The Rematriation Project

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Community-Engaged Research

May 2, 2025

Awarded NCSU CHASS Small Seed Grant to Develop Prototype Archiving App

The team has been awarded a small seed grant from NCSU to develop a prototype mobile texting app for community archiving.

April 17, 2025

New article! "Reimagining Archives in the Age of Automation"

Learn more about our Relational Approach to Archiving (RAA) to combat data colonialism in archival practices.

Cana, Corina, and Chris receiving their 2025 CCCC Best Article in the Philosophy or Theory of Technical and Scientific Communication award in Baltimore in April 2025!

April 17, 2025

Blanket Toss and Big Wins!

Reflections on Nalukataq, Cultural Humility, and some Big Wins writing with Community Partners.

March 4, 2025

Lindgren visits Kotzebue!

Lindgren visits Kotzebue during big regional basketball tournament to support Aqqaluk Trust and meet with community members.

Illustration depicting nalukataq (seal-blanket toss): a person (jumper) being tossed into the air by others with specific roles like a caller and puller

January 16, 2025

REMA Wins National Research Award!

REMA won the NCTE Conference on College Composition and Communication's 2025 CCCC Technical and Scientific Communication Award for Best Article on Philosophy or Theory of Technical or Scientific Communication.

Project timeline from CLIR report

August 19, 2024

Yunes Publishes CLIR Postdoc Report

Now partner Dr. Erin Yunes published a full report of her 2-year CLIR postdoc support on the team.

About

The Rematriation Project is a digital archiving project directed by an Iñupiaq-led and serving tribal organization, Aqqaluk Trust, in Kotzebue, Alaska. Our project's aim is to create capacity for and access to digital archives related to Inuit cultural, tribal, scientific knowledges, and history to assist tribes and communities. In partnership with a team of scholars (itself led by an Iñupiaq scholar from Kotzebue) from Virginia Tech, North Carolina State University, and American College of the Mediterranean, we operate on a foundation of community-first, community-led decision making. We seek to empower Indigenous communities with self-determined data and research sovereignty to collect, control, interpret, and benefit from data that originates from their communities.

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