((link)): Borat Internet Archive

The film is frequently cited in legal archives due to its controversial "mockumentary" style and the numerous lawsuits it triggered:

Additionally, academic video essays—such as the Middlebury College piece analyzing the film’s social commentary—are preserved and linked via the Archive. These resources argue that Borat’s hidden-camera approach was a "form of social commentary that remains relevant even today," a thesis that is now part of the permanent digital record. borat internet archive

The US DVD had one set of deleted scenes. The UK DVD had a different set. The Japanese "Collector’s Edition" VHS (yes, VHS) contained a 12-minute segment of Borat attempting to buy a "sexy time clock" from a bewildered Amish man. —digitized, uncut, and tagged by region. The film is frequently cited in legal archives

Furthermore, the archivists argue that because Borat is a work of social criticism, preserving its raw marketing materials is a form of historical documentation. It shows how "provocative comedy" was sold to Middle America in the post-9/11 era. The UK DVD had a different set

While there isn't a single "academic paper" definitively titled "Borat Internet Archive," the Internet Archive hosts several primary documents and media files that are frequently cited in cultural studies and media research concerning Sacha Baron Cohen’s work. Primary Source Materials