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August 16, 2020 by Gary Price

Conference Paper: “Comprehensiveness of Archives: A Modern AI-Enabled Approach to Build Comprehensive Shared Cultural Heritage”

August 16, 2020 by Gary Price

The paper linked below has been accepted for presentation at Datafication and Cultural Heritage Workshop and Messy Ethnography Workshop at ECSCW 2020

Title

Comprehensiveness of Archives: A Modern AI-Enabled Approach to Build Comprehensive Shared Cultural Heritage

Authors

Abhishek Gupta
Montreal AI Ethics Institute
Microsoft

Nikitasha Kapoor
Pure & Applied Group

Source

via arXiv
arXiv:2008.04541

Abstract

Archives play a crucial role in the construction and advancement of society. Humans place a great deal of trust in archives and depend on them to craft public policies and to preserve languages, cultures, self-identity, views and values. Yet, there are certain voices and viewpoints that remain elusive in the current processes deployed in the classification and discoverability of records and archives.

In this paper, we explore the ramifications and effects of centralized, due process archival systems on marginalized communities. There is strong evidence to prove the need for progressive design and technological innovation while in the pursuit of comprehensiveness, equity and justice. Intentionality and comprehensiveness is our greatest opportunity when it comes to improving archival practices and for the advancement and thrive-ability of societies at large today. Intentionality and comprehensiveness is achievable with the support of technology and the Information Age we live in today.  Reopening, questioning and/or purposefully including others voices in archival processes is the intention we present in our paper.

We provide examples of marginalized communities who continue to lead “community archive” movements in efforts to reclaim and protect their cultural identity, knowledge, views and futures. In conclusion, we offer design and AI-dominant technological considerations worth further investigation in efforts to bridge systemic gaps and build robust archival processes.

Direct to Full Text Paper
10 pages; PDF.

Filed under: Archives and Special Collections, Journal Articles, News

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About Gary Price

Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.

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