Where the BAA Archives have been used

Even before the BAA History Project launched officially in late 2024, material from the BAA Archives had been used by several publications, filmmakers, and even the US government.

As this new Archives website gets built out and content is added, we expect this impact to increase exponentially over time, because:

  1. the source material available for third parties to cite will be vastly larger (only about 1% of the BAA Archives have been put online prior to 2025),
  2. greatly increased findability will make discovery of source material much more likely, and
  3. the Archives website is being designed for intergenerational longevity, so the timespan of use is theoretically endless.

Who’s used the BAA Archives so far?

Known uses as of January 2025:

Park

Headwaters Forest Reserve, US BLM

In 2010, the US Bureau of Land Management (BLM)’s Arcata, CA, office was searching for pictures of Headwaters Forest protests online and found Mark Bult’s Flickr photostream, where he’d posted a few from his large archive. Park Ranger Julie Clark asked if BLM could use them for interpretive signage planned for a new education center being constructed at the Headwaters Forest Reserve. Permission was granted, and the signage was produced. In 2011 Mark and his family visited the education center to view the result.

“More Precious than Gold“ — Five photos form the BAA Archives were used on this display, one of many in the reserve’s education center. Credit: Mark Bult / Bay Area Action Archives
Chains of yarn — When you run out of chains, chain yourself with yarn. Activists locked down at a Pacific Lumber mill site. Credit: Mark Bult / Bay Area Action Archives (original lockdown photo credit: North Coast Earth First!)
Is that a Mogwai? — Visitors to Headwaters Forest Reserve in Humboldt County, CA, viewing an interpretive sign that features photos from the BAA Archives. Credit: John Ciccarelli, BLM; March 2018
“Save the Old-Growth for Young Folks” — Kids at a rally calling for protection of all 60,000 acres of Headwaters Forest; San Francisco, September 22, 1996. Credit: Mark Bult / Bay Area Action Archives

In 2019, BLM produced a video to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the forest’s public acquisition, and again used some of the BAA Archives’ photos in the excellent 5-minute video (photos at 4:53).

These uses by BLM are an example of the importance of “findability” — the ease with which people can locate desired information on websites or through search engines. It’s crucial to note that information not present on the internet is inherently unfindable through digital means, highlighting the importance of making information available and accessible. To wit: If Mark hadn’t put the photos online (making them findable), the BLM may have not located any other protest photos to use in the displays. Instead, tens of thousands of visitors to the reserve now see educational displays showing that it’s very often protests and citizen action that causes parklands to be preserved for future generations.


Documentary film

Giants Rising

In 2023, director Lisa Landers contacted Mark to use photos of Headwaters Forest protests in her documentary, “Giants Rising.” Like the BLM, she also found them on Flickr. The feature-length film, released in 2024, explores the awe-inspiring world of redwood trees, delving into their biological wonders, cultural significance, conservation efforts, and the profound connections between the ancient giants and human well-being. The filmmakers sought permission to use several protest photos in the film, and it was granted.


Magazine

New York

In 2019, New York magazine’s “The Cut” published an article, “Rick Springer Was an Activist in the World, a Terrorist at Home,“ by Rose Andersen, one of Rick’s stepdaughters. It recounts Rick’s strict and sometimes abusive parenting and his alcohol abuse, and has caused many in the peace and environmental movements to reflect on our ignorance and perhaps retrospective responsibility. New York editors asked permission to use a photo of Rick from the BAA Archives, and permission was granted.


University

UC Berkeley

In 2022 UC Berkeley’s Lawrence Hall of Science used a photo from the BAA Archives to illustrate an online textbook in the Global Systems Science’s series, an interdisciplinary, integrated course for high school students and focusing on “societal challenges that science can help us understand.”

Radio / Podcast

“Living On Earth”

In 2015 the public radio show “Living On Earth” used a photo from the BAA Archives to illustrate an online transcript of the August 21 program, in a segment titled “Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner and the American West”.

Nonprofit

Rose Foundation

In 2011 the Rose Foundation used photos from the BAA Archives in a video titled “Saving Headwaters Forest.”

Nonprofit

Nuclear-Risks.org

A photo from The Hundredth Monkey was used in a PDF poster about the Nevada Test Site on www.nuclear-risks.org, part of an exhibition by the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War and Physicians in Social Responsibility.

Newspaper

North Coast Journal

When Rick Springer died in 2010, the North Coast Journal used a photo of Rick from the BAA Archives in the article.

Book

Earth for Sale

Several email action alerts and news updates sent by BAA’s Headwaters Forest Project were cited in the book Earth for Sale: Reclaiming Ecology in the Age of Corporate Greenwash, by Brian Tokar (published in 1997). While the online versions of those action alerts (circa 1996) are no longer available, we hope to make them available again through the BAA Archives.

Book

Social Movements and Networks

When assessing the Bay Area’s environmental movement in 2000, the researchers of the book Social Movements and Networks: Relational Approaches to Collective Action (Doug McAdam and Mario Diani, Editors; Oxford University Press, 2003) cited BAA’s EcoCalendar as one of three sources used: “A survey of the Bay Area environmental movement was conducted during the spring of 2000... The preliminary list of environmental groups was composed from three sources available on the internet: the Bay Area Progressive Network, Bay Area Action’s EcoCalender directory of Bay Area environmental groups, and Yahoo’s listing of environmental groups for each of the nine counties.”

Smithsonian

National Museum of American History

Last but not least, the Smithsonian Institution somehow has a BAA Rad Sheep button in the collection of the National Museum of American History.


Potential of the BAA Archives

At least a hundred other sources on the internet — beyond those above — cite or used BAA’s work. And that all happened before the BAA History Project started putting the rest archives online — when less than 1% of the BAA Archives were online. Imagine what could come of releasing the other 99%.

Citations dwindle as websites go dark, information gets removed, and articles get locked away behind publications’ paywalls in the name of “monetization.” But this type of information should be free.

Please donate today to help us put more content online, permanently, for free public use.

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