IASA journal No 32, January 2009

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  1. Editorial
  2. President’s Letter
  3. The Contributions of Custodians: Welcoming Remarks and IASA 2009 Conference Launch
    Chris Puplick AM, Australian National Film and Sound Archive, Australia
  4. From Satawal to Cyberspace
    Jan Lyall, UNESCO Memory of the World Program
  5. The Mexican Soundscape Project
    Lidia Camacho, Fonoteca Nacional, Mexico
  6. A Working Model for Developing and Sustaining Collaborative Relationships Between Archival Repositories in the Caribbean and the United States
    Bertram Lyons and Rosita M. Sands, Association for Cultural Equity / Alan Lomax Archive, USA
  7. Archiving Challenges in Africa: The Case of Post-Conflict Liberia
    Proscovia Svärd, The Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala, Sweden
  8. Our Future’s Past: Indigenous Archival Discovery as a Catalyst for New Recording Initiatives in Remote Northeast Arnhem Land
    Aaron Corn, The University of Sydney, Australia
  9. Islands Archiving
    Richard Moyle, Archive of Maori and Pacific Music, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  10. Regional Archives and Community Portals
    Paul Trilsbeek and Dieter van Uytvanck, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
  11. The Challenges of Web Access to Archival Oral History in Britain
    Rob Perks, Curator of Oral History, British Library Sound Archive, London & Visiting Professor in Oral History, University of Huddersfield
  12. On the Trail of the Telegraphone
    Christian Liebl, Centre for Linguistics and Audiovisual Documentation, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria
  13. Play the Un-playable: Tinfoil Recording Recovered by the Sound Archive Project
    Nigel Bewley, British Library Sound Archive
  14. Review: Friedrich Engel, Gerhard Kuper, Frank Bell. Zeitschichten: Magnetbandtechnik als Kulturträger. Erfinder-Biographien und Erfindungen
    Reviewed by Albrecht Häfner