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Full Description
Digital heritage can mean many things, from building a database on Egyptian textiles to interacting with family historians over Facebook. However, it is rare to see professionals with a heritage background working practically with the heritage datasets in their charge. Many institutions who have the resources to do so, leave this work to computer programmers, missing the opportunity to share their knowledge and passion for heritage through innovative technology.
Open Heritage Data: An introduction to research, publishing and programming with open data in the heritage sector has been written for practitioners, researchers and students working in the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums) sector who do not have a computer science background, but who want to work more confidently with heritage data. It combines current research in open data with the author's extensive experience in coding and teaching coding to provide a step-by-step guide to working actively with the increasing amounts of data available.
Coverage includes:
• an introduction to open data as a next step in heritage mediation
• an overview of the laws most relevant to open heritage data
• an Open Heritage Data Model and examples of how institutions publish heritage data
• an exploration of use and reuse of heritage data
• tutorials on visualising and combining heritage datasets and on using heritage data for research.
Featuring sample code, case examples from around the world and step-by-step technical tutorials, this book will be a valuable resource for anyone in the GLAM sector involved in, or who wants to be involved in creating, publishing, using and reusing open heritage data.
Contents
List of case studies, figures and tables
List of permissions
List of abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction
1. Openness in heritage
Heritage amateurs
Organising heritage in institutions
Physical access
Online access
Data access
Summary
Notes
2. Sharing legally
Heritage laws
Data protection law
Copyright law
Summary
Notes
3. Publishing open data
Galleries/art museums
Libraries
Archives
Museums
GLAM
Summary
Notes
4. Using and reusing open data
Use and users
Technical skills
Authority
Heritage hackathons
Wikipedians
Education and youth
Apps
DIY and maker culture
Portals
Tools
Summary
5. Visualising open data
Basic data reuse
Images
Maps
Charts
Summary
6. Combining open data
Combining art
Combining archaeological records
Combining newspapers
Summary
7. Open data for research
Basic data collection
Data cleaning
Descriptive statistics
Timeline analysis
Summary
Appendix A: Examples used in the book
Appendix B: Introduction to coding
HTML
CSS
JavaScript
JSON
PHP
Python
References
Index



