TY - JOUR
T1 - Ukrainian community archives in Victoria, Australia
T2 - a stocktake
AU - Achilli, Alessandro
AU - Pavlyshyn, Marko
AU - Shmihelska-Kozuliak, Olha
N1 - Funding Information:
onward, records of fundraising in support of Ukrainian Studies at Monash University, donor lists, press cuttings, and documentation of research grant applications from the Zerov Centre. Other AUV branches and sections are contemplating moving their records to Essendon. Some records of the St Albans branch, founded in 1956,15 were relocated to Essendon in 2019; the majority are in the residences of former branch officeholders.
Funding Information:
1 The authors gratefully acknowledge the support received for the research on which this article is based from the Ukrainian Studies Support Fund of the Association of Ukrainians in Victoria (Australia), the Ukrainian Studies Foundation in Australia, and Monash University.
Funding Information:
The AUV is unique among Ukrainian organizations in Victoria (and, indeed, Australia) in that it has secured resources (for the period 2019–22) for the conservation and cataloguing of its archive. A grant from the Ukrainian Studies Foundation in Australia Ltd. covers personnel costs; financial and in-kind support from the AUV itself and the AFUO made possible building alterations and the erection of shelving, enabling the safe relocation of archival materials, and the creation of workspace for archive workers and future archive users. At the time of writing salaried qualified personnel and volunteers trained for the task had finished ordering and re-boxing archival records and were undertaking conservation, cataloguing, and digitizing work.13 The catalogue in its present, not yet publicly available, form identifies content to the level of the archive box and the folder contained therein; cataloguing of individual documents within folders is in progress. Although the AUV Archival Project is as yet incomplete, the AUV currently has a better overview of the records in its keeping than do other Ukrainian community entities in Victoria over theirs.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies (ewjus.com).
PY - 2023/3/20
Y1 - 2023/3/20
N2 - Contemporary research increasingly recognizes the role of community archives in preserving evidence of the pasts of identity groups, validating their historical experience, and thus furthering the goals of social justice and equality. Such values underlie the Association of Ukrainians in Victoria (Australia) Archival Project, which the present article places into the broader context of Ukrainian community archival collections in the state of Victoria. Data obtained through interview have enabled a descriptive survey of such collections, which are found to be concentrated in a handful of “archival clusters” in suburban Melbourne and regional Victoria. The most typical contents of the collections—records of the proceedings and activities of community secular and religious organizations—reflect the dominant role in the community’s life of organizations established by post-World War II immigrants. The collections constitute a rich resource for research into the part of the community encompassed by these organizations, even if, as a rule, at least at present, they are not well ordered or described. They are less revealing of the experience of immigrants who arrived later or were less inclined to join community organizations. Lack of resources, both human and material, confronts the mainly volunteer officeholders who are responsible for the organizations’ archives. In consequence, collections are often inadequately and sometimes unsafely housed, and in general only informally organized; finding aids or descriptions of them are seldom available. Initiatives taken by some organizations suggest that there is growing awareness among community activists of the potential value of archives for showing and interpreting the community to itself and to others.
AB - Contemporary research increasingly recognizes the role of community archives in preserving evidence of the pasts of identity groups, validating their historical experience, and thus furthering the goals of social justice and equality. Such values underlie the Association of Ukrainians in Victoria (Australia) Archival Project, which the present article places into the broader context of Ukrainian community archival collections in the state of Victoria. Data obtained through interview have enabled a descriptive survey of such collections, which are found to be concentrated in a handful of “archival clusters” in suburban Melbourne and regional Victoria. The most typical contents of the collections—records of the proceedings and activities of community secular and religious organizations—reflect the dominant role in the community’s life of organizations established by post-World War II immigrants. The collections constitute a rich resource for research into the part of the community encompassed by these organizations, even if, as a rule, at least at present, they are not well ordered or described. They are less revealing of the experience of immigrants who arrived later or were less inclined to join community organizations. Lack of resources, both human and material, confronts the mainly volunteer officeholders who are responsible for the organizations’ archives. In consequence, collections are often inadequately and sometimes unsafely housed, and in general only informally organized; finding aids or descriptions of them are seldom available. Initiatives taken by some organizations suggest that there is growing awareness among community activists of the potential value of archives for showing and interpreting the community to itself and to others.
KW - community archives
KW - immigrants
KW - non-government organizations
KW - Ukrainian diaspora
KW - Victoria (Australia)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85151394237&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.21226/ewjus658
DO - 10.21226/ewjus658
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85151394237
SN - 2292-7956
VL - 10
SP - 3
EP - 38
JO - East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies
JF - East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies
IS - 1
ER -