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The
Endangered
Archives Programme is funded by the Lisbet
Rausing Charitable Fund, in pursuit of its general aim to
support fundamental research into important issues in the
humanities and social science. The focus of the programme is on
the preservation and copying of important but vulnerable
archives throughout the world.
The
Programme is now accepting applications for the next round of
funding. Detailed information on the timetable, criteria,
eligibility and procedures for applying for a grant is available
on the programme’s website. The deadline for receipt of
preliminary applications is 3 November 2006.
The
aim is to safeguard archival material relating to societies
usually at an early stage of development, i.e., its normal focus
is on the period of a society’s history before
‘modernisation’ or ‘industrialisation’ had generated
institutional and record-keeping structures for the systematic
preservation of historical records, very broadly defined.
The relevant time period will therefore vary according to
the society with which we deal.
The programme is completely open as to theme and regional
interest, although applications concerned with non-western
societies are particularly welcomed.
The
programme’s objectives are achieved principally by making a
number of grants to individual researchers to locate relevant
collections, to arrange their transfer to suitable local
archival home where possible, and to deliver copies to the
British Library and a local institution for the benefit of
researchers worldwide. Pilot projects are particularly welcomed,
to investigate the survival of archival collections on a
particular subject, in a discrete region, or in a specific
format, and the feasibility of their recovery.
For
the purposes of the programme, archives will be interpreted
widely to embrace not only rare printed sources (books, serials,
newspapers, ephemera, etc) and manuscripts in any language, but
also visual materials (drawings, paintings, prints, posters,
photographs, etc), audio or video recordings, digital data, and
even other objects and artefacts—but normally only where they
are found in association with a documentary archive. In all
cases, the validity of archival materials for inclusion in the
Programme will be assessed by their relevance as source
materials for the pre-industrial stage of a society’s history.
The
programme does not offer grants to support the normal running
activities of an archive, although the programme may offer
support for such items as costs directly related to the
acceptance of relocated material.
The
programme is administered by the British Library and
applications are considered in an annual competition by an
international panel of historians and archivists.
Forty-one
projects, totalling over one million pounds, have already been
granted awards since the programme was established two years
ago. For further details of these awards please visit the
programme’s website
or email <endangeredarchives@bl.uk>.
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