18 research outputs found

    Disruption, Transition, Adaptation: Archivists Working Under COVID-19

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    In this lightning round session, panelists discuss how a small but spirited archive is adapting to work during the COVID-19 pandemic. Since Queens College Special Collections and Archives is largely staffed by current and recent graduates of the college\u27s graduate program in Library and Information Studies, this is a special opportunity to hear from a diverse group of emerging professionals during a challenging and rapidly changing time in the field

    Getting Started with JSTOR Community Collections to Meet the Needs of Queens College Users

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    When COVID-19 hit, Queens College Special Collections and Archives (SCA) strategized to meet the research needs of staff and patrons, both temporarily barred from the physical library as the world moved into remote work. Our poster will detail how SCA launched a partnership with JSTOR Open Community Collections, a platform enabling institutions to share collections through JSTOR’s popular and robust research database. Recognizing the potential of the platform, which reaches millions of researchers every year, SCA uploaded some of the archive’s most frequently requested resources. Not only did JSTOR serve existing users effectively, it reached new audiences and generated publicity

    ‘The feeling of pursuing an ideal’: a League of Nations civil servant reflects on his work

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    Three decades before the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, the international community – in its newly institutionalised guise as a League of Nations – was charged by its covenant to guarantee the rights and protections of a more limited number of people: those considered to be ‘persons belonging to minorities of race, religion or language’ in certain primarily east European states. The everyday work of ‘supervising’ the minorities treaties was carried out by newly recruited members of an entirely unprecedented genre of administration: an international civil service whose role was to support the League of Nations in all its various activities. This paper draws on unpublished interviews from 1965 and 1966, archival documents and first‐person retrospective accounts in which international civil servants describe and reflect on their work on minorities treaty supervision in the new international institution widely seen as an ‘experiment’. Focusing on the accounts of one important figure, the Spaniard Pablo de Azcárate (who served in the Administrative Commissions and Minorities Questions Section of the League of Nations Secretariat from 1922 to 1933), it explores the ethos, aspirations, frustrations and working practices of international civil servants in an institution still in formation and not yet fully bureaucratised
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