31 results on '"L. Punzalan"'
Search Results
2. Reciprocity: Building a Discourse in Archives
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Ricardo L. Punzalan and Diana E. Marsh
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Library and Information Sciences - Abstract
Increasing interest in indigenization, decolonization, community archives, and the recent adoption of the Protocols for Native American Archival Materials (PNAAM) by the Society of American Archivists, offer opportunities for archivists to reflect on the application of “reciprocity” in archives. This article examines reciprocity as a concept in the archival field and shows how current reciprocal practices in archives with Native and Indigenous holdings can inform the wider field and its practice. The authors chart the emergence of reciprocity as an archival responsibility and to create fieldwide change through meaningful, community-based partnerships. They posit a continuum of institutional reciprocity, as well as how reciprocity might be seeded into the core functions of archives to bridge distances between communities and archival institutions. Inspired by recent scholarship in museum studies, the article concludes with a vision of “otherwising” to explore alternative possibilities that can be realized when we adopt reciprocity as an archival practice.
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- 2022
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3. Barriers and Challenges to Virtual Reunification.
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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- 2014
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4. Critical Archival Studies: An Introduction
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T-Kay Sangwand, Ricardo L. Punzalan, and Michelle Caswell
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Archival science ,Critical theory ,Political science ,Library science ,Social justice - Abstract
This introduction defines critical archival studies and summarizes the articles including in the special issue.
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- 2022
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5. Review: Cataloguing Culture: Legacies of Colonialism in Museum Documentation, by Hannah Turner
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,Documentation ,Museology ,Art history ,Conservation ,Colonialism - Published
- 2021
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6. Supporting 'Distant Reading' for Web Archives.
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Jimmy Lin, Kari Kraus, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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- 2014
7. Messages sent, and received? Changing perspectives and policies on US federal email as record and the limits of archival accountability
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Jesse A. Johnston, David A. Wallace, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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- 2022
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8. Preserving Anthropology's Digital Record: CoPAR in the Age of Electronic Fieldnotes, Data Curation, and Community Sovereignty
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Jesse A. Johnston, Diana E. Marsh, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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060101 anthropology ,History ,Data curation ,Anthropology ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Context (language use) ,06 humanities and the arts ,Library and Information Sciences ,Digital records ,Fieldnotes ,050701 cultural studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Sovereignty ,0601 history and archaeology ,Stewardship - Abstract
This paper discusses the potential role of the Council for the Preservation of Anthropological Records (CoPAR) in the context of contemporary developments in anthropological research and archival practice. Despite many efforts, there are no discipline-wide, agreed-upon best practices for making or keeping anthropological records, and no central space where such conversations are taking place. Founded in the 1990s, CoPAR aims to convey the value of anthropological records, to encourage anthropology practitioners and institutions to preserve the field's records, to identify and locate primary anthropological materials, and to promote the use of records in the discipline. While CoPAR led efforts to preserve records of anthropologists in the 1990s, it became inactive by the early 2000s. Since then, the shift to digital field records and the increased digital access of archival records has exposed new concerns for the field's archival records. This article explores the outcomes of a 2015 meeting on this topic and identifies new gaps and challenges for anthropological records, joining this work with current archival perspectives. The article makes a case for a revitalized CoPAR that will encourage life-cycle data thinking and more community-driven approaches to archival stewardship.
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- 2019
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9. Messages sent, and received? Changing perspectives and policies on US federal email as record and the limits of archival accountability
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Jesse A. Johnston, Ricardo L. Punzalan, and David A. Wallace
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Cultural heritage ,History ,Government ,Politics ,Presidential system ,business.industry ,InformationSystems_INFORMATIONSYSTEMSAPPLICATIONS ,Political science ,Accountability ,Face (sociological concept) ,Library and Information Sciences ,Public relations ,business - Abstract
The 2016 US Presidential elections may have presented the most prominent illustration of email and recordkeeping in public perception, but they offer only the most recent and public story of emails as records. This article offers an overview of the development of email as a government record in the USA, as well as the evolving archival perspectives on email and political accountability. Archivists have been contending with email for over 30 years, and from its earliest days in the US political usage, email has presented a complex array of recordkeeping and archival challenges, and we trace the changing archival perspectives and regulatory situations around email as a record in the USA over the past three decades. In this investigation, we explore questions about how and why officials create or destroy email, how email records are appraised, and whether or not preserved emails can be meaningfully accessed. In light of these questions, we argue that the archival tenet of accountability is tenuous at best in the face of the changing technological and political challenges presented by email as a record.
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- 2019
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10. Agents of Empire: How E. L. Mitchell's Photographs Shaped Australia
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Empire ,Art ,Library and Information Sciences ,Ancient history ,media_common - Published
- 2018
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11. Studying and Mobilizing the Impacts of Anthropological Data in Archives
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Ricardo L. Punzalan and Diana E. Marsh
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InformationSystems_MODELSANDPRINCIPLES ,Data access ,Data curation ,Ethnography ,Face (sociological concept) ,Library science ,Stewardship ,Sociology ,Field (computer science) ,Indigenous ,Knowledge sharing - Abstract
This chapter focuses on the impacts of anthropology’s digital data, and the particular challenges anthropological and ethnographic data held in archival repositories present for anthropologists, information scholars, and institutions. Over the past 20 years, the field of anthropology has changed dramatically, as have the records anthropologists produce. Today, the preservation and stewardship of anthropological records face new challenges as anthropologists create records in a wider range of formats, the reuse of these materials changes, and both researchers and repositories shift their ethical attitudes. We share new research as well as applied approaches to understanding the impact of these shifts drawing on two current research projects and an interdisciplinary Wenner-Gren–sponsored workshop held in June 2016 to revitalize the Council for the Preservation of Anthropological Records (CoPAR). This chapter has two parts. First, we discuss two research projects tracking trends and impacts in reuses of anthropological data in digitized archival collections: “Valuing Our Scans: Understanding the Impacts of Digitized Native American Ethnographic Archives” and “Researching the Digital Turn: Documenting the Impacts of Digital Knowledge Sharing in Indigenous Communities.” Second, we highlight our applied work to revitalize CoPAR and how CoPAR aims to address the challenges outlined in our research by creating professional consensus around data access and reuse.
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- 2019
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12. Fostering archival scholarship: introduction to the special issue on the Archival Education Research Institute
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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Cultural heritage ,History ,Scholarship ,Political science ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,Building and Construction ,0509 other social sciences ,Library and Information Sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,Archival research ,Software - Published
- 2017
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13. ‘All the things we cannot articulate’: colonial leprosy archives and community commemoration
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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- 2018
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14. Critical Directions for Archival Approaches to Social Justice
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Michelle Caswell and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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060102 archaeology ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,Information & Library Sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,Library and Information Sciences ,Social justice ,Archival research ,Epistemology ,Scholarship ,Archival science ,Library and Information Studies ,0601 history and archaeology ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,Social science ,050904 information & library sciences ,Relation (history of concept) - Abstract
This article explores the rich history of social justice as a concern in archival studies and delineates future lines of inquiry for the field. We begin by examining how social justice has been defined in the archives literature and its implications for archival studies. Next, we draw forth five major strands of archival thinking in relation to social justice. We identify prominent areas in the archival literature that highlight the relationship between archives and social justice. We also identify critical questions in the relationship between social justice and archives and propose new research trajectories that we deem necessary to advance the archival field in general and its scholarship in particular. Finally, we argue for the importance of research that strengthens the tenets of social justice as a central principle in archival scholarship and practice.
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- 2016
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15. Legacy Matters: Describing Subject-Based Digital Historical Collections
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Ricardo L. Punzalan and Christian James
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Cultural heritage ,Metadata ,Computer science ,Controlled vocabulary ,Special collections ,Library science ,Subject (documents) ,Library and Information Sciences ,Digitization ,Collections management ,Variety (cybernetics) - Abstract
Evolving institutional structures and missions affect the metadata and digitization efforts of a cultural heritage institution. This article discusses the institutional challenges the National Agricultural Library (NAL) faced as it gathered contemporary and historical federal dietary guidance publications into a digital collection. The Library has over time used a variety of descriptive subject and classification schemes as well as a variety of encoding mechanisms, each in response to the administrative as well as technological changes and challenges in the repository. As the Library began compiling content for its Historical Dietary Guidance Digital Collection (HDGDC), it confronted an array of records dispersed across various series and collections with heterogeneous metadata, which are legacies of centuries-long institutional evolution. The authors consider the implications for archives and special collections in creating subject-based digital collections from items dispersed across institution...
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- 2015
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16. Stories of impact: the role of narrative in understanding the value and impact of digital collections
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Brian S. Butler, Diana E. Marsh, Massimo Petrozzi, Robert Leopold, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,Library science ,Building and Construction ,Library and Information Sciences ,050905 science studies ,Collections management ,Collection development ,Cultural heritage ,Conceptual framework ,Ethnography ,Narrative ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,Software ,Digitization ,Storytelling - Abstract
Cultural heritage institutions leverage digitization to fulfill their mission to preserve, represent, and provide access to collections under their care. Despite their common interest in documenting the progress of digitization and online access, the library, archives, and museums (LAM) sector lacks a conceptual framework for assessing and demonstrating the impact of digitized ethnographic collections. Reporting the findings of a yearlong interdisciplinary study, this article underscores the importance of storytelling in articulating the value and impact of digitized ethnographic collections held in cultural heritage institutions. We begin with an overview of the literature on the assessment and describe the methods we employed in our study. Next, we identify and discuss the different ways that stories and storytelling are strategically mobilized in conversations about the impact of digitization. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of our findings for cultural heritage practice and collection development.
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- 2015
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17. Studying the Impact of Digitized Ethnographic Collections: Implications for Practitioners
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Robert Leopold, Diana E. Marsh, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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Engineering ,Salient ,business.industry ,Ethnography ,Library science ,Engineering ethics ,Narrative ,General Medicine ,business ,Digitization ,Storytelling - Abstract
This paper reports salient findings of a yearlong study that aimed to understand the impacts of digitized ethnographic collections. We discuss the barriers and challenges to understanding, assessing, and communicating the impact of ethnographic digitization projects. We then discuss the implications of our findings for collection practice and development and advocate for cultivating a culture of assessment for digitization projects using the systematized collection of impact stories.
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- 2015
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18. Archival Diasporas: A Framework for Understanding the Complexities and Challenges of Dispersed Photographic Collections
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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World Wide Web ,History ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Context (language use) ,Representation (arts) ,Library and Information Sciences ,Visual arts ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common ,Diaspora - Abstract
It is not uncommon for archival photographs to appear in multiple copies, versions, or formats. Photographs of the same provenance are often found in various locations or housed in several institutions. Format diversity, duplication, and dispersion pose profound challenges for archivists attempting to represent photographic images scattered across many institutions. This article identifies four dimensions of archival dispersion—geographical, temporal, provenancial, and material—that simultaneously act as barriers for providing consolidated representation of dispersed photographs. Understanding the context and nature of dispersion is key to effective representation of photographs in archival custody. "Archival Diaspora" explores the complicated nature of distributed collections.
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- 2014
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19. Understanding Virtual Reunification
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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Politics ,Multimedia ,Computer science ,Realm ,Frame (artificial intelligence) ,Representation (arts) ,Library and Information Sciences ,computer.software_genre ,Data science ,computer ,Digitization - Abstract
Virtual reunification is the strategy of reassembling physically dispersed heritage collections to produce a consolidated, digitized representation of scattered artifacts, literary and artistic works, and/or archival records of a single origin or common provenance. Scholars of digitization predict that interest in virtual reunification projects will continue to grow among heritage institutions, particularly in cases where dispersed collections present geographic, material, and political challenges that can more easily be overcome in the digital realm. This article highlights key characteristics of virtual reunification efforts taken from existing reunification projects and available literature on the topic, and it also offers ways to frame and approach virtual reunification. While available literature on virtual reunification focuses on specific project details and technical considerations, this article presents models that help to understand organizational and management challenges that virtual r...
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- 2014
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20. Gerald Vizenor. Native Provenance: The Betrayal of Cultural Creativity
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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Betrayal ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Engineering ,Media studies ,Creativity ,Indigenous ,Critical moment ,Promotion (rank) ,Reciprocity (social psychology) ,Culture theory ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Professional association ,Sociology ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
This is a critical moment for those who care for Native American and Indigenous archives. After much discussion, debate, and years of tireless advocacy, the Protocols for Native American Archival Materials has finally been endorsed by our leading professional organizations. The Association of College and Research Libraries, following the request of the Rare Books and Manuscript Section (RBMS), endorsed the Protocols in August 2019. In 2018, the Council of the Society of American Archivists unanimously endorsed the Protocols, accompanied by an apology for the many years of inaction. Following these endorsements, the next step for us is not only to continue its promotion and implementation, but also grow our understanding of what it means to be responsible stewards of items in our care. The Protocols articulate foundational concepts for our professional practice, including notions of cultural sensitivity and reciprocity. We can further expand our thinking and practice in this area by engaging with the works of prominent thinkers. Among these is Anishinaabe cultural theorist, writer, and scholar Gerald Vizenor’s most recent book, Native Provenance: The Betrayal of Cultural Creativity.
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- 2019
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21. Overall survival benefit for sequential doxorubicin–docetaxel compared with concurrent doxorubicin and docetaxel in node-positive breast cancer—8-year results of the Breast International Group 02-98 phase III trial
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Denis Larsimont, Bo Nordenskjöld, E. de Azambuja, Richard D. Gelber, I. Steinberg, Martine Piccart-Gebhart, J. Gutierrez, M. Margeli Vila, Prudence A. Francis, A. Di Leo, Catherine Oakman, L. Punzalan, Marc Buyse, Martin Andersson, Vernon Harvey, Beat Thürlimann, Giuseppe Viale, Raimund Jakesz, Patrizia Dell'Orto, John Crown, and E. Quinaux
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Adult ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cyclophosphamide ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Breast Neoplasms ,Docetaxel ,Disease-Free Survival ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Young Adult ,Breast cancer ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Doxorubicin ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Chemotherapy regimen ,Methotrexate ,Fluorouracil ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Female ,Taxoids ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: In women with node-positive breast cancer, the Breast International Group (BIG) 02-98 tested the incorporation of docetaxel (Taxotere) into doxorubicin (Adriamycin)-based chemotherapy, and compared sequential and concurrent docetaxel. At 5 years, there was a trend for improved disease-free survival (DFS) with docetaxel. We present results at 8-year median follow-up and exploratory analyses within biologically defined subtypes. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanMethods: Patients were randomly assigned to one of four treatments: (i) sequential control: doxorubicin (A) (75 mg/m(2)) x 4 -andgt; classical cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil (CMF); (ii) concurrent control: doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide (AC)(60/600 mg/m(2)) x 4 -andgt; CMF; (iii) sequential docetaxel: A (75 mg/m(2)) x3 -andgt; docetaxel (T) (100 mg/m(2)) x3. CMF and (iv) concurrent docetaxel: AT(50/75 mg/m(2)) x 4 -andgt; CMF. The primary comparison evaluated docetaxel efficacy regardless of the schedule. Exploratory analyses were undertaken within biologically defined subtypes. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanResults: Two thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven patients were enrolled. After 93.4 months of median follow-up, there were 916 DFS events. For the primary comparison, there was no significant improvement in DFS from docetaxel [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.91, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.80-1.05, P = 0.187]. In secondary comparisons, sequential docetaxel significantly improved DFS compared with sequential control (HR = 0.81, 95% CI = 0.67-0.99, P = 0.036), and significantly improved DFS (HR = 0.84, 95% CI = 0.72-0.99, P = 0.035) and overall survival (OS) (HR = 0.79, 95% CI = 0.65-0.98, P = 0.028) compared with concurrent doxorubicin-docetaxel. Luminal-A disease had the best prognosis. HRs favored addition of sequential docetaxel in all subtypes, except luminal-A; but this observation was not statistically supported because of limited numbers. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanConclusion: With further follow-up, the sequential docetaxel schedule resulted in significantly better OS than concurrent doxorubicin-docetaxel, and continued to show better DFS than sequential doxorubicin-based control.
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- 2013
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22. Invoking 'collective memory': mapping the emergence of a concept in archival science
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Margaret Hedstrom, Trond E. Jacobsen, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,Social memory ,Library science ,Building and Construction ,Library and Information Sciences ,Collective memory ,Epistemology ,Cultural heritage ,Trace (semiology) ,Archival science ,Categorization ,Citation analysis ,Transdisciplinarity ,Sociology ,Software - Abstract
The concept of “collective” or “social” memory has assumed increasing prominence in the discourse of archivists over the past few decades. Archives are frequently characterized as crucial institutions of social memory, and many professional activities are considered forms of memory preservation. We present a systematic examination of the relationships between archives and collective memory as articulated in the English-language archival literature. We first identify the major themes regarding collective memory and categorize archival writings into four major threads. We then analyze citations extracted from 165 articles about collective memory published between 1980 and 2010 in four leading English-language archival studies journals. We identify the most influential scholars and publications and trace the evolution of the collective memory concept in that literature. By comparing the archival literature on collective memory to that indexed in Thomson’s Web of Science and in Google Scholar, we identify specific disciplines, authors, and works that archivists working on collective memory may find useful. We find that in general the archival literature on collective memory is fairly insular and self-referential and call on archivists to actively engage other disciplines when carrying out collective memory research.
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- 2013
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23. Bots, Seeds and People: Web Archives as Infrastructure
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Ricardo L. Punzalan and Ed Summers
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Archival appraisal ,Sociotechnical system ,Computer science ,Web archiving ,05 social sciences ,Computer Science - Digital Libraries ,K.4.3 ,02 engineering and technology ,Space (commercial competition) ,Field (computer science) ,Archivist ,World Wide Web ,H.3.7 ,020204 information systems ,Computer-supported cooperative work ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Digital Libraries (cs.DL) ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,Heuristics - Abstract
The field of web archiving provides a unique mix of human and automated agents collaborating to achieve the preservation of the web. Centuries old theories of archival appraisal are being transplanted into the sociotechnical environment of the World Wide Web with varying degrees of success. The work of the archivist and bots in contact with the material of the web present a distinctive and understudied CSCW shaped problem. To investigate this space we conducted semi-structured interviews with archivists and technologists who were directly involved in the selection of content from the web for archives. These semi-structured interviews identified thematic areas that inform the appraisal process in web archives, some of which are encoded in heuristics and algorithms. Making the infrastructure of web archives legible to the archivist, the automated agents and the future researcher is presented as a challenge to the CSCW and archival community.
- Published
- 2016
24. Archives and Human Rights: Questioning Notions of Information and Access
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Ricardo L. Punzalan and Michelle Caswell
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Value (ethics) ,Human rights ,Divergence (linguistics) ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Universal design ,Public relations ,Epistemology ,Ethos ,Archival science ,Originality ,Political science ,Rhetoric ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this chapter is to delineate a number of factors unique to archives that problematize commonly accepted rhetoric in library and information studies (LIS). Methodology/approach This study reports on an analysis of several core concepts in archival studies (evidence, access, and power) and delineates how such concepts differ from dominant conceptions in the study of libraries. Findings Our research shows how archives call into question three dominant discursive tropes in LIS: the primacy of informational value (as opposed to evidential value in archives); universal access as a professional and ethical obligation; and the assumption that information institutions are universally benevolent. Although such tropes have been increasingly challenged by growing numbers of critical LIS scholars, we argue that they remain dominant discursive formations in LIS and reflect key areas of divergence that differentiate archives from libraries and distinguish the professional ethos of archivists and librarians. Originality/value This is the first chapter to delineate how archives differ from libraries in regard to human rights concerns and will spark discussion about such differences between the fields.
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- 2016
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25. Import of the Archive: U.S. Colonial Rule of the Philippines and the Making of American Archival History. By Cheryl Beredo. Sacramento, CA: Litwin Books, 2013. Pp. vii+157. $25.00 (paper). ISBN 978‐1‐936117‐72‐7
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,Colonial rule ,Library and Information Sciences ,Making-of ,Classics - Published
- 2014
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26. Archives of the new possession: Spanish colonial records and the American creation of a ‘national’ archives for the Philippines
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Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,Government ,National consciousness ,Context (language use) ,Building and Construction ,Library and Information Sciences ,Possession (law) ,Colonialism ,Genealogy ,Cultural heritage ,National archives ,Ethnology ,Treaty ,Software - Abstract
Through the Treaty of Paris in 1898, Spain ceded to the United States all its colonial authority over the Philippines, including its other colonies. The Treaty also placed in American possession the Spanish records kept in the various agencies of the former colonial administration of the islands. Upon assumption of its role as the new de facto colonial regime, the American insular government initiated the process of collecting the Spanish colonial records to be housed in a central repository that became the nucleus of the National Archives of the Philippines. An important aspect of understanding the context of archives in post-colonial Philippines is to trace its early beginnings and to examine the archives’ association with former colonial powers. Established against the backdrop of the shift in the continuum of colonial regimes, the archive is undeniably a colonial creation and a manifestation of colonial domination. For the contemporary imagination, however, its very presence represents a common and collective past that consequently contributes to the formation of a “national consciousness” and ironically reinforces the idea of nationhood of the formerly colonized territory.
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- 2007
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27. An Analysis of Federal Policy on Public Access to Scientific Research Data
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Kerry Huller, Cynthia Parr, Adam Kriesberg, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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open data ,office of science and techology policy ,data access ,metadata ,Compliance (psychology) ,World Wide Web ,Political science ,Agency (sociology) ,Computer Science (miscellaneous) ,lcsh:Science (General) ,0505 law ,050502 law ,Government ,Data curation ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Public relations ,Computer Science Applications ,Metadata ,Open data ,Data access ,Close reading ,Office of Science and Technology Policy ,0509 other social sciences ,050904 information & library sciences ,business ,lcsh:Q1-390 - Abstract
The 2013 Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) Memo on federally-funded research directed agencies with research and development budgets above $100 million to develop and release plans to increase and broaden access to research results, both published literature and data. The agency responses have generated discussion and interest but are yet to be analyzed and compared. In this paper, we examine how 19 federal agencies responded to the memo, written by John Holdren, on issues of scientific data and the extent of their compliance to the directives outlined in the memo. We present a varied picture of the readiness of federal science agencies to comply with the memo through a comparative analysis and close reading of the contents of these responses. While some agencies, particularly those with a long history of supporting and conducting science, scored well, other responses indicate that some agencies have only taken a few steps towards implementing policies that comply with the memo. These results are of interest to the data curation community as they reveal how different agencies across the federal government approach their responsibilities for research data management, and how new policies and requirements might continue to affect scientists and research communities.
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- 2017
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28. Mobilizing records: re-framing archival description to support human rights
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Anne J. Gilliland, Kathy Carbone, Marika Cifor, Stacy Wood, and Ricardo L. Punzalan
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History ,Peace ,Human rights ,Archival description ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Library science ,Archival education ,Information & Library Sciences ,Building and Construction ,Library and Information Sciences ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Cultural heritage ,Framing (social sciences) ,Archival science ,Library and Information Studies ,Political science ,Precept ,Engineering ethics ,Archival theory ,Consciousness ,Software ,Generative grammar ,media_common - Abstract
This article seeks to raise consciousness within the field of archival studies in order to foster a generative discussion about how descriptive practices might be expanded, approached differently, or completely rethought. It brings together crosscutting theoretical issues and provides practical examples of mediation in order to mobilize these records in support of human rights work. It first problematizes the foundational archival precept of respect des fonds and its sub-principles of original order and provenance. It then analyzes the necessary transformation of institutional policies and standards in order to foster trust and transparency and identifies structural or system wide strategies for ameliorating past abuses.
- Published
- 2014
29. Structural Effects of Fusicoccin upon Upregulation of 14-3-3-Phospholigand Interaction and Cytotoxic Activity.
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Ohkanda J, Kusumoto A, Punzalan L, Masuda R, Wang C, Parvatkar P, Akase D, Aida M, Uesugi M, Higuchi Y, and Kato N
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Fusicoccins (FCs) exhibit various cellular activities in mammalian cells, but details of the mechanism of action are not fully understood. In this study, we synthesized two pairs of model derivatives of FCs differing only in the presence and absence of a 12-hydroxyl group and evaluated their binding to a 14-3-3 protein together with various mode 1 and mode 3 phosphopeptide ligands. Our results demonstrate that the 12-hydroxyl group hampers binding to 14-3-3 with mode 1 phospholigands, presumably due to steric repulsion with the i+2 residue. Furthermore, cell-based evaluations showed that only non-substituted FCs exhibit significant cytotoxicity and all 12-hydroxyl derivatives were inactive, demonstrating a clear correlation with their ability to form ternary complexes with 14-3-3 and a mode 1 ligand. These results suggest that binding to 14-3-3 and a partner protein(s) possessing a mode 1 sequence plays a role in the mechanism of action of 12-non-substituted FCs., (© 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
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- 2018
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30. Overall survival benefit for sequential doxorubicin-docetaxel compared with concurrent doxorubicin and docetaxel in node-positive breast cancer--8-year results of the Breast International Group 02-98 phase III trial.
- Author
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Oakman C, Francis PA, Crown J, Quinaux E, Buyse M, De Azambuja E, Margeli Vila M, Andersson M, Nordenskjöld B, Jakesz R, Thürlimann B, Gutiérrez J, Harvey V, Punzalan L, Dell'orto P, Larsimont D, Steinberg I, Gelber RD, Piccart-Gebhart M, Viale G, and Di Leo A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Breast Neoplasms mortality, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Disease-Free Survival, Docetaxel, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Fluorouracil administration & dosage, Fluorouracil therapeutic use, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Methotrexate administration & dosage, Methotrexate therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Taxoids administration & dosage, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Taxoids therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background In women with node-positive breast cancer, the Breast International Group (BIG) 02-98 tested the incorporation of docetaxel (Taxotere) into doxorubicin (Adriamycin)-based chemotherapy, and compared sequential and concurrent docetaxel. At 5 years, there was a trend for improved disease-free survival (DFS) with docetaxel. We present results at 8-year median follow-up and exploratory analyses within biologically defined subtypes. Methods Patients were randomly assigned to one of four treatments: (i) sequential control: doxorubicin (A) (75 mg/m(2)) × 4 →classical cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil (CMF); (ii) concurrent control: doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide (AC)(60/600 mg/m(2)) × 4 →CMF; (iii) sequential docetaxel: A (75 mg/m(2)) × 3 → docetaxel (T) (100 mg/m(2)) × 3 → CMF and (iv) concurrent docetaxel: AT(50/75 mg/m(2)) × 4 →CMF. The primary comparison evaluated docetaxel efficacy regardless of the schedule. Exploratory analyses were undertaken within biologically defined subtypes. Results Two thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven patients were enrolled. After 93.4 months of median follow-up, there were 916 DFS events. For the primary comparison, there was no significant improvement in DFS from docetaxel [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.91, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.80-1.05, P = 0.187]. In secondary comparisons, sequential docetaxel significantly improved DFS compared with sequential control (HR = 0.81, 95% CI = 0.67-0.99, P = 0.036), and significantly improved DFS (HR = 0.84, 95% CI = 0.72-0.99, P = 0.035) and overall survival (OS) (HR = 0.79, 95% CI = 0.65-0.98, P = 0.028) compared with concurrent doxorubicin-docetaxel. Luminal-A disease had the best prognosis. HRs favored addition of sequential docetaxel in all subtypes, except luminal-A; but this observation was not statistically supported because of limited numbers. Conclusion With further follow-up, the sequential docetaxel schedule resulted in significantly better OS than concurrent doxorubicin-docetaxel, and continued to show better DFS than sequential doxorubicin-based control.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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31. An experimental temporary vascular access catheter for intracorporeal plasma separation.
- Author
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Handley HH Jr, Gorsuch R, Peters H, Punzalan L, Cooper TG, Levin NW, and Ronco C
- Subjects
- Animals, Catheterization, Central Venous methods, Cell Separation, Disease Models, Animal, Equipment Design, Equipment Safety, Female, Hemofiltration instrumentation, In Vitro Techniques, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Male, Renal Dialysis methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Swine, Catheterization, Central Venous instrumentation, Catheters, Indwelling, Hemofiltration methods, Renal Dialysis instrumentation
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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