The University Libraries at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is 
excited to announce a call for proposals to expand the project On the Books: 
Jim Crow and Algorithms of Resistance (OTB).  OTB has created two publicly 
accessible, plain-text corpora: one of all North Carolina Session Laws from 
1866-1967, and a second one composed of laws likely to be Jim Crow laws, based 
on machine learning. Other outputs include a GitHub repository of documented 
scripts created for the project, a methodology white paper, and a website 
[https://onthebooks.lib.unc.edu/] for educators and researchers interested in 
Southern and African American history.  Our next step is to expand the project 
beyond North Carolina and we are looking for partner teams from other states!

OTB has received funding from The Andrew W. Mellon foundation to expand the 
project to two additional states and facilitate the use of OTB products in 
research and teaching. Funds will be regranted to teams from two partner 
states, who will have sixteen months to create corpora for their own states and 
use the OTB training set to identify language likely to be Jim Crow laws.  The 
OTB technical team will meet monthly with partners to adapt the workflow we 
have created to work with legal volumes from other states and will be available 
to troubleshoot and solve problems. We are accepting proposals from 
institutions across the country through April 15, 2022. The OTB team is eager 
to collaborate, learn from partners, and determine the best workflow.

For more information, see the Call for Proposals 
[https://onthebooks.lib.unc.edu/get-involved/partner-states/]. We welcome 
questions or opportunities to discuss ideas from interested partners- please 
feel free to contact Project Manager Brianna Nuñez (bynu...@email.unc.edu) with 
any questions or ideas or use the Contact Us form on our website 
[https://onthebooks.lib.unc.edu/contact-us/]. Please share this opportunity 
widely.

Thank you,

Amanda Henley
Head of Digital Research Services
University Libraries
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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