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ASA2022 Here We Are - 2a: Violet Hamence-Davies

Tuesday 18 October 2022 Feminist Recordkeeping Technologies: Design Justice for Victim-Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence / Violet Hamence-Davies We know that records can play a role in enacting social justice, and that evidence, memory, and agency are critical - and human - aspects of recordkeeping. With this in mind, what other social justice contexts do we see these issues play out in? This presentation will introduce the idea of bringing a recordkeeping lens to the context of intimate-partner violence (IPV). I draw on my own lived experience as a survivor of IPV, and knowledge of recordkeeping continuum theory, to uncover the potential role, influence, and impact of recordkeeping technologies in supporting the needs of victim-survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV). Ultimately, we need to privilege the voices of victim-survivors and work with community when designing technologies from an intersectional feminist perspective. Violet Hamence-Davies is a PhD Candidate at Monash University, and Archivist at Good Shepherd Australia New Zealand. She completed her Honours Degree in Medieval Literature at the University of Melbourne in 2016, followed by a Masters of Business Information Systems (Archives and Recordkeeping) at Monash University in 2020. She received the Margaret Jennings Award in 2020 for academic achievement in this course. She is the current Convenor of the Australian Society of Archivists Victorian Branch, and has been a member of this committee since 2019.  With a background in government recordkeeping, Violet has since moved into the non-for-profit sector, with a focus on recordkeeping for former residents of institutional care. She is passionate about bringing the voices of former residents into the archive through participatory recordkeeping practices. Violet began her PhD at Monash University in 2021. Her research draws from her own lived experience as a survivor of intimate-partner violence (IPV), and her knowledge of recordkeeping continuum theory. Violet is a fierce advocate for privileging the voices of victim-survivors in IPV research, and her PhD project explores the potential role, influence and impact of recordkeeping technologies in supporting the evidence, memory, and agency needs of victim-survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV).  Moderator: Dr Jessie Lymn

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