SCOLMA (the UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa) are holding a one-day conference at the University of Oxford on Monday, 30 June (09:30 - 17:30). This year their annual conference focuses on the future and explores what impact does Africa's growing youth population have on the role of archives and libraries that document the continent’s past. It is well known that the African continent has the youngest population in the world, and is sometimes described as the ‘continent of the future’. What impact does this have on the role of institutions documenting the past?
This conference will explore the role of library and archive materials in African Studies in understanding generational change and in meeting the opportunities and challenges that it brings. How have generational change and the experiences of different generations been understood and recorded in the past? How do shifts in technological expectations shape how different generations expect to ‘access’ the past? How do digital technologies change the balances between written records and oral tradition and how can collecting practices adjust accordingly? How can archive or library materials be mobilised to be useful in schools and education for different age groups?
Dr Buhle Mbambo-Thata will deliver a keynote speech on how the youth hold the future of the past: creating an infrastructure for engagement between youth, libraries, archives and museums in the digital preservation of African knowledge.
It will be followed by three panels: Engaging young people with African history; Digital technology: preservation across generations; and Generations in the archives.