Value of Digital Archiving for Civil Society Organizations

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The trouble with civil society-collected archival material on mass human rights violations is it was never intended to be an archive.

CSOs collect documents, photographs, audio-visual recordings, press clippings, artifacts, and other materials not in order to archive and preserve them but rather to achieve concrete impact on a specific legal, political, or social process and event. An organization might be collecting signatures of citizens opposing a war to petition the government to stop the conflict, or a CSO might be gathering testimonies of war crimes survivors and witnesses to provide as evidence in a legal case against certain perpetrators, or for providing reparations to victims. In any case, the focus of CSO activists working in a time of conflict or a violent regime rule will, very reasonably, not be on identifying and listing each item and carefully describing, arranging, and structuring the gathered material. Rather, they will be dealing with overwhelming events at hand, trying their best to just keep working and collecting as much material as possible.

CSOs collect data on a wide scope of human rights violations, including killings, disappearances, imprisonment, torture, gender-based crimes, and many others. These records are often complemented by documents relating to relevant publications; studies; documentation on political and public events; public perception of various issues; and data on social and economic impacts of authoritarian regimes and armed conflicts. Further, these materials can also include records of activities of different political, social, or armed groups, as well as CSOs.

Other types of data include documents relating to peace-building and transitional-justice processes, such as judicial proceedings, truth-telling sessions, commemorative practices, and reparation programs. These records can also include statements from survivors, witnesses or victims’ families, various judicial documents, analyses, media reports, photographs and audio-visual material, as well as items and artifacts such as campaign materials, diaries, drawings, letters, and the like.

As a result of the context and manner in which they have been gathered by CSOs, such collections can often be found as groups of nonstructured material—perhaps as stacks of folders with paper documents or groups of unmarked audio-visual files. The actual size of the collection might be unclear, along with the categories and types of material it contains. Sometimes, such material can be in danger of physical degradation or other types of harm.


Yet, as the amount of collected material continues to grow, along with the need to search and access it, it becomes increasingly clear that the collection has, in addition to its operational purpose, gained historical, legal, and social value. This is often the case once a conflict or a violent regime rule has ended and that society enters transitional justice processes. The CSOs’ archival collections can be used for achieving accountability, supporting reparation programs, developing memorialization initiatives, and devising educational resources.

For CSOs that have gathered or obtained such invaluable collections of materials that are—in archival terms—undefined, unorganized, and therefore unusable, transforming these collections into proper, usable, and sustainable archival collections becomes a necessity. When these archives contain physical material that needs to be digitized, born-digital, or both, achieving this goal will require an organization to embark on the process of digital archiving.

Creating a digital archive can ensure long-term preservation of the collected material, especially if it might be at risk. By digitizing physical collections, we are creating copies that can be sustainably preserved independently of the original item and its condition. Moreover, for both digitized physical items and born-digital files, creation of a digital archive allows us to ensure that there are sufficient backup copies of the archival material—and that they are safely stored and easily located to ensure their security and resilience. In this way, digital archiving allows us to retrieve the archive’s content even in cases when the material in the main collection has been lost, corrupted, or destroyed.


Beyond mere preservation, creation of a digital archive allows for substantial enhancement in terms of managing and operating the content, as well as identifying, searching, locating, and accessing its individual items. When it comes to content management, digital archiving is a true “game changer” in terms of the number and scope of improvements it allows for. Starting from the obvious, rather than going through shelves or boxes, the archivist can click through a database and move an item from one collection to another, or change its name or description. Content can be listed, reviewed, retrieved, copied, or checked for errors—or virtually any other archival action can be performed more easily and efficiently. An important additional benefit of digital archives is they allow for each action taken on any archival item to be recorded. Hence, in addition to an item itself, the full record of actions taken on it is also preserved in the archive. This is important in determining the chain of custody over an item and is therefore of particular relevance for ensuring credibility of archival content.

An equally significant advantage of digital archiving—in particular for CSOs working with archival material on human rights violations—is the immense improvements it brings to the potential for external access, outreach, and use in education, as well its leverage in various processes of transitional justice. Digital archives containing nonsensitive public material can be made easily accessible online to anyone, anywhere in the world—not just mere access to the material, but also the quality of that access is substantially advanced, as digital archives enable meaningful search of content using various criteria; review and analysis of selected groups of items; simultaneous access and use of material by multiple users; and copying of individual files by external users.

Such democratized and enhanced quality and experience of access and use of digital archival material enables its more extensive and varied use—by not only external users but also the CSOs that create and own those archives. This is because digitally archived material can efficiently, and in a variety of formats, be made available, presented to the public, or used for content production, education, and many other purposes. The CSOs can—and do—raise awareness of their archives, and thereby extend their visibility, reach, leverage, and impact.

The digital archives created during a time of conflict or violent regime rule can be used for efforts to achieve peace, support victims and potential targets of violence, and enhance democratic processes. More often, the digital archives are developed and leveraged in post-conflict and post-authoritarian periods as important tools for transitional justice processes, as they are used to inform and teach about the violent past, fight impunity, and support truth-telling, memorialization, and reparation programs. This often includes development of educational programs and resources, establishment of museums and documentation centers, as well as support for projects aimed at improving the rights of victims or advancing the processes of reconciliation. Digital archives are also being used for academic research, media reporting, and artistic projects dealing with the violent past.

These various uses of digital archives can and are being implemented by not only CSOs themselves but also by other, external users: victims’ groups, the media, legal professionals, academics, artists, etc. Digital archives streamline access and allow for a wider visibility into their content, thus creating a multiplier effect that significantly extends their reach, raises the extent of their use and the number and scope of users, and ultimately strengthens the archives’ overall impact.