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Thursday May 7, 2026 2:15pm - 3:00pm EDT
Over the past few years, reparative work has become a topic of discussion in library and archival work, largely in the context of metadata and description. This ethnographic study interrogates what reparative work looks like in a broader sense, as it may impact the work of collection development, reference and technical services, preservation and conservation, as well as description and metadata—using a case study of a large midwestern academic research collection.

Learning Objective(s): 1) Understand the concepts and definitions of reparation and reparative work; 2) Learn about the scope of reparative work as it may be seen and implemented in an academic archival & special collections; and 3) Learn about possible applications of reparative archival work beyond description and metadata practices, which may be formative in organizational policy as well as library and archives management.
Presenters
avatar for Jesse Johnston

Jesse Johnston

Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Michigan School of Information
avatar for Nazelie Doghramadjian

Nazelie Doghramadjian

PhD Candidate, University of Michigan School of Information
Thursday May 7, 2026 2:15pm - 3:00pm EDT
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