Small organisations and cultural institutions – a digital future?

Author:

Spence Jaqueline

Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to examine how technology presents both problems and opportunities for the historian, the researcher, small organisations, and cultural heritage institutions. Ways of safeguarding historical material in digital form are suggested, and the role of cultural heritage bodies as managers of sustainable digital collections is examined.Design/methodology/approachThe tools available for online access to historical material are discussed, with some comparison made between current efforts on access provision and long‐term preservation.FindingsAt present, access to historical material in digital form is often given precedence over its preservation. This could have potentially serious long‐term implications. Lack of funding for the traditional collecting bodies suggests that new mechanisms for dealing with digital archive collections need to be found. Managing digital material from its creation moves responsibility back to owners, but can provide a platform for effective transfer to new custodians at the appropriate time. Small organisations can participate, increasing the volume and diversity of available material, enriching the base of knowledge upon which history is created.Research limitations/implicationsFurther research is required into possible models to enable seamless transfer through the custodial chain. Limitation: lack of quantitative analysis of existing and planned digital preservation projects.Originality/valueThe paper challenges the status quo and sets out some radical ideas concerning the creation, acquisition, management and preservation of digital records, and the roles of the key stakeholders in the cultural and historical domains.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems

Reference11 articles.

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3. Brand, S. (2000), The Clock of the Long Now, Phoenix, London.

4. Crace, J. (2003), “Digital dark age”, The Guardian, 18 March, available at: http://education.guardian.co.uk/egweekly/story/0,915847,00.html (accessed 11 July 2005).

5. Dalbello, M. (2004), “Institutional shaping of cultural memory: digital library as environment for textual transmission”, Library Quarterly, Vol. 74 No. 3, pp. 263‐98.

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