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New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Sustainable Economic Models

Hedstrom's position paper on sustainable economic models for long-term digital preservation for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-hedstrom.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by Charles Humphrey

Position paper addresses the question, "Given a life cycle perspective, what are the key issues of long-term preservation, data management and the curation of data in the context of new partnerships, new organizational models and sustainable economic models?" for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-humphrey.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Three Big Ones for the NSF Workshop

John King's position paper discusses "access and agency," "productivity implications," and unknowns of data management for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-king.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Digital Data Curation and Management

Lust and McCue position paper on organizational models for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-lust.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: The Coming Metadata Deluge

James Myers' position paper on the coming metadata deluge for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-metadata.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: A Statement for the Management of Massive Datasets: New Partnerships

Jim Mullins position paper for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-mullins.pdf

 
   

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by Frank Rack

Comments by Frank Rack—formerly Director, Ocean Drilling Programs, Joint Oceanographic Institutions; currently, Executive Director, ANDRILL (Antarctic geological Drilling) Program for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-rack.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by Mark Sandler

Sandler identifies three issues in the future of data curation: archiving, aggregation, and transparency for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-sandler.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by MacKenzie Smith

Smith identifies two aspects of scientific and engineering data that relate to academic libraries: data as primary source material available for further research and experimentation, using particular datasets or groups of datasets; and data as part of "enhanced publications" that form the basis of modern, digital scholarly communication for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-smith.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by Eric F. Van de Velde

Position paper on data preservation as an essential part of research projects for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-vandevelde.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Position Paper by Todd Vision

Position paper discusses the roles of scientific publishers and libraries, the value of raw data, and the burden of metadata curation for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-vision.pdf

 
 

New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe: Issues in Digital Data Curation Leading Us to the Need for New Partnerships

Walters identifies three issues effecting the growth and future of digital data curation: 1) Culture and policy frameworks; 2) Technology integration and data curation tools; and 3) Economic sustainability of our partnership and consortial models for the September 2006 ARL Workshop on New Collaborative Relationships: The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe held at the National Science Foundation.

pdf nsfworkshop2006-walters.pdf

 
 

Scholarly Communication and Epistemic Cultures

Keynote Address, delivered at "Scholarly Tribes and Tribulations: How Tradition and Technology Are Driving Disciplinary Change," Washington, DC, October 17, 2003

pdf scholarly-tribes-cronin-17oct03.pdf

 
 

The Humanist: "Dances with Wolves" or "Bowls Alone"?

This paper discusses informal scholarly communication in the humanities; ways in which information technology can influence the content of scholarly communication without necessarily changing its outward forms; and an emerging genre of scholarly communication in the humanities, one that is native to the Web, and raises some interesting challenges for the disciplines. Presented at "Scholarly Tribes and Tribulations: How Tradition and Technology Are Driving Disciplinary Change," October 17, 2003.

pdf scholarly-tribes-unsworth-17oct03.pdf

 
 

Fall Forum 2006: Rights Management for Public Access: Engaging and Supporting Faculty at MIT

Proceedings of the 2006 ARL/CNI Fall Forum, "Improving Access to Publicly Funded Research: Policy Issues and Strategies."

ppt ff06-wolpert.ppt

 
 

Fall Forum 2006: Universities Rethink Publishing

Proceedings of the 2006 ARL/CNI Fall Forum, "Improving Access to Publicly Funded Research: Policy Issues and Strategies." Sarah E. Thomas presents on the DPubS Digital Publishing System.

ppt ff06-thomas.ppt

 
   

Membership Meeting 2002 (Spring): Nuts & Bolts of Fundraising: Summary Notes

Proceedings of the 140th ARL Membership Meeting, May 2002. This session focused on practical issues facing directors relatively new to fundraising.

pdf mm02sp-fundraising.pdf

 
 

Membership Meeting 1986 (Spring): On the ARL Library Index

Paper prepared by Kendon Stubbs for the 108th ARL Membership Meeting. A critique and plan for improvement of the ARL Statistics.

pdf mm86sp-stubbs.pdf

 
                     
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