This collection includes Mau’s Swahili poetry and sermons that reflect on education, social justice, morality and piety. The collection also includes his memoirs which reflects his thirst for knowledge and his social commitment.
The Albanian National Film Archive (AQSHF) has digitized a curated selection of materials from the photographic and graphic art collections that includes costume and set design sketches, animation slides and production stills, allowing viewers to trace the journey of Albanian visual artists.
The Afghanistan Center at Kabul University (ACKU) has digitized 5000 images from the Dupree collection, including images from the 1950's until the early 2000’s. The digital collection reflects cultural heritage, architecture, landscape, and art. The images offers insight into Afghanistan’s developments in politics, culture, history, and geography over a span of fifty years.
This digital collection focuses on four personal collections: Raúl Ampuero, Marcelo Croxatto, Sergio Insunza and Patricia Verdugo. These collections include minutes of meetings, correspondence, brochures, legal documents, press, publications, flyers, posters and audiovisuals.
The Universidade Federal do Oeste do Para (UFOPA) in Brazil has digitized the archive of the Court of Justice located in the city of Óbidos, Brazil in the Lower Amazon region. The first part of the collection documents criminal trials regarding theft, threat, aggression, murder, sexual harassment, prisoner runaway, and more. The other part of the collection, the civil trials, covers a wide variety of subjects, such as inheritance inventories, guardianship of orphans, emancipation of minors, acknowledgment of paternity, bankruptcies of commercial establishments, disputes for land, labor court trials (rubber industry, big infrastructure projects), acquisitions of land by prescription as consequence of authoritarian projects for Amazonia, and more. A particular point of cultural interest in this collection is the series of documentation on trials regarding land disputes. This part of the collection reflects the support of local people for creating protected areas including indigenous lands, territories of descendants of African slaves, and ecological conservation units for people of historical traditions. This content can help reconstitute chains of ownership of lands to better identify instances of land grabbing. These court records also document the daily lives of Amazonian civilians in a time of restricted individual rights as well as the modernization of Amazonia by authoritarian projects.