Spectrum & Diversity Scholars Community

Call for Proposals: Special issue of Collection Management. "Sharing Knowledge and Smashing Stereotypes: Representing Native American, First Nation and Indigenous Realities in Collections"

  • 1.  Call for Proposals: Special issue of Collection Management. "Sharing Knowledge and Smashing Stereotypes: Representing Native American, First Nation and Indigenous Realities in Collections"

    Posted Aug 19, 2016 09:14 AM

    Abstracts are due September 15, 2016.


    We invite you to submit an abstract for a future issue of Collection Management:
    “Sharing Knowledge and Smashing Stereotypes: Representing Native American, First Nation and Indigenous Realities in Collections”.

    Many librarians are reviewing their collection management and development decisions with an eye towards the global issues of racism, representation and diversity. Native American, First Nation, and Indigenous peoples are generally misrepresented and misunderstood by the dominant culture (if they are acknowledged at all). Consequently many library collections over-emphasize problematic materials. How can cultural institutions, including libraries, represent the reality of Native American, First Nation, and Indigenous peoples? This special issue provides an opportunity to explore aspects of this question.

    We invite you to submit a 500 word abstract for a special issue of Collection Management on Native American, First Nations, and Indigenous studies collection management and development. Submissions may include original research, historical articles, and review articles, which will be peer-reviewed, and editor-reviewed commentary/opinion essays and case studies. We encourage contributions from a range of authors including tribal librarians, academic librarians, and researchers from a range of disciplines and perspectives

    This special issue will highlight the collection management and development considerations unique to Native American, First Nations, and Indigenous collections.


    Topics may include, but are not limited to:
    • Identifying and purchasing materials from small presses, non-profit publications, tribal education departments
    • Indigenous language materials
    • Materials with stereotypical Indigenous representation
    • Pop culture materials
    • Providing access to culturally sensitive materials
    • Unique collections
    • Engaging with disciplinary and interdisciplinary research
    • Tribal government documents
    • Politics of cataloging: access and description
    • Special collections and archives
    • Developing collection development policies and guidelines
    • Data repositories, services, and management
    • Teaching with Native collections and materials
    • Traditional cultural expressions and intellectual property

    Some guiding questions:
    • How do library collections fit within organizations that use an Indigenous framework (including tribal colleges, tribal libraries)?
    • What types of archival collections contain Native voices and perspectives, both historical and contemporary?
    • How do libraries provide access to materials while educating patrons about potentially sensitive materials?
    • How do library and archives support or undermine oral traditions and ways of knowing?
    • What are strategies that libraries can use to promote materials to specific communities using Indigenous worldview/symbols/organization of information?
    • What would an Indigenous knowledge organization system look like?
    • How do Indigenous scholars deal with research in western-oriented classification and cataloging systems?


    Important dates
    • Abstracts are due September 15, 2016.
    • Selection of abstracts will be completed and communicated by September 22, 2016.
    • Manuscripts are due by December 1, 2016.
    • Peer reviews will be due January 15, 2017.
    • Acceptance decision will be communicated to authors by January 30, 2017.
    • Final manuscripts are due March 1, 2017.
    • Expected publication date is July 2017.
    Submission guidelines
    The Abstract should be submitted through Collection Management manuscript submission site. https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/collectionmanagement To Log In, enter your User ID and Password into the boxes below, then click "Log In." If you are unsure about whether or not you have an account, or have forgotten your password, enter your e-mail address into the "Password Help" section below. If you are a new user, please register.

    The final manuscript should be between 10–50 pages double-spaced, inclusive of references, tables, and figures. Consult the Collection Management website for the style guide.
    About Collection Management
    http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?show=aimsScope&journalCode=wcol20

    Guest Editors:
    Paulita Aguilar, University of New Mexico, paulita@unm.edu
    David Hurley, University of New Mexico, dah@unm.edu
    Sarah Kostelecky, University of New Mexico, sarahrk@unm.edu


    If you have questions, please contact the journal editors or the guest editors above
    Susanne Clement, Co-Editor, Collection Management, sclement@unm.edu
    Judith Nixon, Co-Editor, collection Management, jnixon@purdue.edu