Article
Open Access
Representation of Black History in Archives: A Collection-Centered Quantitative Analysis of the Billups-Garth Archive
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Carrie P. Mastley
Published/Copyright:
August 20, 2020
Received: 2019-06-30
Accepted: 2020-07-22
Published Online: 2020-08-20
© 2020 Carrie P. Mastley, published by De Gruyter
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Keywords for this article
Collection bias;
Collection equity;
Marginalized communities;
Systemic racism;
White privilege
Creative Commons
BY 4.0
Articles in the same Issue
- Special issue: Access to information: Freedom and censorship
- Intellectual Freedom and Social Justice: Tensions Between Core Values in American Librarianship
- Why intellectual freedom? Or; Your values are historically contingent
- Is Access Enough? Interrogating the Influence of Money and Power in Shaping Information
- An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
- Topical issue: Information Studies, Race and Racism
- Racial Disparities in Breast Cancer and Genomic Uncertainty: A QuantCrit Mini-Review
- Disrupting Digital Divide Narratives: Exploring the U.S. Black Diasporic Immigrant Context
- A Preliminary Study Interrogating the Cataloging and Classification Schemes of a K-12 Book Discovery Platform through a Critical Race Theory Lens
- Machine Readable Race: Constructing Racial Information in the Third Reich
- Disrupting Carceral Narratives: Race, Rape, and the Archives
- Systemic Oppression and the Contested Ground of Information Access for Incarcerated People
- Representation of Black History in Archives: A Collection-Centered Quantitative Analysis of the Billups-Garth Archive
- Special issue: Information management and digital information
- Information management in the Intelligence Branch of Britain’s War Office, 1873-1914: ‘All information flows toward it, or returns to it, in a form worked up into shape’
- From Print to Digital, from Document to Data: Digitalisation at the Publications Office of the European Union
- Regular Articles
- The YouTube Algorithm and the Alt-Right Filter Bubble
- An Exploratory Study of Research Data Governance in the U.S.
- Co-Designing Visualizations for Information Seeking and Knowledge Management