In 2016, the University of Melbourne Archives (UMA) commenced a program of change with regard to its records about child welfare in Victoria. This was driven by a social justice imperative to repair past harms done to Care Leavers (people who grew up in orphanages, children's homes, or foster care) while in out-of-home care, and for whom records play an integral role. UMA worked with Care Leavers, advocacy groups and support services to review their policies, procedures and practices around archival documentation and access arrangements. In this article, the authors explore those efforts through the prism of radical empathy (or rather a compassionate response to empathy) and analyze what was achieved and the challenges that remain. Pre-pri...
This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children'...
Histories of out of home 'care' have traditionally fallen into four categories: in-house productions...
© 2019, The Author(s). As the European powers appeared to withdraw from their colonies, they often t...
Worldwide inquiries into childhood institutionalization repeatedly document systemic and enduring pr...
The CLAN Rights Charter asserts rights in records for Care leavers who were taken from their homes a...
For children in out-of-home care (OOHC) and adults who experienced OOHC as children, the records com...
Much recent discussion about social justice in archival studies has assumed a legalistic, rights-bas...
In this featured commentary, Michelle Caswell and Marika Cifor revisit their article, “From Hum...
Much recent discussion about social justice in archival studies has assumed a legalistic, rights-bas...
The publications in this thesis discuss recurring issues in the historical context of out-of-home Ca...
Archivists are inextricably bound to records creators, subjects, and donors not only through the wor...
Approximately 500,000 children were institutionalised in Australian orphanages and other forms of ch...
This article concerns one notable feature of narratives around child welfare records: the prevalence...
The Sorry Books campaign, held in 1998, was a popular reconciliation event that created conditions f...
This article concerns one notable feature of narratives around child welfare records: the prevalence...
This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children'...
Histories of out of home 'care' have traditionally fallen into four categories: in-house productions...
© 2019, The Author(s). As the European powers appeared to withdraw from their colonies, they often t...
Worldwide inquiries into childhood institutionalization repeatedly document systemic and enduring pr...
The CLAN Rights Charter asserts rights in records for Care leavers who were taken from their homes a...
For children in out-of-home care (OOHC) and adults who experienced OOHC as children, the records com...
Much recent discussion about social justice in archival studies has assumed a legalistic, rights-bas...
In this featured commentary, Michelle Caswell and Marika Cifor revisit their article, “From Hum...
Much recent discussion about social justice in archival studies has assumed a legalistic, rights-bas...
The publications in this thesis discuss recurring issues in the historical context of out-of-home Ca...
Archivists are inextricably bound to records creators, subjects, and donors not only through the wor...
Approximately 500,000 children were institutionalised in Australian orphanages and other forms of ch...
This article concerns one notable feature of narratives around child welfare records: the prevalence...
The Sorry Books campaign, held in 1998, was a popular reconciliation event that created conditions f...
This article concerns one notable feature of narratives around child welfare records: the prevalence...
This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children'...
Histories of out of home 'care' have traditionally fallen into four categories: in-house productions...
© 2019, The Author(s). As the European powers appeared to withdraw from their colonies, they often t...