The following partners have contributed post-custodial collections to LADI. Follow the links below to learn more about each partner’s work and affiliated collections.
The Archivo General e Histórico del Poder Ejecutivo de Michoacán (AGHPEM) is a state-run archive, holding approximately 1900 linear meters of documentation, including map, photo, and periodical collections, a library, and the historical archive of the state Interior Ministry.
The Archivo Judicial del Estado de Puebla is located within the facilities of the Superior Court of Justice of the State of Puebla, which resolves civil, family, commercial, and juvenile judicial disputes. The archive has a historical collection (from the 16th century until 1900), divided into one of ‘concentration’ (until 2000), and another of ‘procedure’ (current).
BICU-CIDCA's mission is to promote and conduct social, cultural, and historical research; to produce knowledge, and to disseminate academic outputs that contribute to enhancing the skills of various populations, as well as facilitating their involvement in the development of sustainable development in the autonomous regions and the country as a whole.
The Centro de Investigaciones Regionales de Mesoamérica (CIRMA) is a nonprofit Guatemalan foundation of an educational, scientific, academic, and cultural mission. Since its foundation in 1978, its efforts have focused on the recovery, organization, conservation, preservation, and dissemination of the visual and documentary heritage of the Mesoamerican region, with an emphasis on Guatemala.
The Equipe de Articulação e Assessoria às Comunidades Negras do Vale do Ribeira (EAACONE) was founded on June 17, 1995, in Quilombo Praia Grande, municipality of Iporanga, Vale do Ribeira, São Paulo. Its mission was to identify, articulate, organize, and assist the quilombola communities of the Ribeira valley, prioritizing their cultural preservation and attainment of territorial rights.
The Museo de la Palabra y la Imagen (MUPI) is a civilian initiative founded in 1996 and dedicated to the research, recovery, preservation, and dissemination of the historical and cultural heritage of El Salvador. Its educational program promotes activities related to historical memory, human rights, and the culture of peace.
The Proceso de Comunidades Negras (PCN) is a collective of organizations of Black Communities that consolidated in the early 90s. PCN unites more than 120 grassroots organizations, community councils and people who continue to work on the transformation of the political, social, economic, and territorial reality of Black, Afro-descendant, Raizal, and Palenque communities.