Archives and Manuscripts
ISSN: 0157-6895 (Print) 2164-6058 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/raam20
Information technologies and Indigenous
communities
From the Guest Editors, Lyndon Ormond-Parker & Aaron Corn
To cite this article: From the Guest Editors, Lyndon Ormond-Parker & Aaron Corn (2019)
Information technologies and Indigenous communities, Archives and Manuscripts, 47:1, 1-2, DOI:
10.1080/01576895.2019.1587809
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/01576895.2019.1587809
Published online: 16 Apr 2019.
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ARCHIVES AND MANUSCRIPTS
2019, VOL. 47, NO. 1, 1–2
https://doi.org/10.1080/01576895.2019.1587809
INTRODUCTION
Information technologies and Indigenous communities
From the Guest Editors, Lyndon Ormond-Parker
a
and Aaron Corn
b
a
Indigenous Studies Unit, Centre for Health Equity, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health,
The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; bCentre for Aboriginal Studies in Music, National
Centre for Aboriginal Language and Music Studies, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
This special issue of articles emerged from presentations delivered at the 2017
Information Technologies and Indigenous Communities (ITIC) Symposium, which
was convened by Dr Lyndon Ormond-Parker for the Australian Society of Archivists
(ASA) in conjunction with the 2017 ASA Annual Conference at the University of
Melbourne. It was also held in conjunction with the 16th Symposium on Indigenous
Music and Dance of the National Recording Project for Indigenous Performance in
Australia (NRPIPA) convened by Professor Aaron Corn.
The first ITIC Symposium was hosted by the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) in Canberra in 2010. A Statement on Key Issues
documented the many innovative engagements of Indigenous Australians with the
information technologies sector, and recorded the benefits arising from their increased
participation with digital media and the digital economy. These uses of media and
technology have become increasingly important in nurturing the intergenerational transmission of languages and culture, and developing new industry approaches.
This ITIC special issue features many fascinating and informative essays. The 2017
ITIC Symposium focused on technological advances and new linkages in archives,
collections and Indigenous knowledges. It highlighted Indigenous engagements with
archives and information technologies in native title, education, heritage, languages,
mapping, performance and broadcasting. This special issue captures highlights from
among its presentations that span insights into building and maintaining Indigenous
resources in public and community archives, investigations of attendant policy and
preservation concerns, and explorations of fresh approaches to representing Indigenous
knowledges through collections. Also presented here are reviews of two recent books
that have built significantly on research into archived Indigenous resources.
We hope that this special issue offers readers useful insights into the ways that
Indigenous community needs and engagements with information technologies are
working to transform archives.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the outgoing General Editor, Dr Katrina Dean, as well as Assistant Editor
Dr Hannah Hibbert for their attentive work on this special issue of Archives and Manuscripts.
We also gratefully thank Julia Mant (ASA President), Annelie de Villiers (2017 ITIC Symposium
CONTACT Lyndon Ormond-Parker
[email protected]; Aaron Corn
© 2019 Lyndon Ormond-Parker and Aaron Corn
[email protected]
2
L. ORMOND-PARKER AND A. CORN
Coordinator), and Kathryn Dan and Katherine Howard (2017 ASA Annual Conference
Convenors). Finally, thank-you to all our authors in this special issue, and to everyone who
attended and presented at the 2017 ITIC Symposium for your valuable contributions.
The 2017 ITIC Symposium was dedicated to the late Joseph Neparrŋa Gumbula from
northeast Arnhem Land, who worked to research his own family and community history in
archives and other collections worldwide, and significantly enriched international understandings of Indigenous heritage resources. The ASA and the University of Melbourne
Chancellery Engagement team sponsored three members of Gumbula’s close family, Pamela
Gawura Ganambarr, Farrah Gumbula and Michael Muŋgula Gaykamaŋu, to attend and
participate in the ITIC Symposium. The ASA also sponsored travel from Paris for our
keynote speaker, Dr Jessica De Healy Largy. A special issue devoted to Gumbula’s scholarly
contributions and legacy has recently been published in Preservation, Digital Technology and
Culture (volume 47, issue 3–4).
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Funding
Dr Lyndon Ormond-Parker’s and Professor Aaron Corn’s work as Guest Editors of the special
issue was supported by their joint Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Indigenous
project grant with Dr Dominique Sweeney (IN180100014).
Notes on contributors
Lyndon Ormond-Parker is an ARC Discovery Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Award
(DAATSIA) Fellow in the Indigenous Studies Unit of the Melbourne School of Population and
Global Health at the University of Melbourne. He sits on the Australian Heritage Council, and
the Australian Government Ministry for the Arts Advisory Committee for Indigenous
Repatriation.
Aaron Corn is Director of the National Centre for Aboriginal Language and Music Studies
(NCALMS), Director of the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music (CASM), and a Professor of
Music at the University of Adelaide. He is a Director of the National Recording Project for
Indigenous Performance in Australia (NRPIPA), and has sat on the ARC College of Experts.
ORCID
From the Guest Editors, Lyndon Ormond-Parker
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6010-3808
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4797-9776
Aaron Corn