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Archived since: Apr, 2018
Description:
This project seeks to document the intersection of the March for Our Lives and voter registration and engagement. While we document the event itself and responses to it, we focus on the ways in which March for Our Lives organizers, speakers, and participants used the event to advocate for change through the democratic process, specifically voter registration and rallying young people to use their votes to influence lawmakers and gun policy. This work was conducted by three MLIS students (Emily Flint, Adam Gray, Andrew Staton) for a graduate class, LBSC785: Documentation, Collection, and Appraisal of Records, taught by Professor Ricardo Punzalan and Amy Wicker, at the University of Maryland, College Park, in Spring 2018.
Subject: Politics & Elections, Society & Culture, Blogs & Social Media
Creator: Emily Flint, Adam Gray, Andrew Staton
Important Information About This Collection: No data has been archived in this collection due to the data storage limitations of the parent collection. However, collection and seed-level metadata has been preserved to represent the content of the materials, as well the process of selecting and assembling the materials which we were unable to archive. Two test crawl reports have also been preserved.
Language: English
Appraisal and Selection Note: To research the collection theme, we reviewed news coverage of the March for Our Lives demonstrations and web content created by event organizers, such as op-eds, speeches, web pages, and social media posts. We aimed to capture the actions of students like Emma Gonzalez and David Hogg, who were profiled in publications like Time and acted as leaders for the March for Our Lives movement. We also identified organizations like HeadCount and Rock the Vote as key players that provided support for associated voter registration activities. We included relevant web-based material that documented both preparation for the march (such as voter registration training) and the actual event itself. We also identified content that examined the March for Our Lives’s impact in terms of voter registration statistics and future policy directions. Because the march was organized by students, we made an effort to include material from sources that target a younger audience, such as BuzzFeed and Teen Vogue in addition to major stories from mainstream news sites. We captured the social media accounts of some of the key players listed above and also identified #VoteforOurLives as a relevant hashtag that highlighted connections between March for Our Lives and civic engagement.
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