The University of Massachusetts Amherst
Robert S. Cox Special Collections & University Archives Research Center
CredoResearch digital collections in Credo

Snow, Keith Harmon

(Not fully processed)

Keith Harmon Snow Papers

ca. 1980-2024
41 boxes 61.5 linear feet
Call no.: MS 1264

Born and raised in Williamsburg, Massachusetts, Keith Harmon Snow earned his Master’s in microwave engineering at UMass Amherst. He worked at General Electric Company but left the security of his job soon after receiving a promotion in order to pursue travel and a career in investigative journalism. As a photojournalist and war correspondent, Snow worked extensively in Central Africa. He served as a genocide investigator for Survivors Rights International, Genocide Watch, and the United Nations, documenting and exposing genocide and crimes against humanity in Sudan and Ethiopia. Snow won three Project Censored awards, and in 2009, he was named the Regent’s Lecturer in Law & Society at the University of California, Santa Barbara, recognized for over a decade of work on war crimes. A champion for human rights and the rights of children around the world, Snow’s book, The Worst Interests of the Child: The Trafficking of Children and Parents Through U.S. Family Courts, was published in 2015. Snow died on December 8, 2024.

The papers of Keith Harmon Snow document his work as a photojournalist and war correspondent in Africa, featuring research materials, notebooks, published writings by and about Snow, and a vast array of his photographs, slides, and negatives. The collection includes publications, documents, and book drafts Snow accumulated during the investigative process of writing his book, The Worst Interests of the Child. Also chronicled, his multi-year struggle with the town of Williamsburg, Massachusetts to enforce zoning bylaws that regulate the use of firearms and explosives at a shooting range near his property.

Gift of Keith Harmon Snow, 2024.

Subjects

Children--Crimes againstGenocide (International law)Genocide—EthiopiaGenocide—SudanHuman traffickingPhotojournalistsWar correspondentsWar crimes

Contributors

ArticlesNegativesNotebooksPhotographsSlides