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*NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks*
*Panel, "Digital Archives, Anti-Racism, and Critical Metadata Practices"*
*April 14, 12–2pm (Eastern)*

Dear all,

Please join us on *April 14 at 12–2pm (Eastern)* for a virtual panel on the
topic of anti-racist metadata practices as part of the “Information,
Algorithms, and Justice” speaker series.

This two-hour virtual event brings together four leading scholars and
archivists for a conversation on anti-racist metadata practices in digital
archives. The panel highlights the important work now being done to revise
archiving practices and knowledge systems. How is racism embedded in
knowledge organization systems and how can we change our ways of preserving
and accessing knowledge to eradicate racism? We will open with a brief talk
from each speaker on current issues in the field, followed by a discussion
of several Northeastern projects, to explore how leading-edge conversations
may be taken up by active digital humanities projects. The last segment of
the event will be an open Q&A with the audience.

*This virtual event is free and open to the public, but registration is
required. For more details see the event page
<http://calendar.northeastern.edu/event/panel_digital_archives_anti-racism_and_critical_metadata_practices>.
To RSVP, see here <https://bit.ly/anti-racist-metadata-practices>.*

This event will feature these panelists:

   - Dorothy Berry (Harvard University)
   - Zakiya Collier (Schomburg Center)
   - Valencia Johnson (Princeton University)
   - Jessica Tai (Yale University)

Following the panelists' presentations, we will have a dialogue with
several Northeastern projects and institutions:

   - The Women Writers Project <https://wwp.northeastern.edu/>, represented
   by: Cailin Roles (English, Northeastern)
   - The Early Caribbean Digital Archive <https://ecda.northeastern.edu/>,
   represented by: Alanna Prince (History, Northeastern)
   - The Digital Transgender Archive
   <https://www.digitaltransgenderarchive.net/>, represented by: Eamon
   Schlotterback (English, Northeastern)
   - The Northeastern University Library <https://library.northeastern.edu/>,
   represented by Amanda Rust (University Library, Northeastern)
   - Apartheid Heritages <https://apartheidheritages.org/>, represented by
   Vanessa Torres (History, Northeastern) and Cassie Tanks (Information and
   Library Science, UNC Chapel Hill)

*Speaker Biographies:*
*Dorothy Berry <https://library.harvard.edu/staff/dorothy-berry>* currently
serves as the inaugural Digital Collections Program Manager at Houghton
Library, Harvard University. Her work focuses on the discoverability of
African American history in special collections, through research,
description, and digitization. She is a graduate of the Department of
Folklore and Ethnomusicology, and the School of Informatics, Computing, and
Engineering at Indiana University, with an MA and MLS respectively. She was
honored with Library Journal’s “Movers and Shakers” award, and the Society
of American Archivists’ Mark A. Greene Emerging Leader award. Outside of
libraries, her work can be found in JSTOR Daily, the Public Domain Review,
and Lapham's Quarterly.

*Zakiya Collier <https://zakiyacollier.com/>* (she/they) is a
Brooklyn-based, Black, queer archivist and memory worker. Her work and
research explore the role of cooperative thought and improvisation in the
sustainability of im/material cultural memory, particularly in marginalized
communities and cultural heritage institutions. Before joining Shift
Collective and Documenting the Now (DocNow) in 2022, they have centered
African-diasporan, queer, and community-based organizations. Her previous
experience includes the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture,
Weeksville Heritage Center, SafeWordSociety, Marilyn Nance’s FESTAC ’77
collection, and other private archival collections. She holds a BA in
Anthropology from the University of South Carolina, an MLIS from Long
Island University, and a MA in Media, Culture, and Communication from New
York University. In September 2020, Zakiya became a Certified Archivist
through the Academy of Certified Archivists (ACA). Zakiya is an affiliate
of the Center for Critical Race and Digital Studies (CR+DS) at New York
University, an Interim Board Member of the Archival Education and Research
Initiative (AERI), and a guest co-editor of a forthcoming special issue of
The Black Scholar on Black Archival Practice.

*Jessica Tai <https://web.library.yale.edu/sd/staff/45961>* is the Resident
Processing Archivist at Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
where she is a member of the Manuscript Unit’s accessioning team. She
currently chairs Yale’s Reparative Archival Description Working Group,
which was formed to develop reparative workflows in response to
euphemistic, oppressive, outdated, and harmful language in Yale’s archival
description. She is an MLIS graduate of UCLA’s school of education and
information studies. Prior to her time at Yale, Jessica was a Project
Archivist at UCLA Library Special Collections, and a Research Team Member
for the Community Archives Lab at UCLA.

*Valencia L. Johnson <https://library.princeton.edu/staff/vj2>* is the
Archivist for Student Life at Princeton University. In addition to being a
certified archivist, she holds a Bachelor of Arts in American Studies and
History from the University of Kansas and a Master of Arts in Museum
Studies from Baylor University. She engages with student organizations on
managing and preserving their records, in analog and born-digital formats.
As the creator of Amp Up Your Archives program, she works to create records
management and archival initiatives to inspire students to view their
records and materials as important documentation that is an equal to the
administrative record of the university. She is a co-author of the Project
STAND’s Archiving Student Activism Toolkit and the Archives for Black Lives
in Philadelphia’s Anti-Racist Description Resources.

*We will be including automated live captioning during the event. To make
space for informal discussions, this event will not be recorded for public
distribution. If you have questions, please contact [log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>.*

Please also share this information with anyone who may be interested.

Kind regards,

Javier

Javier Rosario
Graduate Fellow
NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks
Northeastern University

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