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It’s the latest step to pool confidential data that the Trump administration claims will help identify noncitizens on voter rolls and tighten immigration enforcement.
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A recently released agreement gives the Department of Homeland Security access to hundreds of millions of Americans’ Social Security data. It contains alarmingly few provisions to ensure accuracy and privacy, experts say.
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Now more than ever, we need to talk about the importance of journalism. This is not about journalism as an abstract ideal, or as an industry fighting for survival, but as a living, breathing force that connects people to the information they need. Protecting journalism is not just about saving newsrooms. It is about safeguarding people’s right to usable, trusted information, which is the very foundation of healthy societies everywhere.
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Oral historians are warmly invited to write books for Trans Studies, a book series published by Bloomsbury Academic. We seek books that give voice to previously unrecognized transgender and nonbinary people and issues, with a special emphasis on topics not well documented in written literature, but for which there are oral archives that allow the recovery of previously forgotten histories. We also welcome books that explore already well-recognized transgender and nonbinary topics that can be...
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Alison Clemens is an archivist and librarian, and founding co-coordinator of the Abolition in Special Collections collective. Jess Farrell is an archival consultant at Redstart Works and a community organizer.
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Let us build a cyberspace that respects everyone’s dignity and human rights. And let us ensure that the digital age delivers peace, security and prosperity for all.
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The Taliban have gutted Afghan media since taking control of the country in August 2021 through the use of surveillance and censorship and by punishing media workers for perceived criticism.
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In Togo, the authorities have restated their intentions to regulate online speech, restricting the use of social media amid heightened political tensions.
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Across the world, people are still suffering the effects of slavery and colonialism and struggling to get the reparations they deserve.
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Seeking material culture scholars to write and edit books for Trans Studies, a book series published by Bloomsbury Academic. We welcome books on transgender and nonbinary l…
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France is demanding a Council text tackles US data access laws but several smaller countries are pushing in the opposition direction
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In an open letter, more than 40 civil society organisations have questioned the DPC's independence after it appointed a former Meta lobbyist to be its third commissioner
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DisLIS Open for Article Submissions Disabilities in Libraries & Information Studies (DisLIS) is now accepting articles for peer-reviewed, open access publication. This includes o…
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What drives a person to dedicate themselves tirelessly to education, remembrance, and civic engagement? Born in 1977 in Zenica (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Sejfuddin Dizdarevic came to Germany as a teenager. For him, the genocide in Srebrenica in 1995 marked a decisive turning point in his life.
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Au Togo, les autorités réitèrent leur désir de contrôler le discours en ligne pour restreindre l'usage des réseaux sociaux dans un contexte de confrontation politique intense
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En Togo, las autoridades reiteran su deseo de controlar el discurso en línea para restringir el uso de redes sociales en un contexto de intensa confrontación política.
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A position paper, obtained by Euractiv, also contains ideas on digital reporting obligations and streamlining privacy rules
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Archive files detailing the fate of millions of Soviet citizens who were executed or imprisoned during the Stalin era have suddenly been made harder for historians to access. The Russian federal archive authority’s decision to limit access to such documents to the relatives of individual victims is both a violation of Russian law and will further hamper the work of historians researching the period. As it is, to date just a quarter of Stalin’s victims are known to historians by name.
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This article draws from a critique of the PUCL report submitted to the organisation by Ranjan Solomon.
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This report presents the first comprehensive assessment of the destruction and loss of public records in Palestinian institutions in the Gaza Strip, following the outbreak of war in October 2023. “Institutional memory”, defined as the archived records and documented knowledge of institutions, is a cornerstone of effective governance, particularly in the justice and security sectors. It underpins transparency, continuity, accountability, and the protection of public and private rights.
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