I. A COMMUNITY ARCHIVES MODEL
1 'It is noh mistri, wi mekin histri.' Telling our own story: independent and community archives in the UK, challenging and subverting the mainstream / Andrew Flinn and Mary Stevens
2 Special, local and about us: the development of community archives in Britain / David Mander
II. COMMUNITIES AND NON-TRADITIONAL RECORD KEEPING
3 The Single Noongar Claim: native title, archival records and aboriginal community in Western Australia / Glen Kelly
4 Oral tradition in living cultures: the role of archives in the preservation of memory / Patricia Galloway
5 We are our memories: community and records in Fiji / Setareki Tale and Opeta Alefaio
III. RECORDS LOSS, DESTRUCTION AND RECOVERY
6 Archiving the queer and queering the archives: a case study of the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives (CLGA) / Marcel Barriault
7 A living archive, shared by communities of records / Eric Ketelaar
8 Truth commissions and the construction of collective memory: the Chile experience / Joel A. Blanco-Rivera
IV. ONLINE COMMUNITIES: HOW TECHOLOGY BRINGS COMMUNITIES AND THEIR RECORDS TOGETHER
9 From Yizkor Books to weblogs: genocide, grassroots documentation and new technologies / András Riedlmayer and Stephen Naron
10 Co-creation of the Grateful Dead sound archive: control, access and curation communities / David A. Wallace
V. BUILDING A COMMUNITY ARCHIVE
11 'All the things we cannot articulate': colonial leprosy archives and community commemoration / Ricardo L. Punzalan
12 Overcoming anonymity: Kittitians and their archives / Victoria Borg O'Flaherty
13 Always queer, always here: creating the Black Gay and Lesbian Archive in the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture / Steven G. Fullwood
Conclusion: The archivist and community / Richard J. Cox