BC History Digitization Program Early Notice Announcement
The BC Electronic Library Network (BC ELN) and the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre (IKBLC) at the University of British Columbia Library will offer vital support to prospective BC History Digitization Program (BCHDP) grant applicants seeking to bring their unique collections online.
The British Columbia History Digitization Program (BCHDP) is is seeking early notice from small organisations intending to apply for a 2023/2024 BCHDP grant who are also interested in additional support with their applications.
If your organisation is considering applying for a 2023/2024 BCHDP grant this October and would like to obtain additional support, please fill out this survey by August 5, 2022.
Early notice will be accepted until August 5, but the earlier notice you provide the more support we can provide. Early notice is not mandatory, but is expected to improve chances of a successful grant application.
Information provided in the survey will only be used for follow-up, it will not form part of your application. Organisations eligible for and indicating interest in additional support during the grant application process will be contacted.
Support for eligible organisations can include assistance with: completing the grant application; project management; copyright advisory; connections to digitisation service providers; securing digitisation staff; preparing metadata; and hosting digitised materials in the Arca provincial digital repository.
New initiative for Indigenous applicants
In the context of de-colonization and reconciliation, the BC History Digitization Program will consider applications from Indigenous organizations for projects that will not result in public access to the digitized material. IKBLC recognizes that open access is not always ethical or appropriate for Indigenous content. Indigenous applications will be evaluated according to the same criteria in all other aspects of the project applications but will not be required to provide public access to the digitized content.
Background
The British Columbia History Digitization Program (BCHDP), launched by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre in 2006, provides matching funds to support digitization projects that make unique British Columbia content freely available.
In October 2022, the BCHDP will be accepting applications for the 2023/2024 funding year. Applicants can receive up to $15,000 of matching funds for their projects. In 2022, the program awarded more than $150,000 for 21 projects. Since its inception in 2006, the BCHDP has awarded more than $2 million of matching funds for more than 280 projects. For more information about the BCHDP program and to view past projects, please visit the BC History Digitization Program website.
Additional support for small organisations applying for BCHDP grants is provided through a partnership between the BC Electronic Library Network (BC ELN) and the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre (IKBLC) at the University of British Columbia Library. For more information about the BC ELN-BCHDP Support Service, please visit: https://bceln.ca/services/shared-services/bc-eln-bchdp-support-service
Celebrate Indigenous People’s Day
As part of Indigenous History Month, a new exhibit has launched in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. View featured materials from Xwi7xwa’s Indigenous language collection, and learn how the branch supports language revitalization on campus and in the community.
Join Xwi7xwa Library on Tuesday, June 21st from 10-3 to celebrate Indigenous People’s Day and learn more about the Indigenous territories you live on, have been to, or would like to visit! The library will be displaying our Indigenous floor map on the second floor of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. Student librarians will be present to answer questions and help you find further information in your learning journey.
Learn more about how Xwi7xwa Library supports language revitalization on campus and in the community here.
C.E. Gatchalian

C.E. Gatchalian
Biography
Born and raised on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tseil-Waututh peoples (colonially known as “Vancouver”), currently dividing his time between Vancouver and Tkaronto (“Toronto”), C.E. Gatchalian (he/him/his) is a queer Filipinx diasporic author, editor, playwright, dramaturge, teacher and consultant of Tagalog, Ilocano, and Spanish ancestry. A graduate of UBC’s Creative Writing program, he is the author of six books and co-editor of two anthologies. He was the 2013 recipient of the Dayne Ogilvie Prize, two Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards, and a three-time Lambda Literary Award finalist. His plays, which include Crossing, Motifs & Repetitions, People Like Vince, Broken, and Falling in Time, have been produced nationally and internationally, as well as on radio and television. Formerly Artistic Producer of the frank theatre company, Vancouver’s professional queer theatre company, he is the founder of QueerAsian, an ongoing series of writing workshops for 2SLGBTQIA+ Asians hosted by Historic Joy Kogawa House, and is the Outreach and Social Media Manager for CultureBrew.Art, a national searchable database of Indigenous and racialized practitioners in the performing, literary and media arts. His memoir, Double Melancholy: Art, Beauty and the Making of a Brown Queer Man, was published in 2019 by Arsenal Pulp Press, and he is currently co-editing Magdaragat: An Anthology of Filipino-Canadian Writing, to be published by Cormorant Books in Spring 2023. His current work focuses on intergenerational and inherited trauma, and the intersections between race, class, sexuality, and gender; society and the self; history, the present and the future. IG: @ce_gatchalian. Website: cegatchalian.com
Bri Watson

Bri Watson
Biography
Bri Watson (@brimwats) is a disabled, white, queer & nonbinary settler living in Musqueam, Tsleil-Waututh, and Squamish. They are currently a Vanier Scholar at University of British Columbia’s iSchool focusing on histories of information and the practice of equitable cataloging in libraries, archives, museums, and special collections. Watson is the Archivist-Historian of the American Psychological Association’s Consensual Nonmonogamy Committee (div44cnm.org) and the Haslam Collection on Polyamory at the Kinsey Institute. They serve on the editorial board of Homosaurus (homosaurus.org), an international linked data vocabulary for queer terminology, and are the Director of HistSex.org, a free and open access resource for the history of sexuality. For 2022-23, they are one of UBC Library’s Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Scholars-in-Residence.
Nneka Allen

Nneka Allen
“Us and Them: What it Really Means to Belong” with Nneka Allen took place at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre’s Peña Room. Nneka’s article from this talk is accessible here.
TEST – EDI Practice Event
Scholar’s Name
Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.Blurb about the event.
Some fancy thing the scholar said.