DARIAH-EU, WITHIN AND BEYOND THE ACADEMY –

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DARIAH-EU, WITHIN AND BEYOND THE ACADEMY – THE DARIAH DATA RE-USE CHARTER Mike Mertens, CEO, DARIAH.EU @Woodchivalry www.dariah.eu SciDataCon, Denver, 13.09.2016

Overview Research infrastructures in European Context What is ‘Digitally-enabled arts & humanities research’ DARIAH as idea & brief history DARIAH as Organization Overall Goals Data Re-Use Charter

Hold Firm the Good! „Little Baller Rebound Toughness Drill“(https://www.flickr.com/photos/70609370@N00/5545245043/) by clappstar (https://www.flickr.com/photos/clappstar/) is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/) 3

Research Infrastructure - Definition “Research Infrastructures, including the associated human resources, covers major equipment or sets of instruments, in addition to knowledge- containing resources such as collections, archives and databanks.” The European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) Report, 2010. Some 25% of EU Research Infrastructure use is by NGOs and Industry – they are meant to foster innovation and research excellence

‘Digital Humanities’?! “The intersection of new computational approaches to traditional humanistic scholarship.” http://whatisdigitalhumanities.com/ “The entire spectrum of disciplines that apply, develop and research digital humanities methods and technology. These include art history, cultural studies, history, image processing, language and literature studies, manuscripts studies, musicology etc.” European Association for Digital Humanities http://www.allc.org/ What is digital humanities link offers definitions from a ‘day of DH’ 2009-2015. There are 817 definitions. Also includes reflection on data from physical cultural heritage. Close and distant reading.

DARIAH as Idea By researchers, for researchers De-centralised, bottom-up Open and developing research environment “Architecture of Participation” Cross-border, interdisciplinary Deep liaison with Cultural Heritage & Memory Institution domain (GLAMs – Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums) Designed also for broader impacts – “Inclusive, innovative and reflective societies”

Quick History of DARIAH 2006: DARIAH included in the ESFRI Roadmap 2008 – 2011: ‘Preparatory Phase’ project, Preparing DARIAH 2011 – 2013: ‘Transition Phase’, establishing the DARIAH-ERIC, integrating national activities 2014: DARIAH-ERIC status 2016: ESFRI Landmark 2019: DARIAH as “going concern” ESFRI, the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures Explain purpose of ERIC – inclusive and innovative societies: 7

DARIAH-EU Goals Broadening Humanities participation in digital methods Deepening skills base & training Addressing concerns of new postgraduates and ECRs Diversify notions of research output and impact Accelerate Humanities research Enhance reflection and methods through digital affordances Create self-maintaining framework for new tools and services A market of exchange value for innovation, expertise and national investment in Humanities research Support regional and cross-border collaboration Our goals are realised by our 17 Members across Europe and powered by 19 working groups in diverse areas of the digital humanties

Network of Services Open access archive Academic blogging From our member contributions and national road maps: we have 17 full members, with three countries partner status. we cover the council of Europe Scholarly events 9

Spectrum of affiliated projects Archaeologists Medieval and Modern Historians Holocaust Researchers The international network of archives represented by EHRI highly relevant to procedures to make access uniform; cultural heritage data from the last two Ris becoming increasingly important; cendari has shown that the question of augmenting digital documents with annotations is a live one. We can deepen and make more mutual the relationship between archives, colletion holders and researchers. Heritage Conservation 10

The DARIAH Data Re-Use Charter Digital representations from and data originating from Cultural Heritage Institutions are core to Humanities Research. These include: scans, 3D-representations, metadata, transcriptions, repositories, annotations. The Charter identifies, for each research partnership, the relevant type of data, and defines the type of license, enrichment, dissemination and quality control that will be implemented for their use and re-use. Challenges of access, uncertain or heterogeneous terms of re-use, lack of persistence for enhancements on and of digital sources, a patchwork of institutions within different jurisdictions and funding arrangements, lack of visibility for Digital Heritage Labs and Memory Insitutions.

So, this is a mock-up of how the charter would look on the web, it’s purpose and who would interact with it.

The DARIAH Data Re-Use Charter Via the web interface, you can: Browse for partners (other researcher(s), memory institution, digital heritage lab, etc.) View their general re-use principles (licensing, data hosting, quality assurance). Establish initial contact

The five symbols represent scholars, research institutions, cultural heritage labs, GLAMs and data-hosting institutions.

The DARIAH Data Re-Use Charter Through the Charter, as a scholar you would be able to: Register according to an institutional or individual profile Discover collections, annotations, scans, 3D objects relevant to your research Gather information on relevant topics such as licensing Gain visibility and recognition in the international research ecosystem As a Cultural Heritage Lab or Memory Institution, you would be more easily able to: Assess the research impact of your collections (broadly defined) Augment, enhance and extend your holdings for future researchers and public use Offer digital objects that are ‘Digital Humanities Ready’.

Make you slightly hip and cool as a data-sharer.

General challenges Ensuring future new directions for humanist scholars Connecting more to the digital citizen & humanizing the digital - Public engagement beyond “crowd-sourcing” Greater diversity of assessed research outputs Researching digitally, not just researching with digital Relevance – does what we do also make sense to funders & the public? 17

DARIAH-EU Coordination Office dariah-info@dariah.eu Mike Mertens mike.mertens@dariah.eu