This paper discusses activist archives within the context of community archives and the practices of archiving activism. Interference Archive (IA), a volunteer-run independent archive in Brooklyn, New York, is presented as one example of an activist archive. We explain the manner in which IA functions as a transmovement and prefigurative ''free space'' under Francis Poletta's typology of movement spaces. Through this explanation, we illustrate how the structures of free spaces can help us understand the way activist archives forge connections between communities and the ways that they create new networks of solidarity through the archival process.
In this Editors' Note, guest editors Andrew J Lau, Alycia Sellie, and Ronald E. Day introduce the inaugural issue for the Journal of Critical Library and Information Studies (JCLIS).
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