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Are Archives the New Libraries? John MacColl, European Director OCLC Research (with a little help from my friends) Nationaal Archief 18 September 2008
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I will cover … Missions and modes: discussion Recent trends Boundary shift Drivers: scale; exposure Controversial imperatives Recruiting the users New methods: quality trade-offs; repurposing
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Of growing interest?
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What do research libraries do? Collect published materials used in support of teaching and research Provide discovery tools for their own and external collections Provide delivery of materials via their own circulation service, and resource-sharing collaborative schemes Provide specialised collections - ‘Special Collections’ - in support of research, containing rare and unique materials - a mix of published (early and rare editions) and unpublished (manuscript treasures and literary archives)
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What do archives do? Provide depositories for historically important unpublished materials - papers and records Store official records of organisations, including their own parent organisation (eg in universities) Store the records of companies in their region or otherwise associated Store official records of governments and government agencies Store the papers of important scholars Store the papers of creative writers and other artists
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How do libraries do it? By organising essentially tractable, post-coordinated and well-defined materials (print and microfilm) in which scholars (from undergraduates through to graduate students and researchers) make new associations which deepen their scholarship and can create new knowledge By giving the appearance of comprehensively describing the published materials they collect By placing unassociated documents into new collections By being explicit
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How do archives do it? By storing largely intractable, pre-coordinated and undefined materials, in which researchers can make discoveries and map new knowledge By abstracting their deposited materials at a level sufficient to allow researchers to have access By mapping the hierarchy of their deposited materials By respecting the original historical order and place of documents By means of implicit promise
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Archives Libraries Low High Control Comprehensive description Hierarchical mapping Soc Sci/Humanities research Scholarly development Original research Low High Spectra
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Archival principles (Respect des fonds) Provenance Respect for original order
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Mutual education Archives Libraries Place of historicism Rapid processing Exposure methods Hierarchical description
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Whose mission is creeping? Libraries are waking up to the power of their unique assets Many of these are in hidden collections Archivists are better at revelation
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Gravitational pull: University model Google (Worldcat?) Library Archives
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Yale University
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Mass digitised textual corpora Is Google Books a library or an archive? Published material, so like a library Hierarchical structure (title, chapters, sections), so like an archive How should librarians present collections within large-scale corpora? Respect des fonds?
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The Greene-Meissner contribution ‘Cataloguing is a function which is not working’ Forget item level description “Insanity is when you do things the way you’ve always done them, but expect a different result” (Einstein and/or Emerson) ‘Good enough’ beats perfection Hail ‘the demise of the completeness syndrome’ (Ross Atkinson)
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Concentration A web-scale presence Mobilise data Diffusion Disclosure of links, data and services Scale matters
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Mass digitisation of special collections
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Fulfilment?
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Fulfilment!
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Access vs preservation …
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Access wins! No one has been throwing away originals … so preservation needs are best served by themNo one has been throwing away originals … so preservation needs are best served by them Only by surfacing presently ignored collections can we justify their preservationOnly by surfacing presently ignored collections can we justify their preservation Our brave new world shows we can go back and do it againOur brave new world shows we can go back and do it again
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Selection has already been done Don’t spend time selecting items to digitiseDon’t spend time selecting items to digitise Capture materials as accessionedCapture materials as accessioned For important collections, capture it allFor important collections, capture it all For others, sample and allow user interest to guide your choicesFor others, sample and allow user interest to guide your choices Capture on demandCapture on demand Capture ‘signposts’ and devote more attention when/where warrantedCapture ‘signposts’ and devote more attention when/where warranted Woodcut from Sebastian Brant, “Stultifera…” The ship of fooles… 1570 University of Edinburgh Library
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Handle once (then iterate) Handle incoming items once for both description and digitisationHandle incoming items once for both description and digitisation Compromise on image resolution and metadata as needed to achieve throughput requirementsCompromise on image resolution and metadata as needed to achieve throughput requirements Create a single unified processCreate a single unified process Let usage guide further effortsLet usage guide further efforts
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Programmes not projects Forget ‘special projects’ — it’s long past time to make this a basic part of our everyday work!Forget ‘special projects’ — it’s long past time to make this a basic part of our everyday work! Digital capture must be embedded in our basic procedures, budgeting, etc.Digital capture must be embedded in our basic procedures, budgeting, etc. Figure out a way to fund it yourself and you’ll figure out a way to do it cheaperFigure out a way to fund it yourself and you’ll figure out a way to do it cheaper
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Change in Photoduplication Policy As of March 17, 2008, the Ransom Center's policy regarding research copies of items from its collections will change. We will no longer furnish photocopies. For all requests received on or after March 17, our default procedure will be to make digital scans of the originals and furnish PDF files (72 dpi) either by email or on CD-ROM. For patrons who are unable to make use of PDFs, printouts will be available in lieu of digital files. For publication purposes, high-resolution images will still be furnished on the same terms as before. Harry Ransom Center, UT Austin Scan on demand
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Engage your community in description Do not describe everything in painstaking detailDo not describe everything in painstaking detail Start with basic description, then…Start with basic description, then… …allow serious researchers to contact you for more detail, and……allow serious researchers to contact you for more detail, and… …engage your user community with adding to the descriptions…engage your user community with adding to the descriptions
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January 16 th 2008: LC photographs on Flickr
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24 hours later Exposure
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Impact: exposure Flickr: Top 50 LC: Top 6000
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Contributions How to lose control
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Go with it
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Feeding back into our work 89 records updated
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Quality vs quantity: quantity wins! The perfect has been the enemy of the possibleThe perfect has been the enemy of the possible Achieving excellence can have a substantial costAchieving excellence can have a substantial cost Any access is better than none at allAny access is better than none at all Instead of measuring cataloguer/archivist output we should be measuring impact on usersInstead of measuring cataloguer/archivist output we should be measuring impact on users
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Discovery happens elsewhere People don’t discover our content by coming to our lovingly crafted web sitesPeople don’t discover our content by coming to our lovingly crafted web sites We must expose our content to web search engines and hubs like FlickrWe must expose our content to web search engines and hubs like Flickr
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Then: Users built workflow around libraries and archives Now: Libraries and archives must build services around user workflow Discovery happens elsewhere
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“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.” —Charles —Charles Darwin Image: Auckland Museum
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Image: informationarchitects.jp/web-trend-map-2008-beta/ Be where the users are
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Combine approaches
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Funding for streamlined processes
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Are archives the new libraries? Research libraries are increasingly concerned with hidden collections of unique materials Archives are the new edge of research libraries
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Conclusion? Fusion
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The End John MacColl maccollj@oclc.org OCLC Research
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