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Call for Articles: Special Issue of Comma, Archiving for Palestinian Liberation and Global Decolonization

Call for Articles: Special Issue of Comma, Archiving for Palestinian Liberation and Global Decolonization

September 10, 2024

Fighting Colonial Erasures, Archiving Against Genocides for Palestinian Liberation and Global Decolonization

Deadline: January 10, 2025

Submissions in all languages are welcome. We aim to translate all submissions into English and Arabic, as relevant.

Contact:

Key Dates:

  • Deadline for submissions: January 10, 2025
  • Notification of acceptance: by March 1, 2025
  • Revisions due: May 2, 2025 (translation underway)
  • Publication of issue: Fall 2025

Guest Editorial Collective:

  • Rula Shahwan, Director, Library Archives, Arab American University – Ramallah Campus, Palestine; and PhD candidate, Goethe University, Germany
  • Dr. Jamila Ghaddar, Assistant Professor, Dalhousie University, Canada; and Founding Director, Archives & Digital Media Lab
  • Tam Rayan, PhD Candidate, University of Michigan, USA
  • Ghada Dimashk, Librarian, Archivist & Interim Coordinator, Palestine Land Studies Center, American University of Beirut, Lebanon
  • Dr. James Lowry, Chair, Section on Education & Training, International Council on Archives; Founding Director, Archival Technologies Lab, and Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Studies, Queens College, City University of New York, USA
  • Alia Reza, PhD Candidate, University of Maryland, College Park, USA
  • Dr. Mariam Karim, Global Postdoctoral Scholar, Institute of Advanced Study in the Global South, Northwestern University in Qatar
  • Rose Miyonga, PhD Candidate, University of Warwick
  • Doa Khan, Archivist, National College of Arts, Pakistan (TBC)

Guest Managing Editors:

  • Dr. Jamila Ghaddar, Assistant Professor, Dalhousie University, Canada; and Founding Director, Archives & Digital Media Lab
  • Dr. James Lowry, Chair, Section on Education & Training, International Council on Archives; Founding Director, Archival Technologies Lab, and Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Studies, Queens College, City University of New York (USA)
  • Tam Rayan, PhD Candidate, University of Michigan, USA
  • Dr. Mariam Karim, Global Postdoctoral Scholar, Institute of Advanced Study in the Global South, Northwestern University in Qatar

We invite submissions in any language to a special issue of the International Council on Archives’ journal, Comma, on fighting colonial erasure and archiving against genocide for liberation, decolonization, resurgence, and return in the Global South. In this urgent moment for the Palestinian people, over 300 days into what the International Court of Justice has deemed a plausible genocide in Gaza, we focus in particular on the Palestinian case in comparative, regional, and/or global perspective. Hence, we especially welcome submissions on Palestinian archives and heritage anywhere in the world, that provide a comparative perspective between the Palestinian case and other Global South cases, and/or think through dilemmas and issues in any context related to the theme of “archiving against genocide”. All submissions will be translated into Arabic and English.

Curated by a international Guest Editorial Collective led by Palestinian, Lebanese and racialized scholars and practitioners, this special issue seeks to address questions that are as pressing today as they have ever been over the last centuries of western colonialism and racial domination, with their attendant archival erasures and epistemic violences:

  • How can we archive against genocide in Gaza, elsewhere in Palestine, and across the Global South?
  • How can we archive for native sovereignty, liberation, return, landback, healing, and resurgence in Palestine, and elsewhere in the region and across the Global South?
  • How can we do liberatory memory work under the conditions of neoliberalism, globalisation, and late capital? How can we draw on anticolonial, antiracist, feminist, and community-centred models to avoid the pitfalls of First World guilt and racist, paternalistic benevolence?
  • How can we archive and activate the history of Palestine as a celebration of sacrifice and resistance in defiance of racist, self-serving settler colonial frameworks?
  • How can we produce a counter-narrative based on documentary heritage and archives?
  • In what ways can models and practices of South-South and South-North solidarity and collaboration help us articulate a deeper, more meaningful decolonial archival praxis?
  • How can we draw on key international, regional and national texts, documents, conventions, calls, statements, and laws to address these complex issues and conundrums?

We welcome articles that examine a range of models, solutions, and frameworks, including key international instruments and conventions, such as:

As archivists and memory workers worldwide continue to sign a call to archive against genocide in solidarity with Palestine and Palestinian Archives, this special issue similarly calls for an international conversation grounded in solidarity and directed towards liberation. At its core, this special issue seeks to address the fundamental question of how we can centre the right of colonised people to deconstruct and decolonise their archives; to create their counter narrative; to realise their right to a liberated epistemology about their history and truth; and to regather their fragmented archives and documentary heritage. It centres the importance of affirming the right of colonised people to self-determination and self-representation in the design, implementation, and management of archival and heritage interventions as community members, allies, and co-conspirators

In the lead up to the special issue, the Guest Editorial Collective is working with local and global partners to host a virtual symposium related to the theme. Join the Archives & Digital Media Lab mailing list at (info@archiveslab.org) for updates.

Submission formats include but are not limited to:

  • Academic articles (~6,000 words)
  • Opinion pieces (~2,000-3,500 words)
  • Legal briefs on specific cases of disputed archives
  • Interviews
  • Calls to Action
  • Manifestos
  • Open letters
  • Petitions
  • Standards, guidelines, and schemas
  • Edited transcripts of academic, professional or public events, including (paper presentations, roundtables, panels, keynote addresses, etc.
  • Reviews of books and relevant documents/instruments on archival decolonization and repatriation, including standards, declarations, position statements, etc.
  • Artistic or creative pieces — contact us at director@archiveslab.org with your ideas
  • Other format proposals are welcome — contact us at director@archiveslab.org with your ideas

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