Webinars
Watch live or catch up on demand. Join the AM team and guest presenters explore issues and discuss topics related to universities, libraries and archives.
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TitleDescriptionDate
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Rediscover AM: what’s new and why it mattersDiscover how AM’s 2026 frontlist can strengthen your collection strategy and enhance research, teaching, and digital engagement across your institution. This session explores new primary source content, its thematic impact, and the long-term value it brings to libraries.
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Unlocking the multidisciplinary value of primary sourcesDiscover how primary sources can bridge disciplines, deepen learning, and inspire new ways of thinking throughout your library.
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Teaching critical thinking and AI literacy through the libraryIn this Library Journal-partnered webinar, experts from the University of Warwick, Diablo Valley College, and AM explore innovative approaches to AI and student research, with a focus on the value of primary sources.
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Enhancing research and discoverability of primary source material from the British LibraryIn this Choice-partnered webinar, experts from the British Library and AM share how their partnership enhances discovery and access to historical documents for impactful interdisciplinary research.
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Redefining research: Uncovering climate impact insights with digitised primary sourcesIn this Choice-partnered webinar, Philip Gooding (McGill University) and Brian Atwater (University of Washington) joined AM's Dr. Laura Blomvall to share how digitised archival material have advanced our understanding of the Earth's climate.
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From the archive to the classroom: engaging users of all abilities with TNA materialEducators and editors discuss the integration of materials and primary sources from The National Archives, UK, into education, highlighting efforts to advance accessibility, celebrate diversity, and refine pedagogy.
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Torture, State Violence and Political Prisoners: Exploring the Global Human Rights Movement through the Amnesty International ArchivesFind out how our Amnesty International Archives: A Global Movement for Human Rights collection can be used in teaching and research
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Uncovering archival materials in AM’s Africa and the New Imperialism: European Borders on the African Continent, 1870-1914This webinar, with AM partners CHOICE, delves into how researchers can use archival materials to better understand the impact and response to European colonialism in Africa using the newly-published database Africa and the New Imperialism: European Borders on the African Continent, 1870-1914