@article{e3ca923ead0e418eb37f8daa83df48a3,
title = "Jewish archives and sources in the Nordic Countries: The current state of affairs and future prospects",
abstract = "This article aims to give an overview of Jewish archives and archival sources in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. Besides describing significant existing collections, the article looks into ongoing archival projects, digitizing and infrastructure programs, and maps out future challenges.",
keywords = "Jewish, Archives, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Holocaust",
author = "Dora Pataricza and Simo Muir and Bak, {Sofie Lene} and Bjarke F{\o}lner and {Kieding Banik}, Vibeke and Pontus Rudberg",
note = "Funding Information: Ph.D., specialises in Norwegian Jewish history. She is currently head of education at the Norwe gian Center for Holocaust and Minority Studies and a part of the research project {\textquoteleft}Negotiating Jewish identity: Jewish life in 21stcentury Norway{\textquoteright}, funded by the Norwegian Research Council. Funding Information: 3 The Finnish Jewish Archives has been for the most part catalogued under several grants from the Leo and Regina Wainstein Foundation (Finnish Cultural Foundation). Funding Information: 5 The first extensive project was funded by the Rothschild Foundation Hanadiv Europe; project leader: Simo Muir, project workers: D{\'o}ra Pataricza and Merc{\'e}desz Czimbalmos. The digitisation of the oldest documents was done with the help of a grant from the Wihuri Foundation (Czim-balmos and Pataricza 2019: 27–30). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021, Donner Institute for Research in Religious and Cultural History. All rights reserved.",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
doi = "10.30752/nj.111889",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "54--80",
journal = "Nordisk judaistik",
issn = "0348-1646",
publisher = "The Donner Institute for Research in Religious and Cultural History",
number = "2",
}