Journal article

Local archives and community collecting in the digital age

L Ormond-Parker, R Sloggett

Archival Science | Published : 2012

Abstract

Aboriginal communities in Australia have adopted new information technologies in innovative ways. The most well known is the Ara Irititja project software, now increasingly adopted by many local community groups in Australia. These developments demand a policy response from public collecting institutions and governments. There is a raft of opportunities being presented by current archival and record-keeping, and information and record-development programs and activities in Aboriginal communities. These include economic empowerment through the development and distribution of new products; community empowerment through "owning" histories, stories, images and other associated material and being..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the Mulka Project, Ara Irititja Project, Waringarri Aboriginal Arts and Warmun Arts Centre. The Australian Research Council funded research through the Research Council Discovery Indigenous Researchers Development scheme. We would like to thank the Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Indigenous Visiting Research Fellowships Program. We would like to acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people whose lives have been recorded in archives globally and acknowledge those communities that undertake research in archives and who return information to their families and communities and have built their own local digital archives.