The digital lab has digitized a few archival collections in their entirety. The largest collection was from YUM. It consisted of 30 linear feet of materials, mostly fashion drawings by the New York City fashion designer Abe Grubère. However, this collection is an exception and archival collections digitized in the lab are usually small, such as the Raphael Lemkin Collection from the American Jewish Historical Society (AJHS) that consists of 7.5 linear feet. Raphael Lemkin was a scholar who coined the term “Genocide.” He was instrumental in the United Nations’ adoption of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in 1948. The collection documents Lemkin’s lifelong effort to prevent genocide and lobby the United Nations to adopt an anti-genocide convention. In total, the lab digitized the content of 76 folders which translated into 4033 images. The materials were digitized as part of an initiative at the Center that culminated in a conference and an exhibition on genocide in 2009.