Take the UBC Library website survey

Illustration in blue of a computer screenscreen with a checklist and the UBC Librayry logo

We are redesigning the UBC Library website and we need your input! Tell us what works, what does not, and what features you would like to see. 

The survey will take 5-10 minutes to complete and your responses are confidential. At the end of the survey, you will have the option to enter your email address for a chance to win a $50 e-gift card for the UBC Bookstore. 

The survey will be open until Friday, August 22, 2025.

If you have any questions about the survey, please contact the User Experience and Digital Accessibility Librarian, Mark Goodwin (mark.goodwin@ubc.ca).

 

Take the survey

 

Elevator Floor Tile Installation Scheduled for July 22

The UBC Building Operations team will be installing new floor tiles inside the Asian Library’s elevator on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. The installation is expected to be completed within the day, and the elevator will be temporarily unavailable during this time. Access to the upper and lower floors will be available by stairs only. If […]

Digital Archivist University Archives, UBC Library | Vancouver Campus | Full-time, Confirmation-track Librarian

Digital Archivist
University Archives, UBC Library | Vancouver Campus
Full-time, Confirmation-track Librarian
Anticipated Start Date: September 1, 2025

UBC LIBRARY
As one of the world’s leading universities, the University of British Columbia creates an exceptional learning environment that fosters global citizenship, advances a civil and sustainable society, and supports outstanding research to serve the people of British Columbia, Canada and the world.

We honour, celebrate and thank the xʷməθkʷəy̓ əm (Musqueam) and Syilx Okanagan peoples on whose territories the main campuses of the University of British Columbia have the privilege to be situated.

The University of British Columbia Library is one of the largest academic libraries in Canada and consistently ranks among the top university research libraries in North America. UBC Library has 14 branches and divisions across two campuses (Vancouver and Kelowna), including an off-site hospital library; a multi-purpose teaching and learning facility, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre; and the X̱wi7x̱wa Library, a centre for academic and community Indigenous scholarship. Almost 300 knowledgeable employees – librarians, management and professional staff, support staff and student staff – provide users with the excellent resources and services that they need to further their research, teaching and learning.

The UBC Library is committed to being a respectful, healthy environment that encourages leadership, collegiality, diversity, individual growth and opportunity. Explore our aspirational values that we strive to uphold and actively incorporate into all aspects of our organization. We are committed to eliminating institutional and structural systems of oppression and power (such as colonialism, sexism, classism, heterosexism, ableism, and white supremacy).

Learn more about the UBC Library Strategic Framework and about working with us.

University Archives (UA)
The University Archives serves as the central repository for recorded data in all formats created by, for, and about the University of British Columbia. Its mandate, according to Board of Governors Policies GA4 & GA5, is to identify, select, preserve, and make available for use these permanently valuable University records.

POSITION OVERVIEW
Reporting to the Head of Rare Books and Special Collections and University Archives, the Digital Archivist is responsible for implementing the Archives Digital Preservation Policy Framework and showing, leading, and growing a digital archives program for UBC Library. Working with the University Archivist, the Digital Archivist appraises, acquires, arranges, describes, preserves, and makes available records of archival value. Specific emphasis will be placed on digitized and born-digital records received through the records management program as well as University departments, schools, administrative offices and private donors. The Digital Archivist provides reference service to researchers wishing access to archival holdings and to digital records particularly. They also write and recommend policies and procedures for the use, storage, and preservation of digital records. Similarly, the Digital Archivist works with staff in Rare Books and Special Collections to appraise, acquire, arrange, describe, preserve, and make available digital records of archival value within RBSC’s acquisitions mandate. The Digital Archivist also works with staff in Digital Programs and Services in web archiving – that is, the preservation of institutional websites and related web-based content, which forms part of the University’s institutional record. The Digital Archivist also supervises staff and student workers as required; participates in library and campus committees, professional organizations, and the University community; and provides general reference services.

This position reports to the Head of Rare Books and Special Collections and University Archives and works closely with records management staff. The Digital Archivist works closely with professionals and support staff in Rare Books and Special Collections and in Digital Programs and Services. They will liaise with staff elsewhere in the library and around the University regarding digital archives and digital preservation matters.

This position is in-person at a UBC location.

Please visit the UBC careers website to view the full position description and on how to apply.

QUALIFICATIONS

Required

  • Masters-level degree with a specialization or concentration in archival science.
  • Experience working with archival material in all formats especially born-digital and digitized documents in both current and non-current digital formats.
  • Experience collecting, preserving, and providing access to born-digital and digitized records.
  • Experience in core archival functions and knowledge of the Rules for Archival Description (RAD) and with relevant library and archival management systems.
  • Knowledge and experience in digital preservation theory, standards, tools, and best practices including technical requirements for digital preservation.
  • Demonstrated initiative, flexibility, reliability, and willingness to learn new technologies and organizational systems.
  • Evidence of strong professional communication skills, including: written and verbal, in-person and online, active listening, responding to constructive feedback.
  • Demonstrated ability to work in a collaborative team environment and engage with professional and library assistant staff and the public.
  • Willingness to respect diverse perspectives, including perspectives in conflict with one’s own
  • Demonstrates a commitment to enhancing one’s own awareness, knowledge, and skills related to equity, diversity, and inclusion

Preferred

  • Practical experience with digital transfer, preservation, and access tools, including but not limited to, Archivematica, AtoM, BitCurator, MoveIt, and Archive-it.
  • Practical experience with learning and using programming languages (e.g., Python).
  • Practical experience with digital archival transfer of institutional records via retention schedules.
  • Practical experience with email transfer and associated tools (e.g., Emailchemy, ePADD).
  • Experience with web archiving and/or website development standards (e.g., Archive-It, Browsertrix).
  • Experience, course work, or knowledge of working with Indigenous materials, and awareness of relevant issues around culturally appropriate management of archival and library materials.
  • Knowledge of Canadian Copyright legislation and BC’s Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA).
  • Familiarity with International archival standards.
  • Demonstrated experience working in academic archives environment or rare book or special collections library.

TERMS OF APPOINTMENT AND SALARY

Appointment:

This is a full-time confirmation-track appointment with an anticipated start date of September 2025. The successful candidate will hold an initial three-year appointment, normally followed by an ongoing confirmed appointment. In most cases confirmation-track appointments are reviewed following the second year of appointment, and a recommendation is made at that time to grant or not to grant an ongoing confirmed appointment.

The successful candidate will be a member of The University of British Columbia Faculty Association and the terms and conditions of appointment are governed by the Collective Agreement between UBC and the UBC Faculty Association (https://www.hr.ubc.ca/faculty-relations/collective-agreements/).

Eligibility: We are only considering applications from librarians with a maximum of 2 years of professional library experience. However, all internal candidates will be considered regardless of years of experience and are encouraged to apply.

Salary: Starting salary is $81,510 to $84,000 per annum. Actual salary offered will be commensurate with experience and academic/professional qualifications, as well as internal parity. UBC also offers a comprehensive benefits package. Information about salary increases can be found in the Collective Agreement: https://www.hr.ubc.ca/faculty-relations/collective-agreements/
 
Benefits: Librarians and their dependents are eligible for an extensive benefits package including extended health care coverage, dental coverage, Employee and Family Assistance Program, life insurance, pension and travel benefits. To support families, UBC provides a top-up for eligible employees on maternity or parental leave. Tuition assistance is also available for qualifying employees and dependent children. In addition, librarians/archivists are eligible for professional development funding to support career growth at the university, as well as study leave. Details are available in the Collective Agreement, and for more information see UBC Human Resources: https://hr.ubc.ca/benefits/eligibility-enrolment/employee-groups. Additional information about relocation to UBC Vancouver can be found: https://hr.ubc.ca/working-ubc/housing-and-relocation-services

UBC hires on the basis of merit and is committed to employment equity. All qualified persons are encouraged to apply.

Equity and diversity are essential to academic excellence. An open and diverse community fosters the inclusion of voices that have been underrepresented or discouraged. We encourage applications from members of groups that have been marginalized on any grounds enumerated under the B.C. Human Rights Code, including sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, racialization, disability, political belief, religion, marital or family status, age, and/or status as a First Nation, Metis, Inuit, or Indigenous person.

All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however, Canadians and permanent residents will be given priority.

APPLICATION PROCESS

Applications will include: a detailed and current curriculum vitae; and a letter of application that includes a statement of citizenship/immigration status and indicates the candidate’s education, training and work experience in the areas listed above, as well as how did you hear about this opportunity. One consolidated PDF is preferred.

Please visit the UBC careers website to view the full position description and on how to apply. The application deadline will be at 11:59 p.m. August 20, 2025.

Records Management at UBC: Dealing with Transitory Records

An illustration of a laptop, books, folders and papers, together against a blue background.

Excerpted and adapted from “What are transitory records?” on the UBC Records Management Office (RMO) blog, published on May 26, 2025.

According to the UBC Records Management Office (RMO) survey, completed in summer 2024, it’s clear that most respondents understand the importance of records management. But there are many guidelines to follow, finding time to get it done is challenging, and destroying transitory records can be especially tedious.

Transitory records are records that are only temporarily useful—needed for a limited time in order to complete a routine action or prepare a final record. The chat conversation you had on Microsoft Teams about the agenda for an upcoming meeting probably isn’t worth keeping forever. Messages like this are usually considered transitory records.

Transitory records can include emails, chat messages, event invites, notes or drafts. These pieces of information are often used to create longer-term records, like formal meeting minutes, or final version presentations.

Once a transitory record has served its purpose and isn’t needed anymore (for instance, the presentation draft has become a final version), then it can likely be destroyed. How can you take care of these records efficiently?

Here are some quick tips to get you started:

  • Take a look at what systems you use for email and chat, like Outlook and Microsoft Teams. Some of these systems may already have automated or semi-automated retention processes set up for transitory records. At UBC, specific folders in Outlook, including the Deleted Items, Junk, RSS Feeds folders, are automated to be retained for 90-days and then destroyed.
  • Interested in automating other folders in Outlook? Learn how to expand automated retention in Outlook.
  • Check out tools like RMO’s Model File Plans, to help structure your content systems (e.g. Teamshares, MS Teams). These plans are adaptable frameworks, designed for units to adjust to their own needs.

If you’re thinking of a more in-depth process, the Records Management Office can work with your unit on an Assessment Process, where your units’ current practices are assessed, records are surveyed and written recommendations are provided.

Looking for more records management tips and best practices? Find more on the RMO website.


The Records Management Office (RMO) at UBC provides a unified approach to records management, supports overall effective information management, and leads the transition to electronic records management at UBC in an efficient, secure, and sustainable manner. Learn more about available services, training and best practices on the RMO website.

 

Stories in Panels: Graphic Novels at UBC Asian Library

UBC Asian Library invites you to explore our newly launched collection of graphic novels in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. The Asian Library Graphic Novels collection can be found on the upper level of the Asian Library. Comic books are a widely accessible and popular genre in East Asia. While we are not able to fully […]

Snapshots of British Columbia’s Ghost Towns: Part 2—Barkerville’s Chinatown

In Part 1 of our two-part series about British Columbia’s ghost towns, we explored an influential event in the province’s labour history: the 1935 Corbin Miners’ Strike.

This week, we’re taking a look at Barkerville’s Chinatown, one of the first established Chinatown neighbourhoods in Western North America. While often historically omitted from B.C.’s ghost town narratives, Barkerville’s Chinese community was instrumental to the success of the booming industry town.

The beginning of Barkerville

Perhaps the province’s most popular ghost town, Barkerville is a preserved historic heritage site located on the territory of the Dakelh and Secwepemc peoples in B.C.’s Cariboo region.

Barkerville in early days (1865)

It was the largest town erected during the Cariboo Gold Rush, developing rapidly after gold was first discovered in Williams Creek in 1862.

“A gold-mine at Barkerville” (illustration published 1955)

The Chinese community of Barkerville

Though not always historically acknowledged, Chinese residents of Barkerville had a major impact on the town’s growth and prosperity. Having ventured from China and California after hearing of the abundance of gold in the area, Barkerville’s Chinese inhabitants constituted half of the town’s population at its peak of 5,600 residents.

However, Chinese prospectors were subject to discriminatory restrictions that permitted them to pan solely in areas already searched by white prospectors. This, combined with a depletion of the region’s gold, meant that only some of Barkerville’s Chinese residents found wealth in the gold mining industry. Others made up a large component of the town’s workforce, helping to sustain the busy community’s food service, transportation, and agricultural industries.

Street Scene, Barkerville (1867 or 1868)

Chinatown

Barkerville’s Chinese community built a bustling Chinatown neighbourhood which housed restaurants, shops, and social services. They held cultural events and community meetings, and in 1872, even put on two Chinese-language operas.

The most successful Chinese business venture was Kwong Lee & Co., an importer and wholesaler with subsidiaries in other B.C. mining towns. The company was well-respected and heavily patronized, providing merchandise such as rice, tea, cigars, clothing, and prescription drugs to many Barkerville shops and restaurants.

Kwong Lee & Co advertisement from 1868 Victoria Directory (included in B.C. Historical News, 1985)

Chinatown also housed several benevolent society spaces. Tai Ping Fong (“the Peace Room”) was a space for caring for the elderly or sick, similar to a modern nursing home.

The Chee Kung Tong building, a benevolent society hall, hosted celebrations and ceremonies, public affairs meetings, and other social events. It also contained a small hostel and kitchen to support Chinese newcomers.

The Chee Kung Tong building (published in British Columbia History, 2009)

For members of the Chinese diaspora living in the Cariboo region, the Chee Kung Tong building was a deeply important cultural space, as it enabled them to maintain a connection to their homeland. In 2007, it was named a National Historic Site of Canada, in part because it is one of the few remaining examples of Chinese Canadian benevolent society architecture from this era.

After the gold rush…

As the gold rush ended and the town’s population began to decline, some Chinese residents returned to China, while others stayed in Barkerville or moved to other Canadian communities.

Barkerville (early 1900’s)

Today, Barkerville Historic Town & Park is home to the largest collection of Chinese structures. This includes the aforementioned Tai Ping Fong and Chee Kung Tong buildings, as well as Sing Kee Herbalist, Lee Chung Laundry, and more. Visitors can even get a meal at the fully restored Chinatown restaurant Lung Duck Tong.

Despite the deep structural inequality and mistreatment Chinese people experienced in B.C. and Canada during this time, Barkerville’s Chinese residents built a thriving Chinatown neighbourhood. While Chinese workers have often been unjustly excluded from Canadian labour histories, Barkerville’s Chinese community is now deservedly recognized as a fundamental part of the town’s historical and cultural identity.

The enduring intrigue of B.C.’s ghost towns

British Columbia is dotted with dozens of other ghost towns with fascinating pasts. Bradian, Kitsault, and Sandon are just a few others that offer insights into the province’s complicated labour, resource extraction, and industrial development histories.

Former City Hall at Sandon (1971)

Have you ever visited a British Columbia ghost town? Let us know in the comments below!

 

References

Heritage BC. (n.d.). Barkerville’s clan association sites. https://heritagebc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Barkerville-Clan-Assoc-and-Society-Bldgs.pdf

Mussett, B. (n.d.) Barkerville’s Chinatown. British Columbia: An untold history. https://bcanuntoldhistory.knowledge.ca/1860/barkervilles-chinatown

Zhao, L. (2021, December 14). Barkerville: The Chinese gold rush. CBC News. https://ici.radio-canada.ca/rci/en/news/1847179/barkerville-china-gold-rush-history

EBSCOhost interface migration starts August 5th

On August 5, 2025, the Library’s main EBSCOhost profile will migrate to a new user interface.

This interface will become the new point of access for all subscribed EBSCOhost databases. A select number of medical and allied health databases will remain accessible on the old interface until December 22, 2025.

Visit the new LibGuide to learn more about UBC’s migration, and consider registering for an upcoming EBSCO training session!

New Books at the Law Library – 25/07/15

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE8585 .K37 2023 M. Karimjee, Issues in Criminal Trials and Summary Appeal Law (LexisNexis Canada, 2023) LAW LIBRARY level 3: KF305 .A2 2025 American Bar Association, Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Model Rules of Professional Conduct, 2025 Edition (Center for Professional Responsibility, American Bar Association, 2025). LAW LIBRARY level […]

Intrepid Sisters on the Move

Many thanks to guest blogger, Barbara Towell, for contributing the below post! Barbara is E-Records Manager with Digital Programs & Services at UBC Library and an avid cyclist.


Clara and Kitty Wilson. Uno Langmann Family Collection of B.C. Photographs. UL_1591_0087

On Monday, July 17, 1939, twenty-something sisters, Clara and Kitty Wilson, left their comfy family home on the west side of Vancouver and embarked on a two-week self-guided cycling holiday to Vancouver Island. This journey was one of a decade of summer cycling tours they undertook in British Columbia. They documented their trips through a series of photos and letters home that have been brought together in a wonderful photo album, now fully digitized and available on UBC Library’s Open Collections and forming part of the Uno Langmann Family Collection of Photographs. For Kitty and Clara Wilson, the summer of 1939 was one of leisure, adventure, letter-writing, and fun.

86 years after Clara and Kitty’s trip, my partner and I plan to recreate that ride, tracing the sisters’ tire marks, staying in the places they stayed, seeing the sights they saw. Our tour, like many of Kitty and Clara’s, begins at the Plaza Hotel in Nanaimo (now called Fairmont Hotels and Resorts), and carries on north to Campbell River. Some of the hotels and camps where Clara and Kitty stayed still exist, but most are gone. All the natural monuments remain however, and we plan to visit the waterfalls, rivers, and maybe the potholes mentioned in the letters. As for the buildings, I hope to find at least the addresses of where these places once were. In short, we plan to do just what Kitty and Clara did all those summers ago: enjoy a journey powered by legs and bicycles.

The Route

Kitty and Clara began their ride on July 17 and arrived in Campbell River on July 23, 1939. Their trip took place along what is now known at Highway 19A Ocean Side Route, which was at the time, primarily a gravel road. The highway was only fully paved in 1953, as part of WAC Bennet’s highway improvement plan. The sisters averaged just over 40K per day; theirs was a leisurely pace. Kitty herself said it best in a letter home: “We walked up every hill that was more than a foot high and still made good time.” I like the attitude conveyed in the letters; some days they just didn’t feel like riding, especially once they got to Campbell River where they were spoiled by the proprietor of their lodgings, Mr. Danby. They were on holiday after all.

The Gear

We don’t plan on sourcing and riding the same kind of bikes Kitty and Clara used (this isn’t that kind of recreation), but judging by the photographs, the sisters appear to be riding 1930s Dutch-style bikes that weigh-in at more than 20 kilograms each. They named these bikes Rastus (Clara), and Ginger (Kitty).

We Leave Nanaimo. Uno Langmann Family Collection of B.C. Photographs. UL_1591_0047

Kitty and Clara did not itemize their gear, but I can see from the photos that they traveled light: one small suitcase each strapped on to their bike’s luggage rack. Given the heft of Rastus and Ginger, packing light was necessary. I believe they brought their bikes on the ferry that docked at what is now Canada Place in Vancouver then took the CPR Princess Elaine to Nanaimo. It would be another twenty years before BC Ferries established the same routes to Nanaimo.

The Lodging: Auto Camps

There are still evidence of tiny cabins dotting the seaside on Vancouver Island. They were an invention that developed together with the expansion of the road network. I never knew what an auto camp was before I started reading the letters, but in 1939 they were everywhere. The sisters wrote to the proprietors of the auto camps along their route in advance ensuring they had a place to stay.

The Letters

Kitty and Clara wrote and received letters from their family daily, care of various post offices along their route. To the 21st century reader, the sisters’ address and the manner in which they write paints a veneer of white British middle-class privilege and youthful ease. Their letters are full of comic misspellings, nicknames, and devil-may-care kinder-pomp. In contrast to the casual and nonchalant attitude taken up in the letters, the sisters planned this trip carefully. Two young women cycle-touring the dirt roads of Vancouver Island was not a common sight in 1939, and the people they told had opinions about their adventure. The sisters maintained an attitude about their trip that strikes me as particularly modern; they didn’t seem to be especially influenced by people’s opinions of how to spend their leisure time.

These two were not ordinary.

I hope you will join me in part two of this blog as we recreate the ride Kitty and Clara embarked upon 86 years ago, compare the sights, and perhaps get to know these intrepid sisters just a little.

Award-Winning Books and Films on Display at Asian Library

Up Until Early October