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Overview
In August 2018, the SAA Council issued a statement endorsing the Protocols for Native American Archival Materials as an external standard of the organization. The Protocols establish best practices for the culturally responsive care and use of Native American archival materials, particularly materials that are housed in non-tribal institutions.
This series of case studies, sponsored by the Native American Archivists Section (NAAS) of SAA, is intended to help archivists, librarians, museum curators, and other professionals who work with Native American archival materials see how the Protocols can be adapted for use in a variety of institutional contexts. More broadly, the case studies series is designed to highlight evolving access policies to Native American materials, whether or not these policies are based specifically on the Protocols.
Elements of a Case Study
Case studies are intended to demonstrate real-world examples of the ways in which contributors and their institutions have developed and/or implemented access policies for culturally sensitive Native American archival materials. Contributors are encouraged to write about the challenges of developing and implementing these access policies in their institutional contexts, as well as their successes. Case studies from all sizes and types of institutions are welcomed, as are case studies focusing on various types of culturally sensitive archival materials (textual, photographic, audio/visual, etc.). Case studies contributed by single authors or multiple authors are also welcome.
Each case study should include the following basic elements:
A key component of best practices for the care and use of culturally sensitive Native American archival materials is collaboration with Native American communities. Case studies that reflect Native American communities’ experiences with institutions’ evolving access policies are also encouraged.
Preparing and Submitting Your Case Study
To inquire about submitting a case study, please contact the series editors: https://www2.archivists.org/publications/epubs/Native-American-Archival-.... Submissions will be published to the case studies site on a rolling basis.
Case studies should be between 1,500 and 5,000 words. Authors are responsible for understanding and following the principles that govern the “fair use” of quotations and illustrations, and for obtaining written permission to publish where necessary. Accuracy in citations is also the author’s responsibility. SAA prefers the current edition of the Chicago Manual of Style with endnote formatting for citations.
Review Process
All submissions will be reviewed by two volunteer reviewers from the NAAS Steering Committee or from the NAAS membership. Submissions will be evaluated according to a rubric. Reviewers will return the case study and completed rubric within three weeks of receipt to the series editors. The series editors will review the feedback and make an editorial decision, consulting with the NAAS Steering Committee and SAA Publications Editor as necessary. The series editors will communicate a publication decision to the author(s) within five weeks of the receipt of the submission.
A submission will not be considered if it is being reviewed by another publishing outlet at the same time, or if it has been published previously in a similar form.
Publication Process
Once accepted, case studies will be submitted to the SAA Publications Editor and Director of Publishing for light copyediting. If major changes are needed, a version tracking those changes will be sent to the author for confirmation. After the author signs off on a final version, SAA will format the case study and post it to the Case Study Series website as a PDF.
Copyright in the case study will remain with the author, and SAA will acknowledge this in the copyright line that appears with the case study. Authors will consent, grant, and assign to SAA the non-exclusive right to publish and/or distribute all or any part of the case study throughout the world in electronic or any other medium. In return, SAA agrees to publish the work under a Creative Commons Attribution No Derivatives license.