A Case Study of the Librarian-Initiated Publications Discovery Activities in State Level Digital Depositories in the United States

This article describes the novel phenomenon of librarian-initiated publications discovery (LIPD) in state-level digital depositories in the United States. LIPD is a series of actions taken by digital depository librarians to discover and inspect government Web sites and select Web content qualifying...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chi-Shiou Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Taiwan University 2008-12-01
Series:Journal of Library and Information Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jlis.lis.ntu.edu.tw/files/journal/j28-4.pdf
Description
Summary:This article describes the novel phenomenon of librarian-initiated publications discovery (LIPD) in state-level digital depositories in the United States. LIPD is a series of actions taken by digital depository librarians to discover and inspect government Web sites and select Web content qualifying as government publications for inclusion in the state depositories. In a current popular model in which states employ OCLC Digital Archive™ for the depositories, the power of content selection has shifted from government agencies (content producers) to digital depositories. This study systematically documented and compared the LIPD actions in four case states and developed a LIPD process model for descriptive and analytic purposes. It also discusses the impacts and challenges facing the changing practices in preserving government information as historical record. (Article content in Chinese with English abstract)
ISSN:1606-7509
1606-7509