Kate Finegan is a Marketing & Publicity Assistant for the UConn Library. In ten years of working in the field of communication, Kate has assisted organizations both big and small in creating and implementing effective communication and public relations strategies. She enjoys using her content creation skills (writing, video production, graphic design) to collaborate on marketing assets that educate, entertain and inspire internal and external audiences. Kate earned her B.S. in Communication with a minor in Digital Art and Design from Eastern Connecticut State University.
Kate’s weekends typically include competitive pinball, practicing classical guitar, playing board games, and curling up with her cat and a good book.
Laurie Taylor is the Associate University Librarian for Collections & Discovery at the University of Connecticut Library. She provides leadership, strategy, and support for the Collections & Discovery Area, with 7 units: Acquisitions & Discovery, Archives & Special Collections, Collections Strategies, Digital Imaging & Conservation, Digital Preservation (Connecticut Digital Archive), Digital Solutions, and Technology Strategies. Her prior leadership positions include: University of Florida: Senior Director for Library Technology & Digital Strategies, Chair of the Digital Partnerships & Strategies Department, founding Editor-in-Chief of the LibraryPress@UF; and, Digital Library of the Caribbean (dLOC): Operational Lead, Digital Scholarship Director, and Technical Director. Laurie holds an MA and PhD in English/Digital Humanities, MS in Information, has published extensively, and has led million in grants. In 2018, Laurie was awarded the Caribbean Information Professional of the Year by the Association of Caribbean University, Research and Institutional Libraries (ACURIL). Laurie is newly returned to New England and thrilled to explore the area with family and friends.
As the director of the Avery Point campus library, Maria works with faculty and staff to support student learning and research. She is available to provide information literacy training in classrooms or online and welcomes suggestions for resources to add to the library collection. She worked most recently in the CT State Library’s Division of Library Development, offering grants, helping public libraries expand their broadband access, supporting professional development for the library workforce, and gathering and sharing data about Connecticut’s public libraries. Prior, Maria worked at the Redwood Library & Athenaeum, Salve Regina University, and Mystic Seaport Museum. She has a BA in English and History from Amherst College, an MSLIS from Simmons University, and an MBA from Salve Regina University. Outside of work, Maria enjoys flower gardening, reading and listening to fiction, and eating good food.
Areas of Expertise
- Maritime Studies
- Statewide library services
- Community engagement
- Excel
Professional Affiliations
- Black Caucus of the American Library Association, Connecticut Chapter (BCALA-CT)
- Connecticut Library Association (CLA)
- New England Library Association (NELA)
- Rhode Island Library Association (RILA)
Kara Flynn is the Archives Education and Outreach Coordinator at Archives and Special Collections, working to engage students, faculty, and the larger community with the archives through instruction and outreach programming. Kara holds an MLIS from the University of Pittsburgh and a B.A. in English Literature from the University of Puget Sound. Before coming to the University of Connecticut, Kara worked as the Special Collections Librarian at Augusta University, and as the Education & Engagement Archivist at the University of Arkansas. In her free time, Kara enjoys being in nature, working on various craft projects, and being entertained by her cats’ antics.
Areas of Expertise:
- Archival outreach
- Teaching with primary sources
- Archival education
Professional Affiliations:
Jonathan is a Research Services Coordinator at the UConn Library. Jonathan helps coordinate research and reproduction services including reference desk operations, scheduling and supervising reading room appointments, and fulfilling digital reproduction orders. Jonathan also assists with overall departmental operations and works to provide excellent customer service to all patrons.
Jonathan graduated from UConn with a B.A. in both Biological Science and English, a minor in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and a concentration in Creative Writing. He refined his customer service skills working for UConn Dining Services, the New Britain Museum of American Art, CT DEEP’s park service, and the UConn Library’s Access and Visitor Services department.
In his free time, Jonathan enjoys gardening, binging TV shows, creative writing, and reading graphic novels.
Katie (Kathryn) Fiducia is the Research Services Librarian for Geospatial Services at the UConn Library, serving as liaison to Geography and Earth Sciences. She also manages the library’s collection of historical maps and geospatial data through the library’s Map and Geographic Information Center (MAGIC). As a GIS educator, Katie is dedicated to encouraging early student engagement with GIS by assisting UConn instructors with integrating GIS tools into projects and assignments. As a librarian, Katie specializes in finding and using historical maps and geospatial data in teaching and scholarship at UConn. Katie has a Master of Arts in Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, and a certificate in Geographic Information Sciences from Tufts University. She also has a Bachelor of Arts in Law and Politics and Sociology from Southern New Hampshire University.
Karl Muth is a Financial Services Assistant at UConn Library. Karl is responsible for processing and maintaining the Library’s financial transactions, including the purchasing of collection and non-collection materials, travel and non-travel requests and reimbursements, vendor/supplier management, and budget tracking. Karl graduated from Fairfield University with a B.A. in History. He also earned an MLS degree at Southern Connecticut State University and an M.S. in Finance at Fairfield. Karl previously held positions as both an Equity Analyst and a Data Analyst at Bloomberg, the Financial Times and two boutique investment management firms. His last role before joining UConn was as a Reference Librarian at the Wethersfield Library.
Michael is the Repository Manager for the Connecticut Digital Archive (CTDA) at the University of Connecticut Library. Michael coordinates with CTDA partner institutions across the state of Connecticut to provide training and support with using the CTDA to preserve and make discoverable cultural heritage material from a diverse range of collections. Prior to this role, Michael served as a Social Sciences & Data Librarian at San Diego State University with a focus on developing quantitative literacy skills for students through data visualization and data analysis approaches. Michael previously was at the UConn Library in various roles and was co-founder of the Connecticut Digital Archive (CTDA). Michael is well known for his work in geospatial literacy efforts with nearly two decades of experience working with students and faculty on geospatial data and mapping projects, instruction, and research. Michael has taken extensive PhD level courses in Geography at the University of Connecticut, has a Masters in Library and Information Science (MLIS) from Kent State University and a BA in Geography from the University of Cincinnati.
Karen Tatarka is Director of the UConn Hartford Campus Library. She has worked in both public and academic libraries, including the Weston Public Library, Wilton Library, Jeremy Richard Library at UConn Stamford, and Auburn University Libraries. She was drawn to librarianship by a desire to connect people with information, and actively works with library stakeholders to grow collections, services, and collaborative programs to integrate the library into the community.
Karen holds an MLS from Southern Connecticut State University and an MA in English Literature from Fordham University. She is active in professional organizations at the local and State level. She currently serves as Chair of the State Library’s Advisory Council for Library Planning and Development (ACLPD) and is on the steering committee for CT Libraries and Partners for Digital Equity (CTLPDE).
Jennifer L. Schaefer is the Research Services Librarian for Latina/o, Caribbean, & Latin American Studies and Spanish Studies at the UConn Library.
Before joining the UConn Library, Jennifer was a Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Carleton College, a Roots of Contemporary Issues Teaching Postdoctoral Fellow at Washington State University Vancouver, and a Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Michigan.
Jennifer is deeply committed to supporting undergraduate and graduate research and writing, especially drawing on her previous experiences working as the Education and Outreach Fellow in both the Emory Writing Center and the Woodruff Library and then as Interim Director of the Emory Writing Center.
Jennifer earned a BA in History and Comparative Literature from Brown University, an MA in Latin American Studies from the University of Chicago, and a PhD in History from Emory University. Her historical research focuses on political mourning and authoritarianism in late twentieth century Argentina, and she is currently working on a book manuscript titled Rebels, Martyrs, Heroes: Political Mourning in Authoritarian Argentina, 1966-1983. Outside of her work at the library, she enjoys cycling, running, playing pick-up soccer, and gardening.
Website
JenniferLSchaefer.com
Professional Affiliations
Recent Scholarly Activity
- Roundtable Organizer and Participant, “New Approaches to Latin America’s Cold War: Transnational Solidarities, Spatial Mobilities, Generational Conformities, and Ambiguous Chronologies,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2025
- Presenter, “Declassified Distortions: US Government Documents and Argentina’s Last Military Dictatorship, 1976–83,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2025
- Presenter, “Mapping Militancy: Geospatial Analysis of Armed Politics in Cold War Argentina,” New England Council on Latin American Studies, November 2024
- Presenter, “Transcribing Puerto Rican and Connecticut Documents: Two Methodologies for a Digitized Collection,” Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials, June 2024
- Presenter, “A Puerto Rican and Connecticut Document Transcription Project: Testing Methodologies for a Digitized Collection,” Greater Boston Digital Research and Pedagogy Symposium, April 2024
- Roundtable Organizer and Participant, “What’s Special about Maps (2.0): Unique and Underutilized,” American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History, January 2024
- Presenter, “Guerrilla Intimacies: Romances, Friendships, and Family Ties among 1970s Argentine Militants,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2024
- Presenter, “Crowdsourcing and Automating: A Puerto Rican and Connecticut Document Transcription Project,” New England Council on Latin American Studies, November 2023
- Roundtable Organizer and Participant, “What’s Special about Maps? Teaching Border Regions History with Digital and Physical Materials,” American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History, January 2023
- Presenter, “Cóndors and the Malvinas: Nationalism during Argentina’s 1966 Sesquicentenary Celebrations,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2023
- Presenter, “The Detroit of Argentina: Automobile Manufacturing and Labor Unions in Córdoba, Argentina,” American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History, February 2022
- Organizer and Chair, “Avocados, Sugar Beets, and Automobiles: Transnational Markets and Local Labor Practices in the Americas, 1950-2000,” American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History, February 2022
- Roundtable Participant, “Chile-Rio de la Plata Studies Section Meeting: Writing, Thinking, & Teaching the Southern Cone Today,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2021
- Presenter, “‘Spilled blood will not be negotiated’: Acts of ‘Revolutionary Justice’ by 1970s Argentine Militant Groups,” Conference on Latin American History, January 2020
Publications
- (Review) In Search of the Lost Decade: Everyday Rights in Post-Dictatorship Argentina, Jenifer Adair, Journal of Latin American Politics and Society. June 2023.
- “Mapping Politics into the Stadium: Political Demonstrations and Soccer Culture in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1973-1974,” Journal of Sports History Special Issue “Doing Sport History in the Digital Present” 44, no. 2 (Summer 2017):193-208.
- (Review) Miradas médicas sobre la cultura física en Argentina, 1880-1970, Pablo Ariel Scharagrodsky Ed., Journal of Sport History. December 2015.
- (Disciplinary Publication) Co-author, “Guide to Preparing Fellowship Applications,” American Historical Association, September 2016.