We share our findings

Who are our audiences?

- Individual researchers who want to research a subject in-depth: historians, poets, visual artists, psychologists, theologians, sociologists, musicians, ethnographers, linguists
.... for these audiences, we do not edit the interviews except as directed by the narrators or as other ethical responsibilities dictate;

- Groups of people who want to use excerpts from the interviews as springboards for discussion: neighborhood groups and other community organizations; book clubs, families; religious congregations; high school, college, graduate and professional school classes; law enforcement trainings; continuing professional education; policy makers
. . . for these audiences, we create "featured sections" that will identify length, types of assumed knowledge, and warnings where descriptions are disturbingly graphic (admittedly a judgment call)

How do we share these narratives?

- At this website we have already posted a small number of video clips.

- Also at this website, we post full transcriptions of all interviews as they become available to the public and when narrators specifically consent to web publication. Some narrators donate their interviews and allow the public to read, watch or listen to them, but not on the web. These testimonies are available to non-commercial educational institutions, libraries, and community organizations. Contact info[at]texasafterviolence[dot]org for information.

- Via the Human Rights Documentation Initiative (HRDI), full videotapes and transcriptions that we also index, and annotate, and from which we create short features suitable for showing in classes, meetings, or other gatherings. All Texas After Violence Project interviews on the HRDI website are fully public; we have not given any materials that are not fully public to any library.

- Presentations and trainings

- We look forward to your suggestions!