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Publish ENABLAR call for participants#3667

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81 changes: 81 additions & 0 deletions_posts/2025-10-30-enablar-call-for-participants.md
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---
title: Call for Participation - ENABLAR
authors:
- Anisa Hawes
- James Baker
layout: post
categories: posts
---

<p><figure><img src="/images/blog/ENABLAR/ENABLAR-banner.jpg" alt="Banner showing Jisc and Programming Historian logos alongside the project wordmark for the ENABLAR project, which reads ENABLAR, ENABling Library and Archive participation in digital Research co-learning communities"/><figcaption></figcaption> </figure></p>

{% include toc.html %}


_Programming Historian_ and Jisc are delighted to announce a new shared investment: **ENABLAR** - **ENAB**ling **L**ibrary and **A**rchive participation in digital **R**esearch co-learning communities.

## What is ENABLAR?

**ENABLAR** is a new Jisc-funded project from _Programming Historian_ that will **encourage participation** and **facilitate co-production** to **empower co-learning communities**. It will bring **library and archive practitioners** into dialogue with **digital humanities researchers**, creating opportunities for **knowledge exchange**, **skills development**, and **network building**.

- Want to develop your technical writing skills?
- Keen to learn from cross-disciplinary peers?
- Interested in co-authoring a _Programming Historian_ lesson?

If so, we’d love to hear from you. We’re inviting participation from those interested in forming a **cross-disciplinary cohort** who, over the next 10 months, will have the opportunity to **build partnerships**, **exchange insights**, and **develop the skills** needed to **co-produce** practical, accessible, sustainable lessons that support computational processing, discovery, or analysis of digital library and archive collections.


## How will it work?

The **ENABLAR** project will evolve through three phases: Phase 1: **Gather**, Phase 2: **Collaborate**, Phase 3: **Publish**.

**Phase 1: Gather**
- Happening right **now**. Through this call, we will gather ~10 participants as our cohort, balancing representation across library and archives professionals and digital humanities researchers.

**Phase 2: Collaborate**
- Collaboration is central to the project, and during **December 2025** we’ll facilitate two webinars to teach effective, sustainable technical writing, and create partnerships for cross-disciplinary co-authorship.
- As you begin writing, we’ll support your progress through an online programme of lesson development workshops and writing sprints (**January-March 2026**).

**Phase 3: Publish**
- Through **April and May 2026**, we’ll host community review workshops to share and test **ENABLAR** lessons-in-progress. These will provide opportunities for the cohort to benefit from broader feedback, as well as each other’s - we’ll invite new voices to join us from the library and archives sector and the digital humanities research community, also seeking expressions of interest for participation in a formal open peer review process.
- **ENABLAR** participants will be invited to submit their drafts to _Programming Historian in English_ for consideration in **June 2026**.
- From **July 2026** **ENABLAR** lessons selected for development by our editorial team will be guided through open peer review towards first publication in [our English-language journal](/en/lessons/). If not selected for development, we’ll support the publication of your lesson as [grey literature](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_literature). All lessons will be published under an [CC BY 4.0](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en) license.


## Who can participate?

We’re seeking a mixed cohort of participants from across the library and archive sector, and digital humanities research community.
- Maybe you’re a **librarian** who has always signposted communities towards _Programming Historian_’s lessons, but never found time to develop your own computational research skills?
- Or an **archivist** responsible for a growing digital collection, seeking to support researchers to use computational methods to analyse or interact with archival data?
- Perhaps you’re a **Research Software Engineer** working with cultural collections, keen to apply software engineering principles to support and enhance reader services and collections research?
- Are you a **technician** who builds or maintains tools for data management and analysis, eager to explore ways library staff and researchers could put them to use?

We value diversity of skills, voices, and lived experiences. We are committed to diversity and equal access within digital humanities, we encourage the participation of women, members of marginalised groups, LGBTQ+ community, and peoples from the Global South. All events in the **ENABLAR** project programme will take place online to maximise opportunities for participation.

## When is it happening?

**Phase 1: Gather**
- Call for participation open: 30 October 2025
- Information webinar: 14 November 2025
- Call for participation close: 30 November 2025
- Notifications sent to successful participants: 5 December 2025

**Phase 2: Collaborate**
- Orientation 1 (writing digital methods): 12 December 2025 (_indicative date_)
- Orientation 2 (partnership building): 16 December 2025 (_indicative date_)
- Lesson development workshops and asynchronous writing sprints: January - March 2026

**Phase 3: Publish**
- Community Review Workshops: April - May 2026
- Draft **ENABLAR** submissions due: June 2026
- Selection and support for publication: from July 2026

## I’d like to get involved. What’s the next step?

- If you’re interested in taking part, we encourage you to join our **information webinar** which will include an open question and answer session. After the session, we'll add a summary of questions asked and answers given to this blog post.
- The webinar will take place at [12:30 GMT](https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/converter.html?iso=20251114T123000&p1=tz_gmt) on **14 November 2025**.
- Register to join: [tinyurl.com/enablar-info](https://tinyurl.com/enablar-info)

- Complete our short online **application form**: [tinyurl.com/enablar-apply](https://tinyurl.com/enablar-apply). It provides space for you to tell us about yourself, your interest in the programme, and what you hope to achieve by participating.
- Applications close: **30 November 2025**
- We’ll write to you to let you know if your application has been successful.
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