Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T00:17:03.224Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Supporting Capacity Building for Archives in Africa: initiatives of the Cooperative Africana Materials Project (CAMP) since 1995

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Jason M. Schultz*
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
Get access

Extract

In May 1963, discussions between the African Studies Association (U.S.), the Midwest Interlibrary Center (now Center for Research Libraries), and Africana librarians from twelve North American institutions helped create the Cooperative Africana Microform Project (CAMP). Owing to the rise in digital information and preservation formats, CAMP renamed itself the Cooperative Africana Materials Project in 2010. Its mission has been to collect and preserve African newspapers, serials, and ephemera not typically held at U.S. institutions. As its original name suggests, microfilming continues to be an important method of preserving CAMP holdings. While building the collection involved some direct purchases of microfilm from Africa and Europe, the role of collaboration among U.S. and later African institutions enhanced collections and expanded the scope of CAMP's work. The history of these initiatives prior to 1995 has been documented by several CAMP members.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2013

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

This paper was originally presented as ‘History of the Cooperative Africana Materials Project, 1995-2012’ at the conference Archives of Post-Independence Africa and Its Diaspora, 20-23 June, 2012, Goree Island, Senegal.

References

Britz, J. and Lor, P. (2003) ‘A Moral Reflection on the Information Flow from South to North: An African Perspective’, Libri 53, pp.160-173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooperative Africana Microfilm Project. (2000) ‘CAMP Business Meeting Minutes, November 11, 1999, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,’ Africana Libraries Newsletter 102, pp.11-16.Google Scholar
Caruso, Y. (2003) ‘Report on the CAMP-Title VI Joint Acquisitions Project in Senegal, West Africa (1995-2003),’ Columbia University Library, July 2003.Google Scholar
Center for Research Libraries. (2004) ‘Cooperative Africana Microform Project: Forty Years of Collaboration and Scholarship,’ Focus on Global Resources 23(4), http://www.crl.edu/focus/summer-2004(Accessed 29 August, 2013).Google Scholar
Cooperative Africana Microfilm Project. (2008) ‘Cooperative Africana Microfilm Project (CAMP), Business Meeting Minutes, University of Iowa. May 10, 2008’, Unpublished.Google Scholar
Irele, B. and Johnson, T. (2010) ‘Fall CAMP Meeting Greenlights Two Digitization Projects’, Africana Libraries Newsletter 127, pp. 1, Web, 5 Nov 2011.Google Scholar
Isaacman, A, et. al. (2005) ‘Digitization, History, and the Making of a Postcolonial Archive of South African Liberation Struggles: The Aluka Project’, Africa Today, 52(2), pp. 55-77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lalu, P. (2007) ‘The Virtual Stampede for Africa: Digitisation, Postcoloniality and Archives of the Liberation Struggles in Southern Africa’, Innovation: Journal of Appropriate Librarianship and Information Work in Southern Africa 34, pp. 28-44.Google Scholar
Limb, P. (2005) ‘The Digitization of Africa’, Africa Today 52(2), pp. 3-19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Limb, P. (2007) ‘The Politics of Digital ‘Reform and Revolution’: Towards Mainstreaming and African Control of African Digitisation’, Innovation: Journal of Appropriate Librarianship and Information Work in Southern Africa 34, pp. 18-27Google Scholar
Lor, P. (2005) ‘Preserving African Digital Resources: Is There a Role for Repository Libraries?’, Library Management 26(1), pp. 63-72.Google Scholar
Peterson, D. and Macola, G. (2009) ‘Homespun Historiography and the Academic Profession’, In Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, pp. 1-28.Google Scholar
Peterson, D. (2011) ‘The Politics and Practice of Archive Work in Western Uganda’, African Studies Association Annual Conference, 19 Nov 2011, Washington D.C.Google Scholar
Pickover, M. (2009) ‘Contestations, Ownership, Access and Ideology: Policy Development Challenges for the Digitization of African Heritage and Liberation Archives’, First International Conference on African Digital Libraries and Archives. 1-3 July, 2009, Addis Ababa, Web, 5 Dec 2011.Google Scholar
Pickover, M. (2005) ‘Negotiations, Contestations and Fabrications: The Politics of Archives in South Africa Ten Years after Democracy’, Innovation: Journal of Appropriate Librarianship and Information Work in Southern Africa 30, pp. 1-11.Google Scholar
Pickover, M. and Peters, D. (2002) ‘DISA: An African Perspective on Digital Technology’, Innovation 24, pp.14-20.Google Scholar
Simon, J. (2002) ‘CRL International Resources - CAMP/Title VI African Archives Projects, 1993-Present,’ FOCUS 22(1), Web, 18 Oct 2011.Google Scholar