|
Copublished by the Council on Library and Information
Resources
Copyright 2003 in compilation by the Council on Library and Information Resources and the Library of Congress. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transcribed in any form without permission of the publishers. Requests for reproduction or other uses or questions pertaining to permissions should be submitted in writing to the Director of Communications at the Council on Library and Information Resources, 1755 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20036.
ContentsAbout the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program
2.0 Aims, Scope, and Methodology
4.0 Related Multinational Initiatives
5.0 References and Web Sites Consulted
About the AuthorNeil Beagrie became program director for digital preservation in the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) in June 2000. He is responsible for the activities of JISC Digital Preservation Focus. This program is developing JISC policy, guidance to institutions, and collaborative programs for digital preservation, electronic records, and digital collection management on behalf of the Higher and Further Education Councils and institutions in the United Kingdom. He was research director and coauthor of Preservation Management of Digital Materials, a study published by the British Library in 2001. He founded and coordinated the development of a cross-sectoral Digital Preservation Coalition in the United Kingdom and became its first company secretary. In addition to moderating the digital preservation listserv, he is a member of the Preserving Access to Digital Information (PADI) International Advisory Group and the RLG/OCLC Working Group on Digital Archive Attributes. From 1997 to 2000, he was assistant director of the Arts and Humanities Data Service (AHDS). In that post, he developed digital collections policy and standards and published extensively on digital preservation issues. He was joint author with Daniel Greenstein of the study A Strategic Policy Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital Collections (1998). Before joining the AHDS, he was head of Archaeological Archives and Library at the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. He has previously worked as a consultant with the U.K. New Opportunities Fund Digitisation program and the U.K. Department of Environment. Mr. Beagrie completed this report in a private capacity as a consultant.
About the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation ProgramThe mission of the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program is to develop a national strategy to collect, archive, and preserve the burgeoning amounts of digital content, especially materials that are created only in digital formats, for current and future generations.
ForewordLibraries and archives have long recognized the importance of international cooperation and collaboration. As cultural and scholarly institutions in particular and society in general have embraced information technologies, digital content and the networks over which it is transmitted have shown how permeable civil and national boundaries can be. This phenomenon has highlighted the importance of cooperation in the global world of information as well as the subtleties of navigating within the physical world of different institutional, legal, and economic cultures. Our challenge is to respect those many boundaries and differences while sustaining practices and programs that will enable us to preserve contemporary digital expression for use by generations to come. Few would deny the long-term importance of digital information, whether it is embodied in text, Web sites, electronic books and periodicals, music, images, cinema, or any other format. How to preserve that digital content, however, presents an open and demanding set of questions. The importance of answering these questions has become greater as the volume of digital information has increased. For the last two-and-a-half years, the Library of Congress (LC) has been engaged in an extensive planning process as part of the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP). Created by the U.S. Congress in December 2000 under Public Law 106-554, the NDIIPP calls on the LC to lead a national planning effort for the long-term preservation of digital content and to work collaboratively with representatives of other federal, research, library, and business organizations. The LC has interpreted its charge broadly to include consultations with colleagues at other national libraries who have begun to address the challenges of digital resources and from whom we have much to learn. Neil Beagrie's report on selected international initiatives is an important step in our commitment to listen, learn, and share our findings. The report offers a framework within which we can understand and compare programs that sometimes seem disparate and confusing. The study contextualizes its findings in a set of reasonable forecasts about the near future of information technology and the landscape in which that technology is likely to be situated. In consultation with LC and the Council on Library and Information Resources, Mr. Beagrie identified national programs in Australia, France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom that were likely to be similar to the then-nascent NDIIPP effort. Drawing on information collected in a series of interviews and site visits early in 2002, he systematically describes each program's (1) national context, including mission and relevant legal framework; (2) institutional and national initiatives and projects; (3) international initiatives; and (4) planned or future international initiatives. He amplifies these findings with other examples that are not strictly national in scope but are highly influential, such as the Open Archival Information System and Preservation Technology for European Broadcast Archives. All these efforts, as well as LC's parallel investigations, demonstrate that digital preservation requires more than technology, important though technology is to any set of solutions. One of the fundamental challenges for NDIIPP is to identify an organizational framework as well as technological tools and systems that are flexible enough to empower local and regional decisions and mobilize efforts while sustaining overall coherence. The massive scale of digital information and the complexities surrounding it mandate cooperation among many institutions and at many levels. Over the last century, libraries and archives have developed many ways to work together. Our history of cooperation for the sake of future scholarship is a powerful tool as we seek ways to preserve digital content for the generations to come. This report reminds us of that tradition and helps us see how to use our experience as we move forward into the age of digital information. Laura E. Campbell Amy Friedlander
Acronyms ADRI Australian Digital Resource Identifier
|