Posts by Jenni Skinner

Agenda: ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2023 (Friday 23rd June)

SCOLMA (UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa)

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2023

The 2023 AGM will be held at SOAS, London, and online on Friday 23 June 2023 at 13:15.
If you wish to attend, please notify Sarah Rhodes, SCOLMA Secretary (sarah.rhodes@bodleian.ox.ac.uk) by 21 June 2023.
AGENDA
1. Approval of the Minutes of the 60th AGM (posted on our website)
2. Report of the Chair 2022/23 (Lucy McCann)
3. Financial Statement and approval of the audited accounts (Patricia Hewitt)
• Appointment of auditor
4. Appointment of Officers and Committee
The following nominations have been received:
  • Chair – Jenni Skinner (Centre of African Studies Library, University of Cambridge)
  • Secretary – Sarah Rhodes (Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford)
  • Treasurer – Lucy McCann (Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford)
  • Editor – Terry Barringer (Individual member)
  • Web Manager – Charles Fonge (Borthwick Institute for Archives, University of York)
  • Programme Secretary – Liz Haines (The National Archives)
  • Development Officer – Marion Wallace (Individual member)
Elected:
  • Mariam de Haan (British Library) – elected 2022
  • Patricia Hewitt (Robert Sainsbury Library, University of East Anglia)
  • Alison Metcalfe (The National Library of Scotland)
  • Katie Sambrook (Kings College London) – elected 2022
  • Barbara Spina – (Individual member)
Co-opted:
  • Dawn Wright – (SOAS Library, University of London)
  • ASAUK representative:  Stephanie Kitchen – (International African Institute)
5. Any Other Business

Minutes of the AGM 2022

SCOLMA (UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa)

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2022

Minutes of the 60th Annual General Meeting held virtually via Zoom
Wednesday, 29th June at 2.00 pm

Present: Lucy McCann (Chair), Sarah Rhodes (Secretary), Patricia Hewitt, Marion Wallace, Terry Barringer, Dawn Wright, Charles Fonge, Jenni Skinner, Julio Cazzasa, Barbara Spina, Mandy Banton

Apologies: Alison Metcalfe, Stephanie Kitchen, Katie Sambrook, Dan Gilfoyle, Mariam de Haan, Liz Haines, John Pinfold, Sandy Shell

1. Approval of the Minutes of the 59th AGM (posted on the SCOLMA website http://SCOLMA.org)

The Minutes were approved as a true record, proposed by Marion Wallace and seconded by Dawn Wright. There were no matters arising.

2. Report of the Chair 2021/22 (Lucy McCann)

During the past year SCOLMA has continued to operate online, making great use of Zoom and Teams for committee meetings, seminars and now for our AGM for the third year in a row. We had hoped to meet in person today for the AGM and for the 2022 conference which was being planned as a hybrid event from SOAS. Unfortunately there was little response to our Call for Papers and the decision was taken to postpone until 2023 when we hope that travel restrictions will have eased in more parts of the world. We think that the theme, ‘Africa and the Environment: Documenting and Archiving a Changing Climate’, is a topical and important one which should elicit more papers. The committee will be considering how to encourage more participation in 2023 and we look forward to meeting in person then.

2021 conference
SCOLMA’s 2021 conference took place online on 14 June, having been postponed from 2020. The theme was ‘Publishing, Collecting and Accessing African-language Materials’ and speakers in Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, the Netherlands, the US and the UK presented papers.
The keynote speaker was Munyao Kilolo of the Ngugi wa Thiong’o Foundation and Jalada Africa who described projects supporting original writing and translation into African languages and the question of how to reach speakers of these languages. Other speakers addressed the acquisition of Somali language books, African language material in the British Library and SOAS collections, the success of a Yoruba newspaper first published in 1996, the Bible Society Collection which contains 1000 translations of the Bible into African languages and the archive of a comic book artist who used the urban language of Kinshasa.
The conference was SCOLMA’s first to be held entirely online and we were indebted to Jenni Skinner and Charles Fonge for their expertise in producing it on MS Teams Live. It enabled speakers to participate from outside the UK, attracted a widespread audience and gave committee members the opportunity to learn new skills.

African Research and Documentation/Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation
Following the agreement at the General Meeting in April 2021 to merge African Research and Documentation with Africa Bibliography a great deal of work has gone into realising the merger and we are on course to publish the first issue of the new journal, Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation, later this year. The new editorial committee, with strong SCOLMA representation, has met regularly and the first issue will contain a number of papers from the 2021 SCOLMA conference on African language publishing and collecting. The entire back run of ARD from 1973 has been digitised and will be available on the ABRD website with free access to SCOLMA members. I would like to thank the editorial committee and colleagues at Cambridge University Press, and particularly Stephanie Kitchen of the IAI and our editor Terry Barringer for all their work in getting the new journal underway. We plan to hold a launch event in the autumn and will send out information about that in due course.
Our hard-working editor, Terry Barringer, has also been occupied with the final issues of ARD as numbers 139 and 140 have been published in the last year. We record our thanks to our printers, Simmons Printers in Chelmsford, who have printed ARD since issue 126 in 2014 and have always provided an excellent service.

Committee meetings and seminars
SCOLMA has held two committee meetings on Zoom since the last AGM, on 8 November 2021 and on 1 March 2022. On 1 March our Programme Secretary Dan Gilfoyle organised an online seminar with Vincent Hiribarren speaking from the Institut Français de Recheche en Afrique (Nigeria) about the IFRA-Nigeria project to digitise the Naija Archives. The seminar was most informative and there was good attendance as there has been for today’s seminar on the aftermath of the Jagger Library fire. I am grateful to our two speakers and to Marion Wallace for the organisation and for chairing today’s seminar.

Website and Communications
Our web manager, Jenni Skinner, has been reviewing the content and layout of our website and we are most grateful for her technical expertise and the assistance provided by Charles Fonge with the website and the organisation of our online events. We continue to tweet regularly and now have 643 followers on Twitter (@Scolma), a slight increase on a year ago. We encourage anyone interested in SCOLMA’s activities to subscribe to our Jisc mailing list, LIS-SCOLMA, where we publicise news and events.

European Librarians in African Studies (ELIAS)
We continue to maintain our links with European colleagues through ELIAS. The 15th ELIAS Annual Meeting took place at Sciences Po Bordeaux on 24th June 2022. The event was hybrid and Dawn Wright attended via Zoom. The event was recorded and the session will be uploaded to the ELIAS website – eliasnet [licensed for non-commercial use only] / FrontPage (pbworks.com) At the Business Meeting the current members of the Working Group were re-elected for a further year. A series of logos for ELIAS had been created and participants voted on the version they preferred which will be used on the website. The next meeting will coincide with the ECAS Conference to be held in Cologne, 31 May – 3 June 2023.

African Studies Association (UK)
I attended the ASAUK Council meetings in September, December and May and the AGM in October to represent SCOLMA and we are very grateful for the input of Stephanie Kitchen as ASAUK representative at our committee meetings. In the last year Stephanie and I have been involved in proposing the establishment of an ASAUK Library and Archives award, for which research libraries and archives in Africa will be able to apply to fund sustainable projects which can be difficult to finance.
Thanks The SCOLMA committee has continued to work as a strong team during difficult times and I would like to thank all members for their commitment and support. I would particularly like to thank Pat Hewitt, our efficient Treasurer, for managing the changes necessitated by the journal merger and our move to individual membership only, and Sarah Rhodes for her hard work as Secretary.

We have been sorry to lose Ivana Frlan as an observer at our meetings and hope to find another representative from the University of Birmingham library and archives.
We are also sorry to say farewell to Dan Gilfoyle, The National Archives’ representative on the committee for many years and in recent times our Programme Secretary. We thank him for all his work and wish him well for retirement. We are very pleased that Liz Haines will join from TNA and I am most grateful to Marion Wallace for offering to succeed Dan as Programme Secretary.

3. Financial Statement and approval of the audited accounts (Patricia Hewitt) – circulated prior to the meeting
• Appointment of auditor

Patricia Hewitt, SCOLMA Treasurer, spoke to her report and commented on the audited accounts for 2021. The effects of the pandemic were still apparent in the income received in 2021 with a significant reduction in income from membership and subscriptions. The 2021 online conference was also free of charge although modest donations were gratefully received. Printing and editorial expenses for ARD were lower due to two rather than three issues being published during the year.

The financial update for 2022 noted that, with the move to a personal membership only organisation, there will be a significant loss of income without the institutional subscriptions. However, outgoings will be much lower with SCOLMA no longer bearing the costs of producing ARD. Providing access at a reduced rate to the merged journal Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation should attract new members. Nonetheless, it will take time for the new membership scheme to bed-in and it will be necessary to publicise SCOLMA actively to raise membership numbers.

The balance of account at 31 December 2021 was £10,154.95 with the deficit of £1,713.80 met from reserves.

The proposal to reappoint Peter Westley as auditor, was proposed by Terry Barringer and seconded by Lucy McCann. The approval of the accounts was proposed by Sarah Rhodes and seconded by Terry Barringer. All were in favour.

4. Appointment of Officers and Committee

The following nominations had been received:

Chair – Lucy McCann (Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford)
Secretary – Sarah Rhodes (Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford)
Treasurer – Patricia Hewitt (Robert Sainsbury Library, University of East Anglia)
Editor – Terry Barringer (Individual member)
Web Manager – Jenni Skinner (Centre of African Studies Library, University of Cambridge) Programme Secretary and Development Officer – Marion Wallace (Individual member)

Elected:

Julio Cazzasa – (Senate House Library, University of London) – elected 2020
Dawn Wright – (SOAS Library, University of London) – elected 2020
Charles Fonge – (Borthwick Institute Archives, University of York) – elected 2022
Katie Sambrook – (Kings College London) – elected 2022
Mariam de Haan – (British Library) – elected 2022
Liz Haines – (The National Archives) – elected 2022

Co-opted:

Alison Metcalfe – (The National Library of Scotland)
Barbara Spina – (Individual member)

ASAUK representative: Stephanie Kitchen – (International African Institute)

Proposed by Barbara Spina and seconded by Patricia Hewitt, committee officers and members were elected nem con.

5. Any Other Business

Mandy Banton and Marion Wallace raised concerns that public access to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office ‘migrated archives’, deposited at the National Archives in 2012-13 under the reference FCO 141, had been withdrawn suddenly with no notice, public website announcement or information in the general catalogue entry. A TNA email to a researcher stated that the series was withdrawn ‘in order for our Collection Care team to carry out a condition assessment’. The assessment found evidence of ‘historical preservation treatment of these files indicating insecticide use’. The assessment report has not been published but it would be helpful to have TNA’s opinion of the potential risk of insecticide contamination whether to documents or persons handling them.

It was proposed that Marion Wallace would, in the first instance, write to SCOLMA’s TNA contact Dan Gilfoyle for clarification, noting SCOLMA’s concerns with the expectation that a letter will be written to TNA Keeper asking for further information and stressing the importance of these documents to researchers.

Sarah Rhodes, SCOLMA Secretary – 25th July 2022

SCOLMA Conference 23 June 2023 – Registration now open!

Africa and the Environment
Archives and Data in the Climate Emergency

23 June 2023

A one-day conference at SOAS, London, and online

Registrations are now open!

Please see ticket options and how to book via the SCOLMA Eventbrite registration page.

Please also see details of the The National Archives event on “Knowledge exchange on the historic use of insecticides in collections” which is taking place on the 22nd June.

9.50–10.00 Welcome

10.00–10.40 Keynote

‘Sources on the Visual History of African Wildlife, 1945-1980: Images that Changed the
Animal World’
William Beinart, African Studies Centre, University of Oxford

10.40–11.00 Break

11.00–12.30 Panel 1: Environmental Histories, Archives and Mining

CHAIR: Miles Larmer, University of Oxford

‘Exploring the Historical Climatology of Southern Africa using Documentary Evidence from UK
Archives’
David J. Nash, University of Brighton, George C.D. Adamson, Georgina H. Endfield, Stefan W. Grab, Matthew J. Hannaford, Clare Kelso and Jørgen Klein

‘Documenting Lived Experiences of Resource Extraction and Environmental Transformation
on the Copperbelt’
Iva Peša, University of Groningen

‘A Preservation History of Mining Archives: The Case of the Selection Trust and Anglo-American Corporation Environmental Archives in Zambia’s Copperbelt’
Miyanda Simabwachi, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein

12.30–13.15 Lunch break

13.15–14.00 SCOLMA AGM

14.00–15.30 Panel 2: Material Heritage, Data and the Environment

CHAIR: Jody Butterworth, Endangered Archives Programme

‘The Climate Emergency and Coastal Heritage Sites: Archival Data and Environmental
Modelling for Heritage Preservation in Senegal, Kenya and Tanzania’
Mapping Africa’s Endangered Archaeological Sites and Monuments (MAEASaM), University of Cambridge

‘The Activating the Archive Project – Using Museum Collections to Understand Colonial
Legacies of African Environmental Histories’
Ashley Coutu, Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford and Tabitha Kabora, Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity, University of York

‘Documenting Environmental Knowledge through/with/in Material Practices’
Ceri Ashley, British Museum/Nottingham Trent University

15.30–16.00 Break
16.00–17.25 Panel 3: Archival Resources and Environmental Change

CHAIR: Elizabeth Haines, The National Archives

‘The Archival Trail and the History of International Cooperation in Environmental Control:
The Case of Locusts in Southern Africa’
Admire Mseba, University of Southern California

‘The Effects of Harmattan Haze on the British Colonial and Administrative records at the
Public Records and Archives Administration (PRAAD) Tamale (Ghana)’
Ismael M. Montana, Northern Illinois University

‘Complementary and Competing but Neglected: Understanding the State of Private
Environmental Archives in Zimbabwe using the Boulton Atlantica Foundation’
Livingstone Muchefa, Curator for Education and Public Programming, National Gallery Of Zimbabwe

17.25–17.30 Conference close

This programme is subject to change.
Please note that some speakers will be giving their papers in person, and others online.

(Other enquiries can be sent to Sarah Rhodes, SCOLMA Secretary,
sarah.rhodes@bodleian.ox.ac.uk.)

Knowledge exchange workshop on the historic use of insecticides in collections – at the UK National Archives on 22 June
Attendees at the SCOLMA conference 2023 are also cordially invited to a hybrid workshop hosted at the National Archives, UK on the 22nd of June. The knowledge exchange workshop will be exploring how several archives, libraries and museums are investigating and managing the presence of historic pesticide treatments of their paper-based collections. This follows recent research into TNA collections, the results of which are available in an open access paper published by Heritage Science here.

Collection specialists at King’s College London, the National History Museum London, and Durham University, as well the Collections Care Department at the National Archives, UK, have confirmed participation.

The workshop will be running as a hybrid event with options to attend onsite at Kew, and online. Please find details about timing and registration of the event on the TNA website.