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University of Winnipeg

Archive-It Partner Since: Jul, 2013

Organization Type: Colleges & Universities

Organization URL: http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/   

Description:

The University of Winnipeg Archives is the steward of the records of the University of Winnipeg and its founding colleges: Manitoba College, Wesley College, and United College. The records support the University's governance, administration, and strategic directions, and preserve its institutional memory and documentary heritage.

The Archives stewards records from individuals or organizations connected with the University, including its faculty, staff, administration, or alumni.

The Archives stewards records from individuals or organizations relevant to the University's strategic directions, research and teaching, or service mandate.

The Archives also provides stewardship for rare publications and special collections that support the teaching, research, and service mandates of the University and its stakeholder communities.

For our web-archiving and take-down policy, please see our About page: https://archives.uwinnipeg.ca/our-collections/about-our-collections.html

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Racism in Winnipeg

Archived since: Mar, 2015

Description:

The Racism in Winnipeg web collection was created in response to an article published by the news magazine, Maclean's, which made claim that Winnipeg was Canada's most racist city. The collection consists of archived web sites that range from the original online publication of the Maclean's article on January 22, 2015, to official responses made by the City of Winnipeg's municipal government including 1winnipeg.ca, to public responses made online by Winnipeg residents, and other responses made from other news media outlets. The collection is curated using the University of Winnipeg’s subscription to the Internet Archive service Archive-It. Captures of archived websites are created using the Internet Archive’s Heritrix and Wayback Machine tools. All captures of the archived web sites are hosted on Internet Archive servers.

Subject:   Society & Culture ,  Government - Cities Blogs & Social Media News Social media Society & Culture Narratives Racism--Winnipeg,  Racism--Canada

Truth and Reconciliation

Archived since: Jul, 2016

Description:

In collaboration with the University of Manitoba Libraries, the National Centre of Truth and Reconciliation, and the Library and Archives of Canada, the University of Winnipeg Library has curated and captured a selection of webpages, blogs, news coverage, and PDF files that pertain to Manitoba's ongoing involvement with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. This growing collection covers a diverse range of topics, which include survivors’ stories, apologies, responses, cultural events, and more. This is an ongoing web-archiving project that will continue to grow as we witness new ways that reconciliation and healing take place in our province. We gratefully acknowledge the financial assistance of Manitoba Tourism, Culture, Heritage, Sport and Consumer Protection, and the Government of Canada in the creation of this collection.

Subject:   Society & Culture ,  Government - Cities Arts & Humanities Truth and Reconciliation Canada Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Indigenous peoples—Manitoba,  Racism--Canada ,  Residential Schools Universities Research and Teaching

Wet’suwet’en Resources in Manitoba

Archived since: Feb, 2020

Description:

The Wet’suwet’en Resources in Manitoba collection was created in an effort to preserve the news, blogs, social media, and controversy as it relates to Manitoba surrounding the Coastal GasLink pipeline proposing to go through the Wet’suwet’en Nation's territory. The Coastal GasLink pipeline is part of a $40 billion project that would move natural gas extracted from northeastern B.C. to the proposed LNG Canada facility in Kitimat, B.C., where the gas would be liquefied and shipped overseas. A large portion of the proposed 670-kilometre pipeline is slated to go through the Wet'suwet'en Nation's traditional territory — a route rejected by most of the nation's hereditary chiefs. The pipeline's owner, TC Energy, says it has signed agreements with all First Nations along the proposed route, but the hereditary leaders say those agreements don't apply to their territory because they have never historically ceded their territory. The Wet’suwet’en Nation lies about 300 kilometres west of Prince George, B.C. Wet'suwet'en members and supporters established checkpoints and camps to prevent Coastal GasLink workers from accessing the Nation's territory. TransCanada got an interim injunction from B.C. Supreme Court in December 2018 for access, which was enforced by RCMP in January 2019, when 14 people were arrested at the Gidimt'en camp. Protests were organized nationally and internationally in support of the Wet’suwet’en Nation.

Subject:   Society & Culture ,  Blogs & Social Media Government Society & Culture Indigenous Peoples--Canada,  Racism--Canada ,  News Social Media Government--Canada

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