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                  <text>Social Justice and Women's Rights Oral History Project</text>
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                  <text>Dr. Heather M. Haley, Department of History, Auburn University, in cooperation with Auburn University Special Collections and Archives</text>
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                  <text>All files in this collection are the property of the Auburn University Libraries and are intended for non-commercial use. Users of these materials are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. For information about obtaining high-resolution copies of this and other images in this collection, please contact Auburn University Libraries Special Collections &amp; Archives Department at archives@auburn.edu or (334) 844-1732.</text>
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                  <text>In keeping with the goal of the Ralph Brown Draughon Special Collections and Archives to focus on the history Alabama and Auburn University, oral historian Dr. Heather M. Haley organized and initiated the Social Justice and Women's Rights (SJWR) Oral History Project in early 2017. This project comprises a collection of interviews, transcripts, and ephemera from Auburn University students, faculty, staff, administrators, and alumni who participated in local, regional, and national protests for women's rights, science- and evidence-based policy, and social justice. This information serves as an essential historical record for researchers interested in the personal experiences of protest from residents of the Deep South. Financial support from the Samia I. Spencer Creative Mentorship Award funded the expansion of this project into an interdisciplinary collaboration between the Public History and Women's Studies Programs at Auburn University. The collection contains fifteen audio interviews, totaling approximately twenty-four hours of content. The SJWR Oral History Project has grown to include a diverse cadre of voices from interviewees of varying ages, socio-economic backgrounds, (dis)abilities, and sexual orientations. In the 2019-2020 academic year, the files were added to the open-source web publishing platform Omeka for easy access by users from across the globe. Auburn University Special Collections is one of only four university-supported digital repositories that maintain collections related to recent protest marches in the South. The SJWR Oral History Project is the only one that collects and maintains oral histories, images, and ephemera not only from women's marches but also from protests that advocated for evidence-based policy and social justice that built on the momentum of the Women's March on Washington.</text>
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              <text>00:00:00 - Introduction&#13;
00:03:03 - Segregated public school education in Atlanta, GA&#13;
00:06:38 - Growing up in an immigrant Jewish family&#13;
00:13:04 - Employment at a crisis center and involvement in women's consciousness-raising&#13;
00:16:22 - Law school at the University of Georgia and engagement with Women Law Students Association&#13;
00:23:13 - Ideological beliefs in women's reproductive choice&#13;
00:26:41 - Anti-war protests and Atlanta International Pop Festival&#13;
00:32:24 - Jackel Family's political and ideological leanings&#13;
00:36:44 - Internship at an abortion clinic in Atlanta, GA and sex education in the 1970s&#13;
00:47:48 - Election Day, November 8, 2016&#13;
00:57:47 - Morning after the election&#13;
00:53:47 - Travel to Baltimore, MD and Donald Trump's inauguration&#13;
01:03:43 - Women's March (in Washington, D.C.)&#13;
01:25:58 - Return to Alabama&#13;
01:29:57 - Maintaining the momentum&#13;
01:37:18 - Roberta's final thoughts</text>
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                <text>Interview with Roberta Jackel</text>
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                <text>Heather M. Haley, Ph.D. candidate, Department of History, Auburn University, in cooperation with the University Archives and Special Collections</text>
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                <text>All files are the property of the Auburn University Libraries and are intended for non-commercial use. Users of these materials are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. For information about obtaining high-resolution copies of this and other items in this collection, please contact Auburn University Libraries Special Collections &amp; Archives Department at archives@auburn.edu or (334) 844-1732.</text>
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                <text>An oral history with Roberta Jackel, an employee of Auburn University, concerning her participation in the Women's March on Washington that occurred on January 21, 2017, in Washington, D.C. Jackel offers compelling commentary about growing up in Atlanta, GA during the Civil Rights Movement and her witness to the rise of Women's Liberation. She details her internship and later seasonal employment at an abortion clinic in downtown Atlanta in the 1970s, which helped to shape her values on women's reproductive rights. Jackel's oral history offers a lens through which to view the tenuousness of the rights bestowed upon Americans in the 1960s and 1970s as she expounds on her recent efforts to remain involved in local and national activism, fearing the restriction or retraction of those rights.&#13;
&#13;
Her testimony includes a comical anecdote about Jane Fonda napping in her (future) husband's bed after an anti-war protest in Atlanta.</text>
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