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Number 44 • March/April 2005
Contents
New Partnerships for Digital Preservation by
Abby Smith
CLIR Seeks Input on New Strategic Plan by
Nancy Davenport
CLIR Appoints Selection Committee for 2005
Access to Learning Award
DLF Names Aquifer Director
NDIIPP's Preservation Partnerships
Frye Institute Participants Named
New Partnerships for Digital Preservation
by Abby Smith
WHEN OUR DESCENDANTS want to see today's data, journals, films,
television, GIS data sets and software, or any other information
resource, 50 to 100 years hence, where will they go? Chances
are, they will go to the Internet or its successor to get access
to retrospective data, as they do for contemporary data. But
what will be there for the browsers to present these users
on their handheld devices, mobile phones, digital paper, or
other media du jour?
That is the question that the Library of Congress (LC), under
a mandate from the U.S. Congress to facilitate preservation
of and access to a wide variety of digital materials, is seeking
to answer. The mandate reflects the Congress's recognition
that all sectors of our nation face challenges in managing
born-digital content. Data are not only increasingly voluminous
but also heterogeneous in format. Moreover, they are encoded
in proprietary softwares that are replaced or updated annually.
Many materials with scientific, policy, and cultural-heritage
value are at risk of loss.
In December 2000, Congress directed LC to lead a National
Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program
(NDIIPP). It allocated a total of $100 million for the program.
Of that sum, $75 million was to be spent on matching grants
to the program's preservation partners; the remainder was to
cover planning and program-support activities.
Since then the library has completed its research-and-planning
phase, submitted a plan to Congress, gained approval of that
plan, and begun to implement it. (The plan and its supporting
documentation are available at www.digitalpreservation.gov.)
CLIR is one of a few organizations to which LC has turned for
help as it planned the program, and CLIR continues to play
a crucial role in program implementation and in communicating
the preservation needs and aspirations of libraries, archives,
and museums to the NDIIPP program.
After yearlong study and consultation with a broad range of
stakeholders, from those who create data to those who archive
it, LC concluded that when it comes to digital preservation,
no single institution can do it all—even for its own digital
assets. New types of partnerships and interdependencies must
be nurtured to carry off the monumental task of building an
infrastructure that can provide long-term access to digital
data. It is upon this premise that NDIIPP has designed three
major program elements that are being implemented in parallel:
- development of a network of preservation partners,
- development work on a technical preservation architecture,
and
- funding of digital preservation research.
Developing a Network of Preservation Partners
The goals of the first element are to build an enduring network
of preservation partnerships, identify and preserve at-risk
digital content, develop scalable digital collection and preservation
strategies, explore protocols and standards to support partnership
operations, and support the development of tools, models, and
methods for digital preservation.
As stipulated in the legislation, LC has entered into cooperative
agreements that award to its partners, which are selected on
a competitive basis, funds to model and test archiving activities
and approaches. In fall 2004, LC announced partnerships with
eight consortia consisting of more than 30 partners (see pp.
4–5). LC made these awards on the condition that each lead
institution bring with it other partners—data archives, research
libraries, data providers, federal and state government entities,
even a law firm in one case—so that no one institution is a
single unconnected dot but is rather a central node in the
growing network. This round of grants commits $14.9 million
using a one-to-one dollar match from the preservation partner
institutions, for a total of more than $28 million over three
years.
During the three years of award funding, these institutions
will be deeply engaged in the most challenging issues confronting
digital data managers. The challenges include developing coherent
content selection and collection strategies, probing and documenting
intellectual property and privacy laws and policies that impede
preservation best practices, documenting the costs of archiving
and developing models for who is bearing which costs, identifying
and sharing best practices on a broad range of technical policy
procedures, and, perhaps most important, learning how to negotiate
partnership roles and build mechanisms of trust that will sustain
those partnerships over time.
The Library of Congress is also partnering with state libraries
and archives in a new program to develop digital preservation
needs assessments at the state level.
Developing Work on a Technical Preservation Architecture
The second element of the program is building a technical
preservation architecture that will serve as a framework to
guide the development of a national preservation network. The
design principles are few and easily summarized, but designing
and testing according to these principles is a complex activity
that involves many iterations. The principles are that the
architecture must support institutional relationships, separate
preservation and access, be constructed modularly and assembled
over time, be able to upgrade parts without disruption of the
whole, and use broadly adoptable standards and protocols. Work
has begun with an archive ingest and handling test of digital
data. LC is working with the Old Dominion University Computer
Science Department, The Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries,
Stanford University Libraries and Academic Information Resources,
and Harvard University Library to explore strategies for the
ingest and preservation of digital archives.
Preservation Research
Preservation research, the third element of the preservation
program, will begin shortly with the award of joint LC and
National Science Foundation (NSF) grants. The call for research
proposals, which was issued by NSF, invites research in areas
defined at an LC-NSF–sponsored workshop and a report entitled
It's About Time (available at http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/repor/NSF_LC_Final_Report.pdf.)
The call for proposals asked for research in digital repository
models; tools, technologies, and processes; and organizational,
economic, and policy issues. NSF received more than 60 proposals,
and awards will soon be announced.
In 2008, when LC reports to Congress on the progress made
under the NDIIPP, it will focus on the following four areas:
- collection and selection strategies,
- preservation architecture,
- legal and regulatory constraints, and
- costs and economics of archiving.
CLIR Invites Community Input
The preservation partnerships, engaging in real-world learning,
will help assess the nature of the challenges ahead, what kinds
of solutions warrant further investment by Congress and other
agencies, and what models of collaboration and interdependencies
will best suit the needs of long-term commitments to stewardship.
LC expects that several activities and investigations will
complement and amplify the work done in each of the three program
elements. One such activity that will be of special interest
to the library and archival world is the Copyright Working
Group, convened under the auspices of NDIIPP to investigate
Section 108 exemptions that affect preserving institutions.
LC will soon issue an announcement about the formation and
membership of this group.
It is important that the library and archival communities
let their interests be known to this effort and to other NDIIPP
areas of investigation, so that the report to Congress can
be shaped by the widest-possible stakeholder group. CLIR is
available to take comments and suggestions from the community
and to relay them to NDIIPP. Correspondence should be directed
to Abby Smith by e-mail (asmith@clir.org)
or U.S. mail at the address found on this newsletter's masthead.
^ Top
CLIR Seeks Input on New Strategic Plan
by Nancy Davenport
CLIR IS WIDELY known as an organization that focuses on strategy.
We look at the big picture. We continually track developments
in the scholarly world, in the library community, and in the
world of information and consider the implications of those
changes for our programs, publications, and research.
To help support these key activities over the next few years,
CLIR's staff and Board members are developing a new strategic
plan and research agenda. Our staff will complete a draft of
the strategic plan in the early spring so that the Board can
refine it at its April meeting.
To help get this work under way, at the October 2004 Board
of Directors meeting, I briefed our Board members on research
that other organizations such as OCLC, Outsell, and the Pew
Trust have done on the information landscape. We looked at
changes in information-seeking behavior, preferred learning
styles, some of the economic and political contexts of a learning
society, the societal role of the library, and the role of
the librarian in the learning society.
We then undertook an examination of CLIR's position in this
changing landscape. We assessed CLIR's role as an information
organization and concluded that CLIR delivers a range of valuable
services to the community. Foremost among these services, in
the minds of many or our constituents, is the support of independent
research on information issues and best practices. Another benefit is our persistent focus on the preservation
of information resources. We also offer a national view on
library and information issues and convene forums where experts
from a variety of fields discuss the thorny issues facing the
library community. Finally, we are a respected imprint.
In the few months since that meeting, at least three significant
changes have taken place. The Internet Archive announced an
effort to digitize book holdings from around the world through
an international collaboration of libraries. Cornell University
issued the findings of its study of the costs of open access.
And in December, Google announced a partnership that will involve
digitizing and making accessible portions of the holdings of
several large research libraries. We expect that these developments
will affect the information and scholarly communities and that
they should be factored into our planning.
CLIR has been working in six program areas: resources for
scholarship, digital libraries, economics of information, preservation
awareness, leadership, and the international dimensions of
these program areas. We are trying to determine whether these
are still the right areas for research. Do they need to be
modified or refined? Are they the areas that are the most important
for CLIR and for the community?
There is an adage, "If you plan to work alone, plan alone."
CLIR does not plan to work alone over the next few years. We
plan to work on the issues that are of most use to the scholarly
and library communities and we invite you to join the conversation.
As I have visited CLIR's sponsors and talked with our colleagues,
I have been gratified to hear that CLIR is a highly valued
organization. To paraphrase what I have heard, CLIR is valued
"because it thinks about the issues that we know are important
but don't have time to think about."
If you are among those with whom I haven't yet talked personally,
I invite you to call me or to write about what you would like
to see on CLIR's research agenda. What do you need to think
about but don't have the time?
Nancy Davenport
Ndavenport@clir.org
202-939-4752
^ Top
CLIR Appoints Selection Committee for 2005 Access to Learning
Award
CLIR HAS APPOINTED the selection committee for the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation Access to Learning Award for 2005. The award
is given annually to a library, library agency, or comparable
organization outside the United States that has been innovative
in providing free public access to information. The selection
committee will review applications and choose the award recipient.
The award will be presented at the World Library and Information
Congress of the International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions (IFLA), to be held in Oslo in August 2005.
Rashidah Begum bt. Fazal Mohammed
Penang, Malaysia
Nancy Davenport (chair)
President
Council on Library and Information Resources
Washington, D.C.
Jessica Dorr
Project Coordinator
International Library Program
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Seattle, WA
Torny Kjekstad
Library Director
Baerum Public Library
Sandvika Norway
Bernard A. Margolis
President
Boston Public Library
Boston, MA
Buhle Mbambo
University Librarian
University of Zimbabwe
Harare, Zimbabwe
Patricia Palmucci
Librarian
Biblioteca del Congreso de la Nación
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Valentyna S. Pashkova
Director, Information Resource Center
U.S. Embassy
Kiev, Ukraine
Barbara Perry
Retired Head
IMF/World Bank Library
Alexandria, VA
Robert Stueart
Professor and Dean Emeritus
Simmons College
Wellesley, MA
^ Top
DLF Names Aquifer Director
KATHERINE KOTT HAS been named director of the Digital Library
Federation's Aquifer initiative. Her appointment became effective
January 1, 2005. Kott comes to the DLF from Stanford University
Libraries, where she was head of cataloging and metadata services.
As Aquifer director, she will continue to work from Stanford.
Aquifer is an initiative of the DLF that will support research,
teaching, and learning with high-quality online special collections
and distinctive information services. It will leverage extant
digital collections, institutional capacities, curatorial expertise,
and library services to benefit scholarly communities. Eleven
DLF member libraries are currently participating in Aquifer.
Aquifer's products and services will be shared freely with
other DLF participants and with the library community at large.
Kott brings to her position broad experience in academic library
systems, and in technical and public services. Before coming
to Stanford, she led the implementation services department
at a major ILS vendor, coordinating the installation of systems
at a wide range of libraries, including consortia.
^ Top
NDIIPP's Preservation Partnerships
THE LIBRARY OF Congress awarded funds to the following eight
partnerships for projects to model and test archiving activities
and approaches. The projects were selected to advance the goals
of NDIIPP.
1. Develop Web archiving tools that libraries will
use to capture, curate, and preserve collections of Web-based
government and political information
Lead: California Digital Library at the University
of California
Partners: New York University, University of North
Texas, The Libraries, and the Texas Center for Digital Knowledge
Collaborators: San Diego Supercomputer Center, Stanford
University Computer Science Department and Sun Microsystems
Inc.
2. Lead the formation of a National Geospatial Federated
Digital Repository to design an infrastructure and collect
materials across the spectrum of geographic formats
Lead: University of California at Santa Barbara
Partner: Stanford University
3. Establish the first procedures, structures, and
national standards necessary to preserve public television
programs produced in digital formats
Lead:Â Educational Broadcasting Corporation (Thirteen/WNET
New York)
Partners:Â WGBH Educational Foundation, Public Broadcasting
Service (PBS), New York University
4. Develop a MetaArchive of Southern Cultural Heritage
by creating a distributed digital preservation network for
critical and at-risk content relative to Southern culture
and history
Lead: Emory UniversityÂ
Partners: The University of Louisville Libraries,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Libraries,
Florida State University, Auburn University Libraries, Georgia
Institute of Technology Library and Information Center
5. Develop criteria for determining which digital
materials to capture and preserve, as not all digital material
can or should be preserved
Lead: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library,
Graduate School of Library and Information Science and National
Center for Supercomputing Applications
Partners: OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Tufts
University Perseus Project, Michigan State University Library,
and an alliance of state library agencies from Arizona, Connecticut,
Illinois, North Carolina, and Wisconsin
6. Preserve at-risk digital materials from the American
business culture during the early years of the commercialization
of the Internet, 1994-2001Â
Lead: University of Maryland Robert H. Smith School
of Business
Partners: Center for History and New Media at George
Mason University; Gallivan, Gallivan and O'Melia LLC; Snyder,
Miller, Orton Lawyers LLP; and the Internet Archive
7. Create a partnership to identify, acquire, and
preserve data used in the study of social science
Lead: University of Michigan Inter-university Consortium
for Political and Social Research
Partners: The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research
at the University of Connecticut, the Howard W. Odum Institute
for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill, the Henry A. Murray Research Center at the Radcliffe
Institute of Harvard, the Electronic and Special Media Records
Service Division of the National Archives and Records Administration
and the Harvard-MIT Data Center
8. Collect and preserve digital geospatial data resources,
including digitized maps, from state and local government
agencies in North Carolina
Lead: North Carolina State University Libraries
Partner: North Carolina Center for Geographic Information & Analysis
^ Top
Frye Institute Participants Named
THE FOLLOWING INDIVIDUALS have been selected for participation
in the 2005 Frye Leadership Institute. The Instiute will be
held June 5–17 at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.
Kenning Arlitsch, University of Utah
Charles Bartel, Carnegie Mellon University
Sharon Blanton, Scottsdale Community College
Andrew Bonamici, University of Oregon
Scott Britton, Washington University Libraries
Debra Bruxvoort, Central College
W. Gardner Campbell, University of Mary Washington
Beth Chancellor, University of Missouri-Columbia
Helen Chu, California Polytechnic State Univ.,
San Luis Obispo
Robert Clougherty, Jr., Tennessee Technological
University
Sylvia Contreras, Edgewood College
Lorie Edwards, University of South Carolina
John Fritz, University of Maryland, Baltimore
Cty.
Chandra Gigliotti-Guridi, Hampden-Sydney College
Chris Gill, Gonzaga University
Al Gonzalez, Cornell University
Lynn Gunn, Marquette University
Richard Holmgren, Allegheny College
Judith House, Georgetown University
Jim Jorstad, University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse
Dawn Kight, Southern University and A & M
College
Barron Koralesky, Macalester College
David Levin, California State Polytechnic
University, Pomona
Julie Little, University of Tennessee
William Mayer, The George Washington University
Jenny Mehmedovic, University of Kansas
Mary Parlett-Sweeney, Union College
Medaline Philbert, Pace University
Faye Priestly, Johnson C. Smith University
Ulrich Rauch, University of British Columbia
Michael Reder, Connecticut College
Jane Schillie, University of Miami
Tracy Schroeder, University of San Francisco
Sonya Shepherd, Georgia Southern University
Dale Smith, University of Oregon
Sarah Stein, North Carolina State University
Betsy Tippens, University of Washington, Bothell
Timothy Tolson, University of Virginia
Andrew Treloar, Monash University
Jeffrey Trzeciak, Wayne State University
Joseph Vaughan, UCLA
Richard Wake, University of Southampton
Carolyn Walters, Indiana University, Bloomington
Jennifer Ward, University of Washington Libraries
John Williams, University of Michigan
^ Top
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