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Passing along info on an internship, reply to: Amanda Huron, project
director, at [log in to unmask] or 202-246-0112.


 Position Title:    Archival Intern, The WISH Archives Project

Term:   September 15, 2009 – May 15, 2010

Hourly commitment:      8-10 hours/week

Compensation: To be determined

Location: Offices of Empower D.C., 1419 V St. NW, Washington, D.C.





Empower D.C., a grassroots community organization in the District of
Columbia, is seeking a library science graduate student intern to assist in
organizing the archives of Washington Inner-City Self Help, or WISH.  WISH
was a grassroots housing rights group that organized among District
residents from 1978 to 2003.  Over the years, WISH took on many different
challenges, all geared towards helping low-income District residents gain
power over their lives, neighborhoods, and city.  WISH represents an
important chapter in the history of social movements in Washington, D.C.,
stemming from the civil rights movement and intertwined with local movements
for self-determination.  WISH has also played a major role in housing
struggles in the District – struggles that continue to be waged to this day.




WISH’s records are currently stored in 20 boxes in the offices of Empower
D.C.  These boxes are full of fascinating documents, including WISH
newsletters, brochures, flyers, board minutes, meeting programs, letters,
newspaper clippings, housing cooperative documents, photographs, audiotapes,
videotapes, and many other materials.  The job of the archival intern will
be to both devise an appropriate system for cataloguing these materials, and
conduct the cataloguing of the materials.  The intern will work closely with
the project director, and may work with other volunteers, as well.  The
resulting archives will be housed in the Washingtoniana Division of the
Martin Luther King, Jr., Library, and publicly accessible to all.  The
ultimate goal of the project is to give the general public access to the
records and history of WISH, and add to the body of archival materials that
cover the history of housing and community organizing in Washington, D.C.



This position is ideal for a library science graduate student who is
specializing in archival work and interested in community archiving.  Interest
in community organizing, housing rights and/or D.C. history is a plus, but
not necessary.  Compensation may be available, depending on funding.
Interested
students should contact Amanda Huron, project director, at
[log in to unmask] or 202-246-0112.