New Electronic Resources Available

Latin American Newstand Now Available!

UConn Libraries now have a great new news resource called the Latin American Newsstand, from ProQuest It provides the full-text of 41 Latin-American newspapers and newswires covering international and Latin-American regional topics. This is a joint initiative sponsored by LARRP, (Latin Americanist Research Resources Project) a CRL Project.

See the Latin American Newsstand in the ERM, and check out the title list from ProQuest.

Mintel Reports

We now have access to Mintel Reports, a great market research tool! The Mintel Reports database contains full-text market research reports covering US and Global consumer markets, with an emphasis on European and US markets. Each report analyzes market share, segmentation, and trends along with providing comprehensive demographic profiles and consumer patterns. It covers the following categories:

  • automotive
  • beauty, personal goods and toiletries
  • clothing, footwear, accessories
  • consumer lifestyles, marketing, promotion
  • drink and tobacco
  • electrical goods
  • food and foodservice
  • health and wellbeing
  • holidays and travel
  • household/house and home
  • industrial
  • leisure time
  • lifestages
  • media, books, stationery
  • miscellaneous
  • personal finances
  • retail
  • technology/telecoms

Upon the first login to Mintel, you will be required to register with your email address and select your own password. Once you have registered, Mintel creates a user profile where you can save and later retrieve your searches. All reports are keyword searchable and one can download or print individual sections or entire reports. It also provides an option to export tabular information within reports directly to Excel spreadsheets.

Environmental Justice: A 21st Century Civil Rights Issue

The Thomas J. Dodd Research Center and the African American Cultural Center invite you to join us for a talk by environmental justice activist, Sharon Lewis.

“Environmental Justice:  A 21st Century Civil Rights Issue” 

Talk by Sharon E. Lewis, Director, Hartford Citizens in Action 

Tuesday, October 30, 2007 at 4:00 PM

Konover Auditorium, Thomas J. Dodd Research Center,

University of Connecticut  Reception to follow

Sharon E. Lewis, the Director of the Hartford Citizens in Action, has been involved with environmental justice movements in Connecticut and globally since the 1980s, and will join us for a discussion of environmental issues for low income and communities of color and their disproportionate burden of environmental hazards.  The event is free and open to the public.

“The US and Human Rights after Abu Ghraib and All That” Lecture, TODAY, October 23 at 4 PM

Lecture Today:  Tuesday, October 23, 2007  at 4 PM at the Dodd Center

The Human Rights Institute presents the Visiting Gladstein Lecture in Human Rights, “The US and Human Rights after Abu Ghraib and All That,” by Professor David Forsythe.  Dr. Forsythe is the Marsha Lilien Gladstein Visiting Professor of Human Rights this year at the University of Connecticut, and the Charles J.Mach Distinguished Professor Political Science at the University of Nebraska.  Dr. Forysthe is the author or editor of  significant volumes on human rights including, The United Nations and Changing World Politics, Human Rights in International Relations (now in its second edition), American Foreign Policy in a Globalized World, and many others. 

The talk will be at 4:00 pm on Tuesday, October 23, 2007 in Konover Auditorium at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, followed by a reception. 

African National Congress Oral History Interview Transcripts Collection

From the UConn Advance, October 15, 2007

Oral History Project on Anti-apartheid Struggle Completed, by Michael Kirk

A substantial, wide-ranging oral history of the African National Congress (ANC) and the lives of its leading figures during South Africa’s apartheid years has been donated to the University by the ANC.

The ANC was established in 1912 to provide a political avenue for the struggle for racial equality in South Africa. After apartheid became official policy in 1948, it became the leading anti-apartheid organization.

Interviews with 133 ANC leaders conducted in South Africa between 2000 and 2006 have been transcribed and donated to UConn as part of the University’s partnership with the ANC and the University of Fort Hare in South Africa. Fort Hare also holds a copy  of the transcripts.

The transcripts, ranging in length from seven to 135 pages, will be permanently housed at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center and will be available to scholars, students, and the public.

“The ANC oral histories add a significant dimension to the Dodd Center’s growing collection of human rights materials,” says Thomas Wilsted, director of the Dodd Center.

“The oral histories offer valuable insight into the impact of apartheid on the lives of South Africans and will be a significant resource to faculty and students researching and teaching history and human rights. We also hope to make copies of the oral history transcripts available online for wider access to their content.”

The collection features South Africans being interviewed by other South Africans, a number of whom were trained in the collection of oral histories by Bruce Stave, director of the oral history office at UConn, and his staff.

“Training the South African interviewers proved to be an exciting and stimulating oral history experience for me and my associates,” says Stave, professor emeritus of history.

After an intensive two-week workshop in Cape Town, teams of interviewers fanned out throughout the country to conduct the initial interviews of the project.

They returned to evaluate this work before conducting more taped conversations. Two of the interviewers came to Storrs to earn their M.A. degrees in history.

The topics of the interviews range from the educational system in South Africa, to prison conditions and life under house arrest, life in exile, and the 1994 democratic elections.

“The uniqueness of the ANC transcripts here at UConn is their ability to shed light on the experiences and daily lives of those who actively dismantled the apartheid system,” says Valerie Love, curator for human rights collections at the Dodd Center.

“The oral histories not only give voice to the experiences of black South Africans whose history and experiences went for the most part unrecorded under the apartheid system, they also include interviews with members of the ANC who had been classified as Indians, “coloreds,” and whites so as to illuminate the spectrum of experiences that South African activists endured as a result of their race.”

Amii Omara-Otunnu, executive director of the UConn-ANC Partnership who holds the UNESCO Chair in Comparative Human Rights, says, “The ANC represents something terribly special in the history of human rights. It was the first national party in world history to have a vision of a non-racist society where all people are respected equally.”

The oral histories are particularly important because many ANC leaders limited their written communications for security reasons during the anti-apartheid struggle.

Between 1960 and 1990, many members of the ANC, forced into exile because of their activism, continued their political work against apartheid from outside the country.

After apartheid was ended, the ANC won the country’s first democratic elections in 1994.

In an effort to preserve its history, the party established archives at the University of Fort Hare, a historically black institution, with the goal of collecting historical materials from 33 different countries.

In March 1999, UConn signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the ANC establishing a partnership to foster training, assistance, and cooperation in developing oral histories and archival records of the ANC, and to develop comparative studies in human rights.

As part of the project, Thomas J. Dodd Research Center staff provided archival planning and training for ANC staff. During the period 2000 to 2006, ANC archivists organized more than 3,000 cubic feet of archival collections created during the apartheid years, with support from the Andrew Mellon Foundation.

Those records are now housed at the University of Fort Hare.

##

The ANC Oral History Transcript Collection is open to researchers.  The collection is located at the  Thomas J. Dodd Research Center at UConn, which is open from from 10 AM to 7 PM on Mondays, 10 AM to 4 PM, Tuesday through Friday,  and on Saturdays from 12 to 4 PM during the academic year.

For more information: 

The finding aid for the ANC Oral History Transcripts Collection

Connecticut Public Radio’s Where We Live program which discussed the interviews

The Hartford Courant’s article on the ANC Oral History Transcripts Collection

The Thomas J. Dodd Research Center

The Oral History Office at UConn

“Stop the Traffick” Film Screening Tonight– October 15, 2007

In addtion to the two films on Wednesday, the campus group “Love146,” which advocates to end child sex slavery and exploitation, is sponsoring a screening of Stop the Traffick tonight, October 15, at 8 PM in Konover Auditorium at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.  Stop the Traffick exposes the aftereffects of the Khmer Rouge’s regime and genocide in Cambodia which has left children vulnerable to exploitation through the sex trade.

Lumo and Walking the Line: Film Screenings and Q & A with Producers

A couple of important human rights documentaries are being screened on campus this week:  Lumo, and Walking the Line.  The producers of each film will be on campus as well for discussion and Q & A. 

Lumo is a documentary about a young Congolese woman on an uncretain path to recovery at a unique hospital for rape survivors. 

The film will be shown on Wednesday, October 17 at 7:30 PM in St. Thomas Aquinas, the UConn Catholic Campus Ministry.  Co-director and producer of the film Nelson Walker III, will lead a Q & A session following the film. 

Lumo has won numerous awards and aired on PBS in September.  More information on the film is available here

See also the recent New York Times article on the brutality of rape in the Congo

Also on Wednesday, October 17, there will be two events surrounding the documentary, Walking the Line, which explores U.S. vigilantes, undocumented migrants, and human rights. 

At 4 PM in Batterson Multipuporse Room, there will be a meet and greet with the film’s producers, Jeremy Levine & Landon Van Soest.

At 7 PM in the Andre Schenker Lecture Hall (behind Montieth Hall) there will be a screening of the film followed by discussion on U.S. border protection and human rights with the film makers. 

National Coming Out Day– free t-shirts and LGBTQ archival resources

The Rainbow Center on the 4th floor of the Student Union is offering free anti-homophobia t-shirts in honor of National Coming Out Day, so if you’re on campus, definitely stop by and pick one up. 

UConn Libraries are also celebrating Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer History Month throughout October, with a resource guide on GLBTQ materials available at UConn

The Dodd Research Center has a significant number of archival materials dealing with LGBTQ themes:

The Alternative Press Collection:  Large collection of non-mainstream newspapers, journals, magazines, pamphlets, and other materials, including a significant number of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer liberation publications from the 1960s to the present.   GLBTQ magazines and newspapers in the Alternative Press Collection include Bay Windows, The Body Politic, Christopher Street, Fag Rag, Gay Sunshine, Lesbian Connection, and many more.  Check for other titles in HOMER

Foster Gunnison Papers: Contain letters, manuscripts, photographs and printed materials which document the homophile and gay liberation movements of the 1960s and 1970s.

Human Rights Research Workshop– Wed. October 10 at 4

Join me on Wednesday, October 10 at 4 PM in the Electronic Classroom 2 of Babbidge Library for a workshop on conducting human rights research. The workshop is being sponsored by Namaste, UConn’s student human rights journal, and will last a little under an hour.

At the Human Rights Research Workshop, we’ll be covering the following:

* Overview of the Human Rights Subject Guide and library resources for human rights
* Databases for human rights research and how to find peer-reviewed journal articles
* Search tricks for HOMER to find human rights materials
* Overview of the Dodd Center and human rights archival resources on campus

I hope to see you all there!

Human Rights Film Series Screening: Water (2005)

In case one screening of Deepa Mehta’s film, Water, wasn’t enough, there are actually two opportunities to watch and/or learn more about the film and historical conditions for women in India tomorrow (Tuesday, October 9).

The Human Rights Institute is screening Water as part of our ongoing Human Rights Film Series at 6 PM in Konover Auditorium at the Dodd Research Center.

Kappa Phi Lamda Sorority. Inc is sponsoring a discussion of the film at 5 PM across campus in the Asian American Cultural Center.

So, if you haven’t already seen this excellent  film, join us tomorrow in Konover!   If you have seen it already and would like to discuss it, drop by the Asisan American Cultural Center.