Are institutional repositories set up and resourced to preserve their
contents over the long term? Potentially contradictory evidence has
emerged from my various questions related to this topic.
You may remember that on the Digital Curation Blog and the JISC-
Repositories JISCmail list on 23 February 2009, I referred to some
feedback from two Ideas (here and here) on the JISC Ideascale site
last year, and asked 3 further questions relating to repository
managers’ views of the intentions of their repositories. Given a low
rate of response to the original posting (which asked for votes on
the original Ideascale site), I followed this up on the JISC-
Repositories list (but through oversight, not on the blog), offering
the same 3 questions in a Doodle poll. The results of the several
different votes appear contradictory, although I hope we can glean
something useful from them.
I should emphasise that this is definitely not methodologically sound
research; in fact, there are methodological holes here large enough
to drive a Mack truck through! Nevertheless, we may be able to glean
something useful. To recap, here are the various questions I asked,
with a brief description of their audience, plus the outcomes:
a) Audience, JISC-selected “expert” group of developers, repository
managers and assorted luminaries. Second point is the same audience,
a little later.
- Idea: “The repository should be a full OAIS [CCSDS 2002]
preservation system.” Result 3 votes in favour, 16 votes against, net
-13 votes.
- Idea: “Repository should aspire to make contents accessible and
usable over the medium term.” Result: 13 votes in favour, 1 vote
against, net +12 votes.
b) Audience JISC-Repositories list and Digital Curation Blog
readership. Three Ideas on Ideascale, with the results shown (note,
respondents did not need to identify themselves):
- My repository does not aim for accessibility and/or usability of
its contents beyond the short term (say 3 years). Result 2 votes in
favour, none against.
- My repository aims for accessibility and/or usability of its
contents for the medium term (say 4 to 10 years). Result 5 votes in
favour, none against.
- My repository aims for accessibility and/or usability of its
contents for the long term (say greater than 10 years). Result 8
votes in favour, 1 vote against, net +7 votes.
A further comment was left on the Digital Curation Blog, to the
effect that since most repository managers were mainly seeing deposit
of PDFs, they felt (perhaps naively) sufficiently confident to assume
these would be useable for 10 years.
c) Audience JISC-Repositories list. Three exclusive options on a
Doodle poll, exact wording as in (c), no option to vote against any
option, with the results shown below (note, Doodle asks respondents
to provide a name and most did, with affiliation, although there is
no validation of the name supplied):
- My repository does not aim for accessibility and/or usability of
its contents beyond the short term (say 3 years). Result 1 vote in
favour.
- My repository aims for accessibility and/or usability of its
contents for the medium term (say 4 to 10 years). Result 0 votes in
favour.
- My repository aims for accessibility and/or usability of its
contents for the long term (say greater than 10 years). Result 22
votes in favour.
I guess the first thing is to notice the differences between the 3
sets of results. The first would imply that long term is definitely
off the agenda, and medium term is reasonable. The second is 50-50
split between long term and the short/medium term combination. The
third is overwhelmingly in favour of long term (as defined).
By now you can also see at least some of the methodological problems,
including differing audiences, differing anonymity, and differing
wording (firstly in relation to the use of the term “OAIS”, and
secondly in relation to the timescales attached to short, medium and
long term). So, you can draw your own conclusions, including that
none can be drawn from the available data!
Note, I would not draw any conclusions from the actual numerical
votes on their own, but perhaps we can from the values within each
group. However, ever hasty if not foolhardy, here are my own
tentative interpretations:
- First, even “experts” are alarmed at the potential implications of
the term “OAIS”.
- Second, repository managers don’t believe that keeping resources
accessible and/or usable for 10 years (in the context of the types of
material they currently manage in repositories) will give them major
problems.
- Third, repository managers don’t identify “accessibility and/or
usability of its contents for the long term” as implying the
mechanisms of an OAIS (this is perhaps rather a stretch given my
second conclusion).
So, where to next? I’m thinking of asking some further questions,
again of the JISC-Repositories list and the audience of the Digital
Curation Blog. However, this time I’m asking for feedback on the
questions, before setting up the Doodle poll. My draft texts are
- My repository is resourced and is intended to keep its contents
accessible and usable for the long term, through potential technology
and community changes, implying at least some of the requirements of
an OAIS.
- My repository is resourced and is intended to keep its contents
accessible and usable unless there are significant changes in
technology or community, ie it does not aim to be an OAIS.
- Some other choice, please explain in free text…
Are those reasonable questions? Or perhaps, please help me improve them!
This post is made both to the Digital Curation Blog and to the JISC-
repositories list...
OAIS: CCSDS. (2002). Reference Model for an Open Archival Information
System (OAIS). Retrieved from http://public.ccsds.org/publications/
archive/650x0b1.pdf.
--
Chris Rusbridge
Director, Digital Curation Centre
Email: [log in to unmask] Phone 0131 6513823
University of Edinburgh
Appleton Tower, Crichton St, Edinburgh EH8 9LE
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
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