1 / 32

DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle

DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle. Digital Curation Program Development. Nancy Y McGovern Research Assistant Professor, ICPSR. Topics. Scope of a digital curation program Community context Three-legged stool for digital curation

Download Presentation

DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle Digital Curation Program Development Nancy Y McGovern Research Assistant Professor, ICPSR

  2. Topics • Scope of a digital curation program • Community context • Three-legged stool for digital curation • Stages of program development

  3. Program Scope Data CurationDigital Preservation + Digital Curation

  4. COMMUNITYCONTEXT

  5. Community Documents Trusted Digital Repositories: Attributes and Responsibilities (RLG/OCLC) http://www.oclc.org/programs/ourwork/past/trustedrep/repositories.pdf OAIS Reference Model (CCSDS) [ISO 14721] http://public.ccsds.org/publications/archive/650x0b1.pdf

  6. More Community Documents ISO Digital Archive Audit and Certification Working Group – public draft pending http://wiki.digitalrepositoryauditandcertification.org/bin/view Builds on: Trustworthy Repositories Audit & Certification (TRAC): Criteria and Checklist, 2007 http://www.crl.edu/content.asp?l1=13&l2=58&l3=162&l4=91

  7. The Three-Legged Stool for a Digital Curation Program Organizational Infrastructure Technological Infrastructure Resources Framework $$$$ Adapted from: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  8. (how) (how much) (what) Adapted from: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  9. Organizational Infrastructure • Best framework: TDR • Best reflected in: • mission • policy development and implementation • long-term planning • institutional commitment • participation by Producers and Consumers Adapted from: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  10. Attributes of TDR • OAIS Compliance • Administrative Responsibility • Organizational Viability • Financial Sustainability • Technological and Procedural Suitability • System Security • Procedural Accountability

  11. Role of Policies Developing policies: • Defines institutional commitment • Demonstrates compliance • Manages expectations • Defines issues and challenges • Raises awareness • Identifies roles and responsibilities

  12. Policy Continuum Organizational High-level organizational policies Reflect the intentions of the organization Lower-level organizational policies Document the decisions of the organization Individual policy statements Regulate the actions of the organization Encoded policy statements Translate organization’s policies into actions Technological Source: McGovern, 2008

  13. TechnologicalInfrastructure • Most comprehensive framework: OAIS • Combination of: • hardware and software • packaging and re-packaging • network, security, and services • functions and workflow • procedures, protocols, documentation • technical and curation skills Adapted from: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  14. OAIS Reference Model Source: version of high-level OAIS diagram designed for DPM workshop, 2003

  15. Avoid Technology Pogo Stick Source: McGovern, DPM Workshop, 2005

  16. ResourcesFramework $$$$ • No community-based articulation comparable to TDR or OAIS – yet… • Includes: • staff, training, and development • technology and related developments • outreach and designated community support • other Adapted from: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  17. Blue Ribbon Task Force on Sustainable Preservation and Access

  18. LIFE² Cost Model

  19. Resource Planning Steps • Identify cost categories • Identify common cost centers • Calculate costs • Secure resources

  20. Secure Resources • Get additional funding • Recover costs • Reduce expenses • Reallocate

  21. Example: ICPSR Model …with virtually all activities tied to curation

  22. Connecting the 3 Legs Source: McGovern, 2005

  23. Transparency and Compliance … Source: McGovern, 2005

  24. Five Organizational Stages • Acknowledge:understanding that digital curation is a shared concern • Act:initiating digital preservation projects • Consolidate:segueing from projects to programs • Institutionalize:incorporating the larger environment and rationalizing programs • Externalize:embracing inter-institutional collaboration and dependency Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  25. Stage 1: Key Indicators Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  26. Stage 2: Key Indicators Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  27. Stage 3: Key Indicators Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  28. Stage 4: Key Indicators Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  29. Stage 5: Key Indicators Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  30. Using the Stages The 5 Stages: • identify steps for developing an organization’s digital (defines a maturity model) • provide a way of communicating about digital preservation development • enable measuring progress towards programmatic digital preservation goals Source: Kenney and McGovern, 2003

  31. Types of Planning and Review • Durable Access Planning (ongoing) • Self-assessment (internal process) • Audit (external review by peers) • Development plans (result of audit) • Certification (future option?)

  32. Source: DPM Workshop, 2003

More Related