Integrating preservation into librarian workflows

The core mission of libraries is to ensure perpetual access to the record of knowledge. As a review of the NASIG webinar (formerly North American Serials Interest Group), ‘Integrating Preservation into Librarian Workflows’, by Jill Emery and Sunshine Carter, this article examines working models cons...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michelle Polchow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2023-05-01
Series:Insights: The UKSG Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.insights.uksg.org/index.php/up-j-i/article/view/614
_version_ 1797804406991749120
author Michelle Polchow
author_facet Michelle Polchow
author_sort Michelle Polchow
collection DOAJ
description The core mission of libraries is to ensure perpetual access to the record of knowledge. As a review of the NASIG webinar (formerly North American Serials Interest Group), ‘Integrating Preservation into Librarian Workflows’, by Jill Emery and Sunshine Carter, this article examines working models constructed to sustain perpetual access for their institutional communities. In reflecting on these data-intensive practices, both presenters now recognize that previously impactful collection development business decisions were being made in the dark. Reviewing the webinar also reveals that this issue of preservation access has two critically distinct aspects, which should not be conflated as interchangeable. One is concerned with long-term preservation and the other addresses a library’s ability to provide post-cancellation access to its user community, given budgetary or physical space constraints. The following is an analysis of how effective the processes explored in the webinar are in addressing both post-cancellation access and long-term perpetual access goals. Based on a 2018 NASIG survey, results indicated that many organizations in scholarly communications lacked preservation policies. In June 2022, as a result of the survey, NASIG released the model digital preservation policy as a template to guide consequential and explicit decision-making by addressing issues including scope, roles, responsibilities, tools and techniques. These policy issues are important for librarians to understand before negotiating content licenses, in sustaining long-term discovery and access, and when developing collaborative access frameworks to address collection development and maintenance challenges.
first_indexed 2024-03-13T05:36:44Z
format Article
id doaj.art-97aaa725443a4b948c935988b964ed4d
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2048-7754
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T05:36:44Z
publishDate 2023-05-01
publisher Ubiquity Press
record_format Article
series Insights: The UKSG Journal
spelling doaj.art-97aaa725443a4b948c935988b964ed4d2023-06-14T07:30:15ZengUbiquity PressInsights: The UKSG Journal2048-77542023-05-0136111110.1629/uksg.614354Integrating preservation into librarian workflowsMichelle Polchow0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4805-8063Electronic Resources Librarian, Content Support Services, University of California, DavisThe core mission of libraries is to ensure perpetual access to the record of knowledge. As a review of the NASIG webinar (formerly North American Serials Interest Group), ‘Integrating Preservation into Librarian Workflows’, by Jill Emery and Sunshine Carter, this article examines working models constructed to sustain perpetual access for their institutional communities. In reflecting on these data-intensive practices, both presenters now recognize that previously impactful collection development business decisions were being made in the dark. Reviewing the webinar also reveals that this issue of preservation access has two critically distinct aspects, which should not be conflated as interchangeable. One is concerned with long-term preservation and the other addresses a library’s ability to provide post-cancellation access to its user community, given budgetary or physical space constraints. The following is an analysis of how effective the processes explored in the webinar are in addressing both post-cancellation access and long-term perpetual access goals. Based on a 2018 NASIG survey, results indicated that many organizations in scholarly communications lacked preservation policies. In June 2022, as a result of the survey, NASIG released the model digital preservation policy as a template to guide consequential and explicit decision-making by addressing issues including scope, roles, responsibilities, tools and techniques. These policy issues are important for librarians to understand before negotiating content licenses, in sustaining long-term discovery and access, and when developing collaborative access frameworks to address collection development and maintenance challenges.https://account.insights.uksg.org/index.php/up-j-i/article/view/614academic librarieselectronic resources licensingpost-cancellation accessdigital preservationperpetual accessopen access
spellingShingle Michelle Polchow
Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
Insights: The UKSG Journal
academic libraries
electronic resources licensing
post-cancellation access
digital preservation
perpetual access
open access
title Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
title_full Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
title_fullStr Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
title_full_unstemmed Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
title_short Integrating preservation into librarian workflows
title_sort integrating preservation into librarian workflows
topic academic libraries
electronic resources licensing
post-cancellation access
digital preservation
perpetual access
open access
url https://account.insights.uksg.org/index.php/up-j-i/article/view/614
work_keys_str_mv AT michellepolchow integratingpreservationintolibrarianworkflows