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Back-ups for the future: archival practices for data activism
Authors:Morgan E Currie  Britt S Paris
Institution:1. Digital Civil Society Lab, Center on Philanthropy &2. Society, Stanford Law School, Stanford University, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, CA, USA;3. Data &4. Society, Science, Technology &5. Innovation Studies, University of Edinburgh, 2.05 Old Surgeons’ Hall, High School Yards, Edinburgh, UK;6. Department of Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract:Literature on activist archiving theorises the power of recordkeeping to give voice to marginalised communities. However, missing from this archival literature are analyses about the political practice of preserving data as an act of grassroots resistance. Simultaneously, existing scholarly literature on grassroots data activism analyses the creation of new statistical representations to challenge official ones. This literature has largely ignored what will happen to this data over the long term, nor has it treated data archiving as an activist project in its own right. This theoretical article seeks to close the gap between literature on archival activism and literature on data activism, in hopes that both sets of research can draw productively from each other. There are clear affinities between activist archives and data activism: both address the failure by mainstream institutions to account for marginal voices, both have the power to make issues visible and legitimate within the public sphere, and both experiment with traditional forms of memory and statistical evidence. The authors believe that these two powerful forms of activity have much to learn from each other, particularly as the need to steward data over the long term will only grow.
Keywords:Data activism  archival activism  community archives  critical data studies
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