilitate a conversation with attendees. You might present a particularly challenging situation you’re facing and ask for suggestions and feedback. You might present a case study about an innovative assignment you’ve created and facilitate a Q&A with attendees who want to learn more about your work.   

Presentation topics focused on any aspect of archival reference, access, instruction, advocacy, and outreach are encouraged. We are particularly interested in proposals that align with the work of RAO’s Teaching with Primary Sources (TPS) and Exhibits and Events (E2) Subcommittees. In past years, the Marketplace has included topics such as: 

  • The Future of the Archives & Special Collections Reference Desk & Reading Room: Open for Walk-Ins, By Appointment Only, or Other? 
  • Engaging MFA Theatre Students in Archival Studies and Memory Work 
  • Break Out! Gamify your Collections 
  • Navigating Minimal Processing and Public Services 
  • Lending Archival Materials 

You can submit your presentation proposal here: 

2026 RAO Marketplace of Ideas proposal submission – Fill out form 

Please submit by Friday, April 17, 2026. We will notify successful applicants no later than Friday, April 24, 2026.  

If you have questions, please reach out to Erin Lawrimore, RAO Chair, or any member of the RAO Steering Committee