Daniel Jones
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Archiving the extreme
Ethical challenges in sharing, researching, and teaching
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Does extreme material present a challenge to archive ethics and practice? Based on the decade of work of the Searchlight Archive at the University of Northampton, this chapter explores the question of how those working around archives of extremism can ethically engage with the material and make use of it to further education in this key area. As well as considerations of practical measures in managing and welcoming users into the archive space, this chapter considers the obligations of the archivist to care for the wellbeing and safety of their staff and researchers. It also argues that the archive should not be a passive repository, but instead that archives covering extremism can help engage students and the wider public with important parts of social and political history. These archives have an important role to play in the decolonisation of teaching by offering sources from extreme groups and community groups that oppose them. Ultimately, it asks whether the risks of this material can be balanced and mitigated to unlock the potential that exists within archives of extremism, and how researchers and practitioners can approach such content to achieve this.

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