Job Requisition ID: REQ177387

Job Description

Anticipated Start Date: July 1, 2022

Applications will be reviewed beginning April 25, 2022

The Global Curatorial Project Archivist is a project-based position housed at 
the John Hay Library  in partnership with the Center for the Study of Slavery 
and Justice (CSSJ). The Global Curatorial Project (GCP) was founded in 2014 to 
be a network of scholars, curators, and educators who are committed to creating 
innovative forms of public history about the historical social system of racial 
slavery and the ways in which it continues to shape our world. The GCP is led 
by CSSJ and the Center for the Study of Global Slavery (CSGS) at the 
Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC). 
Together, they convened 10 partner institutions located in Africa, Europe, and 
South America on two interconnected projects: a traveling exhibition, In 
Slavery’s Wake and a curatorial / archival collection and public engagement 
project, Unfinished Conversations. In Slavery’s Wake is an international 
exhibition project curated by the GCP which re-frames the history and legacies 
of slavery as both a locally and globally central story with deep contemporary 
relevance to our lives throughout the Atlantic world. The Unfinished 
Conversations initiative supports the exhibition project by focusing on 
exploring the question “How Slavery Shaped this Place” both through public 
programs that will encourage new conversations, and by establishing new 
collections of oral histories that will explore the lived experiences and 
historical memories of enslaved Africans and their descendants.  

 

Reporting to the Head of Collection Services and Metadata, the Global 
Curatorial Project Archivist accessions, arranges, describes, and catalogs the 
oral histories and related documentation, in all types of digital and analog 
formats, created and collected by the Global Curatorial Project. The Archivist 
will contribute the resulting collections and descriptive metadata to existing 
online databases and a new digital archive site dedicated to the GCP. The work 
is done in a user-centered and access-driven approach to processing and 
cataloging archival collections while paying close attention to the ethical 
needs of diverse cultural materials and their creators.  The position will 
ensure the description and vocabulary meets the needs of the creators and a 
global audience.  The Archivist  will also be an integral member of the  
intellectual and professional communities of the John Hay Library and the CSSJ. 
 They will serve as a close collaborator with faculty and staff at the CSSJ and 
GCP partner institutions.  They will participate in the Center's internal and 
external programs and as needed in partner meetings related to the Global 
Curatorial Project.   The Archivist will participate with the CSSJ, GCP 
partners, and Brown University Library staff on the creation of the new digital 
archive site to present the oral histories and related documentation to 
researchers worldwide.  To support this work, the Global Curatorial Project 
Archivist will train and mentor student assistants to perform entry-level 
tasks. The cataloging work will also be informed by direct user interaction 
through regular service at service points at the John Hay Library.

 

About the Library:

 

The John Hay Library is home to Brown University’s remarkable collections of 
rare books, manuscripts, and archival material. The Hay and its collections 
attract an international cohort of researchers, and as a Carnegie Library, the 
Hay is committed to investing in community and public engagement. To ensure 
that its collections are carefully stewarded for long-term access and use by 
any visitor, the John Hay Library Collection Policy outlines six strategic 
collecting directions and core guiding principles for collecting. The Hay’s 
mission is to collect and preserve rare and unique materials that promote 
interdisciplinary research, teaching, and learning and inspire experimentation 
and creativity. Its collections support free and open inquiry, and we are 
committed to providing equitable access to our collections, exhibitions, and 
programming to a global community of students, scholars, and the public.

 

The Brown University Library is a dynamic center of scholarship and community 
at the heart of a world-class research university. Supporting and collaborating 
with a broad and diverse academic constituency, the Library is essential for 
Brown’s mission “to serve the community, the nation, and the world by 
discovering, communicating, and preserving knowledge and understanding in a 
spirit of free inquiry.” Integrating with Brown’s ambitious strategic plans, 
the Library is a site of innovation that fuels intellectual creativity.  
Signature Library initiatives include the establishment of the Center for 
Library Exploration and Research to increase campus and community impact; the 
Racial Justice Project to assess and counteract the legacies of historical 
racism in library practice; the Digital Publications Initiative pioneering new 
approaches to born-digital scholarship; and a revisioned special collections 
program that is positioning the John Hay Library as a research destination and 
leader in reparative and community-based collecting. We are seeking outstanding 
library professionals at all levels of the organization who are excited about 
advancing academic excellence at the highest level, and who will bring a wide 
array of backgrounds, experiences, and abilities to a scholarly community that 
is actively committed to being more diverse and inclusive.

 

About the CSSJ:

 

Founded in 2012, CSSJ creates a space for the interdisciplinary study of the 
historical forms of slavery while also examining how these legacies continue to 
shape our contemporary world. 

 

The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice is a scholarly research center 
with a public humanities mission. Recognizing that racial and chattel slavery 
were central to the historical formation of the Americas and the modern world, 
the CSSJ creates a space for the interdisciplinary study of the historical 
forms of slavery while also examining how these legacies shape our contemporary 
world.

 

This is a 2-year externally-funded  term-limited position with the possibility 
of extension. This position is hybrid eligible with 1 day of remote work and 4 
days of onsite work.

 

Education and Experience

ALA-accredited master’s degree in library or information science, or an 
equivalent combination of education and experience.
1 year of experience in an academic library, public library, school library or 
other cultural heritage setting, or educational institution in a cataloging, 
teaching, administration, or research role.
Experience or academic training in one or more of the following: Black Studies 
(or equivalent), Gender & Sexuality, Native American & Indigenous 
Studies or other related fields.
Experience providing public access to original cultural heritage resources 
through cataloging, reference, research or teaching.
Demonstrated ability to research historical subjects, remain abreast of 
research and academic trends, and learn and apply evolving professional 
descriptive standards.
Familiarity with library or museum cataloging standards such as DACS, CCO, 
MARC, AACR2, or RDA, desirable but not required.
Familiarity with oral history collections is desirable but not required.
Demonstrated planning, decision making, and problem-solving skills with 
superior verbal and written communication skills.
Excellent organizational, time, and project management skills.
Demonstrated ability to work collaboratively in a diverse, dynamic, team 
setting or across institutions and to balance multiple competing priorities.
Commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion at every level of the University.

All offers of employment are contingent upon a criminal background check and 
education verification satisfactory to Brown University.

 

 

 


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