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- The Relational Archivist
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Description
Learn how to cultivate collaborative relationships and place people at the center of archival work to create a growing and thriving archive.
Relational archivists will set the standard for professional practice in the 21st century by connecting people to people. Rather than primarily focusing on the acquisition and processing of collections to attract academic researchers, Rivera uses relatable examples from her own archival experiences to argue that taking the time to cultivate collaborative relationships will pay rich dividends and create a thriving archive. Drawing on real-life examples, she shows how new exhibits, programs, and donations have grown from these relationships, strengthening both the archive and its partners. Such relationships enable growth and progress impossible for an archivist laboring in isolation.
The Relational Archivist draws from both public history and the writings of archivists focused on social justice, political activism, and community engagement allowing archivists to understand their work within a broader community. Archivists are in a unique position to use the treasures of the archive to activate learning, foster community engagement, and help people better understand their own relationship to the past.
This call-to-arms for modern archivists provides a vision, the underlying theory, and the real-life examples that can arm the archival professional to thrive in our modern world. Meaning making happens when the stories of life speak to people over time and space. The archive exists as a place to preserve the stories of meaning, and the archivist works to promote the stories so that more people are exposed to the legacy of the stories contained in the archive. This transformative work of meaning making happens across and within archives of all types and sizes. It happens when the archival leaders have the courage to become intentionally relational and place people at the center of their archive.
Accessibility Information
Additional accessibility information
- PDF/UA-2, 1.4
- accessibility@bloomsbury.com
Hazards
The publication contains no hazards
Support for non-visual reading
Has alternative text descriptions for images
Navigation
- Page list to go to pages from the print source version
- Elements such as headings, tables, etc for structured navigation
- All or substantially all textual matter is arranged in a single logical reading order
Table of Contents
2. Activating and Energizing University Archives through Outreach
3. Examining the Spectrum of University Archives
4. Public Programming and Publicity: Identifying and Promoting Your Collections
5. Crafting an Inclusive Archive & Working Toward Social Justice
6. Collaboration: Coming Together to Make a Difference in the Lives of People
7. Teaching and Learning in the Archive
8. From Beginning to End: It Is All About the People
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | 12 Nov 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 208 |
| ISBN | 9798216277170 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Libraries Unlimited |
| Illustrations | 19 bw illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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The Relational Archivist is an inspired and hopeful volume. Using place-based case studies, interdisciplinary critical inquiry, and compelling (inter)personal experiences, Rivera challenges readers to reimagine archival practice as interwoven social responsibilities rooted in care and intention.
Claudia F. Willett, Archivist for Processing and Discovery Strategy, Stanford University Libraries, USA
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In a time of diminishing resources when archivists are being asked to do more with less, The Relational Archivist teaches archivists to find balance and build a realistic workload through the centering of relationships; in a time of neglect of the humanities when institutions value technology and production over people and meaning, it pushes us to remember that our work and the collections we serve are valuable only if they serve us and our communities. Drawing on hands-on archival experience and a degree in public history, Elizabeth Rivera's case studies demonstrate how to share authority with stakeholders and build bonds between an archive, its current and potential researchers, and its wider community. The Relational Archivist will inspire readers to build and grow their own people-centered archives.
Lauren Bickel, Technical Services Archivist, Sallie Bingham Center, Rubenstein Library, Duke University, USA
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Few people see archives as sites of public history and Elizabeth Rivera wants to change that. Drawing on her experience as both an archivist and public historian, Rivera demonstrates the immense potential of university archives to contribute to broader institutional missions by making people, rather than collections, the central focus. The Relational Archivist brings together the traditional constituencies of archivists and researchers with students, donors, and community members to co-create repositories of stories and experiences far beyond the collections themselves-offering a practical framework for the deeper collaboration among archivists, professors, administrators, and communities that university missions increasingly demand.
Historians have long recognized the significance of archives, and the acknowledgments pages of their books testify to the deep relationships developed between researcher and archivist. Yet most people will never visit an archive, in part because they believe it is not their space. The Relational Archivist reimagines the physical archive as more than a repository of documents but as a relational space for connection, presence, and inclusion. As a venue for public history, the archive becomes a place for anyone to encounter and contribute to the preservation of our shared past. By reimagining archives, Rivera opens pathways for universities to fulfill their public missions in ways that traditional collection-building never could-creating partnerships that enrich teaching, deepen institutional memory, and strengthen community relationships.
Rivera's framework is both timely and transformative. At a moment when universities face mounting financial pressures and archives can seem like a luxury, she repositions them as critical components of institutional mission and community engagement, providing concrete strategies for turning archives into sites of active collaboration rather than passive preservation. Grounded in archival practice, The Relational Archivist offers a vision that extends far beyond the archive itself-inviting administrators, professors, students, alumni, and community leaders to reimagine how universities preserve the past, engage the present, and build more inclusive futures.Patrick C. Leech, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Global History, Anderson University, USA
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The Relational Archivist: Centering People in the Archive is a timely, critical call to prioritize human connection within the archival enterprise. Drawing on research, experience, and training in public history, Rivera makes the case that archivists do our best work when we focus on the well-being of our colleagues, the communities with whom we engage, and ourselves. This book is an essential source for anyone who seeks insight into the practice of relationship-building in college and university archives.
Dawn Schmitz, Ph.D., MLIS, Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA

























