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apologies for any cross-posting

The following seminar being held in UNESCO headquarters in Paris in February 
next year may be of interest to members of the list. There is no fee for 
attendance but registration is required. Further details below.

Neil


Seminar on Digital Preservation of the record of Science- state of the art
Paris, France, February 14-15 2002

Introduction 

ICSTI, the International Council for Scientific and Technical Information, 
has been encouraging discussion, debate and actions on ensuring that the 
record of Science continues to preserved. With the progressive movement 
towards digital production and distribution of scientific information there 
is a risk that the record represented by this material will be lost. Although 
many of the parties concerned with digital production and distribution have 
taken measures to preserve the material the effort is diffused and overall 
co-ordination may be necessary. 

In February 2000 ICSTI held a seminar, with support from UNESCO, during which 
the issues were discussed and contact was established between a number of 
groups active in the area of digital preservation. It was suggested then that 
a further meeting be held at a later date to review the situation and to 
formulate any actions deemed necessary. 

Many other bodies in the Science community, such as CODATA, IUPAP, ICSU, 
interests from the international standards arena, those concerned with the 
creation of "open archives" as well as the scientific publishing community 
both the traditional and the newer actors, are all involved in one sense or 
another with preservation. In addition the library community and the 
representatives of the history of science community are intimately concerned.

While, as noted, many activities and initiatives are under way and research 
programmes are in progress, the cost of digital preservation can be 
significant and the need to avoid duplication of effort is paramount. The 
need for a federal approach to both the preservation process and access to 
the archives has been suggested; this requires co-ordination. 

The objectives of the meeting in February are:

· To ensure all the interests in digital preservation in Science are aware of 
all current activities in the field

· To evaluate the needs for co-ordination of the efforts.

· To create any necessary structures and work programmes to ensure 
co-ordination of the activities. 

The proposed meeting, which has received the support of UNESCO, will deal 
with the following issues, and any other topics the attendees may raise. 

· What are the varieties of S&T information that must and will be archived

· What are the likely future uses for this information 

· What is the minimum amount of information (data fields) needed to locate 
and identify different kinds of information

· Who is creating what kinds of standards related to location and basic 
identification

· What kinds of "business" and "information" models are relevant in a 
situation where there might be multiple owners, managers, driving forces and 
multiple standards (or what is a federated model of archiving and archiving 
standards)

· If a federated model is not appropriate, what model is

· What are the appropriate structures to get the various groups involved in 
digital preservation to work together to develop workable solutions (assuming 
there is agreement that workable solutions are needed).

· Specifically - what additional issues related to scientific factual data 
need to be addressed.

· How will future access to digitally archived information be arranged

· What are the common issues with preservation of cultural archives, apart 
from the record of Science and how can these be accommodated

Who should attend?

The topics to be discussed will be of interest to:
· authors and publishers of scientific information, in particular developers 
of newer digital methods;
· those concerned with the short and long term storage and distribution of 
this material, librarians and archivists; 
· developers of computer systems for digital archiving; 
· those involved in the creation of national and international standards, as 
well as subject or data-type oriented codes of practise;
· national and international representatives from the Science community, 
specifically the professional and other bodies with interests in science 
subjects; 
· representatives of the scientific data community.

In addition, representatives of the history of Science and those concerned 
with the preservation of cultural artefacts in published form should be 
present. 

The Venue

The meeting will be held at the premises of UNESCO, with the kind permission 
of the Assistant Director General for Science. 

There is no fee for attendance but neither UNESCO nor ICSTI is in a position 
to offer support for travel or accommodation. 


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Programme

Thursday Feb 14 2002

09.00 Registration
09.30 Welcome - UNESCO representative

09.45   Introduction            Kurt Molholm, President ICSTI

10.15   The CODATA interest,    CODATA activities and developments
William Anderson, US Representative, CODATA Data Archiving Working Group

10.45   Questions/Clarifications
10.50   Coffee

11.15 ICSU activities and developments
Sir Roger Elliot, Chairman, ICSU Press

11.45 Digital Preservation; overview of current developments
Gail Hodge, Independent Consultant
12.30 IUPAP Initiatives, report from the Lyon Workshop
    Franck Laloë and/or Marty Blume
13.00   Lunch

14.00   STM Members; viewpoint and developments 
Bob Campbell, Blackwell Publishers 

14.30   Developments in related fields
Metadata and pre-print archives Herbert van de Sompel, British Library
Deposit Libraries           TBA
Digital Object Identifiers      Norman Paskin, DOI Foundation.

15.30   Tea

16.00   Specific Examples and issues

        JSTOR                   Kevin Guthrie, JSTOR

        Preservation of Cultural materials  UNESCO representative

17.00 Discussion and Close of day 1

 Feb 15 2002

10.00   Review of Day 1

10.30   Research Projects underway and planned  
Neil Beagrie, UK JISC Digital Preservation Focus

11.00   Coffee

11.30 Next steps - 
Standardisation activities          Gail Hodge
Metadata and preservation   Deborah Woodyard, 
British Library
Liaison between different interest groups   Sally Morris, APLSP

Guidelines for digital preservation actions:    TBA
    The requirements for guidelines

12.30   Lunch

14.00   Proposed Actions
Establishing Working parties:
    Guidelines development
    Liaison between different interests
    Others 

16.00   Tea

16.30 Timetable for further actions and wrap-up

17.30 Close


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Registration:

Please complete the attached application form and send it by email to 
[log in to unmask] or 
fax to +33 1 42 15 12 62
 Seminar on Digital Preservation of the record of Science- state of the art
Paris, France, February 14-15 2002

Application Form for attendance


Name:……………………………………………………………………..

Organisation:………………………………………………………………..

Address 1:………………………………………………………………………

Address 2:……………………………………………………………………….

City:……………………………………………………………………………….

Country:…………………………………………………………………………..


Email:………………………………………………………………………………

Telephone:………………………………………………………………………….

Fax:…………………………………………………………………………………

Will attend the seminar in Paris, representing the following interest(s) in 
digital preservation:

………………………………………………………………………………………………….




Confirmation of the reservation  will be made to the above email address 
unless an alternative address is specified below:

……………………………………………………………………………………..


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