The Digital Archives Handbook : A Guide to Creation, Management, and Preservation

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The Digital Archives Handbook : A Guide to Creation, Management, and Preservation

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 270 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781538122389
  • DDC分類 025.3414

Full Description

The Digital Archives Handbook provides archivists a roadmap to create and care for digital archives. Written by archival experts and practitioners, Purcell brings together theoretical and practical approaches to creating, managing, and preserving digital archives. The first section is focused on processes and practices, including chapters on acquisitions, appraisal, arrangement, description, delivery, preservation, forensics, curation, and intellectual property. The second section is focused on digital collections and specific environments where archivists are managing digital collections. These chapters review digital collections in categories including performing arts, oral history, architectural and design records, congressional collections, and email.

The book discuss the core components of digital archives—the technological infrastructure that provides storage, access, and long-term preservation; the people or organizations that create or donate digital material to archives programs, as well as the researchers use them; and the digital collections themselves, full of significant research content in a variety of formats with a multitude of research possibilities. The chapters emphasize that the people and the collections that make up digital archives are just as important as the technology.

Also highlighted are the importance of donors and creators of digital archives. Building digital archives parallels the cycle of donor work—planning, cultivation, and stewardship. During each stage, archivists work with donors to ensure that the digital collections will be arranged, described, preserved, and made accessible for years to come.

Archivists must take proactive and informed actions to build valuable digital collections. Knowing where digital materials come from, how those materials were created, what materials are important, what formats or topical areas are included, and how to serve those collections to researchers in the long term is central to archival work. This handbook is designed to generate new discussions about how archivists of the twenty-first century can overcome current challenges and chart paths that anticipate, rather than merely react to, future donations of digital archives.

Contents

Introduction, by Aaron D. Purcell

Part I: Processes and Practices

Chapter 1: Acquisitions, Appraisal, and Arrangement
Lisa Calahan

Chapter 2: Description and Delivery
Dorothy Waugh

Chapter 3: Digital Preservation
Bertram Lyons

Chapter 4: Digital Forensics and Curation
Martin Gengenbach

Chapter 5: Contracts, Intellectual Property, and Privacy
Heather Briston

Part II: Collections and Environments

Chapter 6: Performing Arts Collections
Vincent J. Novara

Chapter 7: Oral History Collections
Douglas A. Boyd

Chapter 8: Architectural and Design Collections
Aliza Leventhal

Chapter 9: Congressional Collections
Danielle Emerling

Chapter 10: Email
Matthew Farrell

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