Posts by Jenni Skinner

SCOLMA membership rates

SCOLMA Logo

 

SCOLMA membership rates 

 

In 2022 SCOLMA moved to an individual membership scheme. This reflects the agreement between SCOLMA and the International African Institute (IAI) to merge their two journals African Research and Documentation (ARD) and Africa Bibliography (AB) respectively. The first issue of Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation (ABRD) was published both online and in print in October 2022.

ABRD is published annually, with the ability to publish articles online ahead of print throughout the year.

Cambridge University Press (CUP) publish ABRD on behalf of IAI and issue details can be found on the CUP website https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/africa-bibliography-research-and-documentation. For SCOLMA members, access to ABRD and all back issues of ARD is available at a substantial discount as part of the SCOLMA individual membership subscription.

Membership

You are warmly invited to become a member of SCOLMA; benefits of Membership include:

• a programme of conferences and seminars relating to Africa
• belonging to a network of librarians, archivists and researchers, in the UK, Africa and elsewhere interested in the acquisition and promotion of library and archival materials across African studies
• the right to participate in SCOLMA meetings and contribute to the activities of SCOLMA
• access to an expert body providing specialist advice
• the option to subscribe to the journal Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation (ABRD) the joint publication of SCOLMA and the International Africa Institute at a greatly subsidised rate. Note, the bibliographic database element of ABRD is produced online only.
• concessionary rates available for students, retired or unwaged


  • Membership + access to ABRD online only (including bibliographic database) £25
  • Membership + access to ABRD in print and online (including online access to bibliographic database) £35
  • Concessionary membership + access to ABRD online only (including bibliographic database) £20
  • Concessionary membership + access to ABRD in print and online (including online access to bibliographic database) £30

Please contact us on (SCOLMA Enquiries) sales@scolma.org for further details or to express interest in joining along with the category of membership required and the SCOLMA Treasurer will respond.

For full information on our Terms and Conditions and our Data Protection policy, see links from the website membership notice:
i. Terms and Conditions – Scolma.org – UK Libraries & Archives Group on Africa
ii. Privacy Notices – Scolma.org – UK Libraries & Archives Group on Africa

Save the date! – Africa & the Environment: Archives & Data in the Climate Emergency

Africa and the Environment
Archives and Data in the Climate Emergency

23 June 2023

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

Please save the date! Registration details to follow.

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

‘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

‘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

‘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.

Please save the date! Registration details to follow.
(Other enquiries can be sent to Sarah Rhodes, SCOLMA Secretary,
sarah.rhodes@bodleian.ox.ac.uk.)

Notice of event at the UK National Archives on 22 June
Knowledge exchange workshop on the historic use of insecticides in collections
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 save the date and look out for more details about timing and registration in the coming weeks.

The Africa Centre Collections, London Metropolitan Archives – Lunchtime Seminar

lunchtime seminar poster with link to register