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CNI
Program 1998-1999
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Mission
The Coalition for
Networked Information (CNI) is an
organization to advance the transformative promise of
networked information technology for the advancement of
scholarly communication and the enrichment of intellectual
productivity.
Background and History
The Coalition was
founded in 1990 by the Association of
Research Libraries (ARL), CAUSE and Educom. ARL represents
the research libraries of North America. CAUSE and Educom
were organizations concerned with the use of information
technology in higher education. In 1998, CAUSE and Educom
merged to create the new Educause organization, which has
broad membership from the higher education community and
their technology partners.
In establishing CNI, these sponsor organizations recognized
the need to broaden the community's thinking beyond issues
of network connectivity and bandwidth to encompass networked
information content and applications. Reaping the benefits
of the Internet for scholarship, research, and education
demands new partnerships, new institutional roles, and new
technologies and infrastructure. The Coalition seeks to
further these collaborations, to explore these new roles,
and to catalyze the development and deployment of the
necessary technology base.
The Coalition is supported by a task force of about 200
dues-paying member institutions representing higher
education, publishing, network and telecommunications,
information technology, and libraries and library
organizations. Membership in the Coalition's Task Force is
open to all organizations -- both for-profit and not-for-
profit -- that share CNI's commitment to furthering the
development of networked information.
The Task Force will meet twice in 1998-1999:
- Seattle, in conjunction with the CAUSE Meeting on
December 7-8, 1998,
- Washington DC, in conjunction with Educause Net '99 and
Internet2/University Consortium for Advanced Internet
Development (UCAID) meetings during the week of
April 26, 1999.
The Coalition's program is guided by a steering committee
chaired by Richard West of the California State University
system. As sponsor organizations, ARL and Educause each
appoint three representatives to the steering committee
drawn from their member leadership; the steering committee
is supplemented by outside representatives providing
additional perspectives.
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Paul Evan Peters was the founding
Executive Director of the Coalition, and served until his untimely death in
1996. Joan Lippincott, now CNI's Associate Director, served as Interim
Executive Director until the appointment of Clifford Lynch as the new
Executive Director in July, 1997.
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CNI
Program 1998-1999
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Program Themes
The work of the Coalition is
structured around three central themes which we believe are the
essential foundations of the vision of advancing scholarship and
intellectual productivity:
- Developing Networked Information Content. A network which
will play an integral role in scholarly discourse and
productivity must be rich with content and information
resources. The Coalition seeks to mobilize and bring
together the many diverse communities that create and manage
content. It works with these communities to develop methods
of creating, organizing, evaluating, managing and preserving
networked information resources. The Coalition also furthers
the development of economic, policy and legal frameworks
that sustain the creation and management of networked
information and facilitate its access.
- Transforming Organizations, Professions and Individuals.
The use of networked information will transform
institutions, professions, and the practices of learning and
scholarship. Success in the new environment -- in higher
education or other organizations -- will require an
unprecedented degree of collaboration among libraries,
information technology groups, faculty, instructional
technologists, museums, publishers and other units.
Organizations will need to develop and share new strategies,
policies and best practices. Of equal importance is the
need to assess and measure the impacts of the new
environment on institutions and their activities as the
transformation progresses. Professions will need to develop
new competencies, and enter into new dialogs which cross
traditional disciplinary boundaries. The Coalition seeks to
facilitate these collaborations and dialogs, and to help
professions and institutions to work together both in
program strategy formulation and impact assessment.
- Building Technology, Standards and Infrastructure. The
networked information environment relies extensively on the
development and deployment of standards and infrastructure
components in order to enable the discovery, use, and
management of networked information. The ability to use
collections of resources in a unified, consistent fashion is
essential: this requires a continuing focus on
interoperability of services. At the same time, promising
new technologies are constantly appearing which need to be
explored, assessed and tested, and sometimes adapted to the
needs of the CNI community. No one institution acting alone
can build the needed infrastructure, or explore the full
range of new technologies as they become available.
Accomplishing these goals requires a coordinated community-
wide effort; CNI seeks to provide leadership in this
undertaking, to offer a context for collaborative
experiments and testbeds, and to serve as a focal point for
sharing knowledge about new technologies.
The specific program initiatives which further these themes
evolve from year to year. The initiatives and strategies
planned for 1998-1999 are described below; most build upon
and continue earlier efforts already underway. Many of the
initiatives seek to make strategic progress relevant to more
than one theme. It is important to recognize that the
networked information environment is evolving very rapidly;
CNI is continually adapting its activities in response to
new developments and opportunities. Indeed, the Coalition
believes agility is essential in the current environment and
invites a continuous dialog with the members of the Task
Force on the need for additional program initiatives.
In addition to initiatives to advance these overarching
themes, the Coalition actively conducts an ongoing program
of education and advocacy for the development of networked
information and its role in transforming organizations and
scholarly activities. This is accomplished through both
print-based and network publications; through participation
in various conferences, committees, meetings, workshops and
committees on an institutional, regional, national and
international basis; through contributions to standards
efforts; and through participation in organizations such as
the World Wide Web Consortium. The Coalition also
contributes to the development of the networked information
community by hosting electronic discussion groups and acting
as a distribution point for materials.
Finally, the Coalition's twice-annual Task Force meetings
not only allow CNI to highlight activities related to its
program themes and to focus attention on significant new
thinking and technology developments, but also provide a
major opportunity for the membership to showcase and discuss
a wide range of emerging issues and developments in
networked information. For member organizations, these
meetings offer a unique opportunity to remain informed about
new developments that may reshape institutional plans, and a
forum in which to establish collaborations and dialogs with
others sharing common interests.
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CNI
Program 1998-1999
NINCH
NATIONAL HUMANITIES ALLIANCE
STEERING COMMITTEE FOR COMPUTER SCIENCE AND THE HUMANITIES
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1998-1999 Program Activities
Developing Networked Information Content
Content from the
arts, the humanities, and the cultural
heritage community represents an important scholarly
resource for the networked environment; indeed, making much
of this information available in digital form should greatly
increase its accessibility and usefulness. CNI is pursuing
this goal through its ongoing support of the National
Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH), a
broad coalition of arts, humanities and social science
groups. CNI, the American Council of Learned Societies
(ACLS) and the Getty Information Institute founded NINCH in
1996. CNI also supports the National Humanities Alliance,
which was created in 1981 to advance the cause of the
humanities in national programs, policies and legislation.
The Alliance brings together scholarly and professional
associations, museums, libraries, historical societies,
state humanities councils and universities and independent
centers for scholarship. CNI is participating with NINCH,
the National Research Council, and ACLS in a Steering
Committee for Computer Science and the Humanities which
seeks to promote the application of the information sciences
to the understanding of the human record; currently, the
work of this committee is focusing on knowledge
representation and humanities informatics.
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CONSORTIUM FOR THE COMPUTER INTERCHANGE OF MUSEUM INFORMATION (CIMI)
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On a more technical level, CNI is a member of the Consortium
for the Computer Interchange of Museum Information (CIMI),
which consists of organizations working together to solve
standards and interoperability issues related to the
electronic interchange of museum information. CIMI is
playing a key role in developing the technical approaches
necessary to interchange and provide access to cultural
heritage information.
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LICENSING MUSEUM INFORMATION
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As a part of the effort to ensure that cultural heritage is
available to the research ,education and library
communities, CNI is serving as a forum for discussion of the
emerging consortia to create, organize, and license museum
information in digital form and the pilot projects under
development to validate the technical approaches and
business models of these consortia.
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NETWORKED DIGITAL LIBRARY OF THESES AND DISSERTATIONS (NDLTD)
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Theses and dissertations are a key part of the content
created by the higher education community; also, because the
process of their creation is so integral to the process of
higher education, they offer a unique opportunity to train
new scholars in the creation of digital documents, and for
institutions to formalize their management. Further, these
materials represent a significant body of important
information that has not historically been readily
accessible. CNI is a member of the Networked Digital Library
of Theses and Dissertations (NDLTD) program, and serves on
the steering committee of this enterprise. The initiative
seeks to improve graduate education by allowing students to
produce electronic theses and dissertations, and to
understand issues in publishing while increasing the
availability of student research for scholars, and
preserving these electronic materials.
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DUBLIN CORE DESCRIPTIVE METADATA INITIATIVE
CNI NIDR WHITE PAPER
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Metadata to describe networked information resources is now
recognized as a key component in organizing content to
facilitate its discovery and use. CNI has been a partner in
the Dublin Core Descriptive Metadata initiative on a
continuing basis and will be a sponsor of the 6th Dublin
Core meeting in Washington, DC in November 1998. The
Coalition also expects to release its White Paper on
Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval early in the
1998-1999 program year. A key goal for 1998-1999 is to move
work on metadata beyond descriptive information to support
resource discovery; this will include work in metadata and
supporting infrastructure to address the authenticity,
provenance and integrity of digital information, and to
document the digitization or capture processes for
electronic information.
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INTERNET SCOUT PROJECT
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There is a continuing need for alternative resource
discovery tools to serve the particular needs of the
research and education community in offering human-mediated,
highly authoritative collections of Internet resources. CNI
is a co-sponsor of work being conducted by the NSF-funded
Internet Scout Project to link geographically distributed
metadata collections into a coherent virtual collection;
leveraging existing efforts to create metadata, this seeks
both to provide such a discovery tool and to also create a
testbed for continuing research on networked information
discovery and retrieval.
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DIGITAL PRESERVATION
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Preservation and long-term management of digital information
is emerging as a central issue in the shift to network-based
scholarly publishing. CNI is working with ARL and other
partner organizations in developing economic, business and
organizational models for preservation; in exploring
technologies to manage the archiving of digital content, and
in identifying priorities for preservation action. The
Coalition will host a workshop on organizational and
economic issues in the spring of 1999.
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SCHOLARLY COMMUNICATION
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CNI continues to work with other organizations, including
ARL, ACLS, and the American Association of University
Publishers to understand the changing landscape of scholarly
communication. Following last year's successful conference
on the future of the Scholarly Monograph, planning is
proceeding for a March 1999 conference focused on changing
roles and expectations of the academic community in the
scholarly communications process.
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CNI
Program 1998-1999
WORKING TOGETHER WORKSHOPS
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Transforming Organizations, Professions and Individuals
A fundamental goal
of CNI is to foster dialog and
collaboration among information professionals from all
disciplinary backgrounds. In 1998-1999 the Coalition will
continue to offer its Working Together program, which
provides a structured workshop experience to help groups of
professionals improve their ability to collaborate and build
partnerships with colleagues, particularly on projects
related to networked information resources and services.
These workshops can be offered as preconference programs, or
as on-campus retreats or consortium programs. In addition,
we will be delivering a specialized Working Together
workshop for archivists, records managers, and information
technologists in December 1998 under a grant from the
National Historical Preservation and Records Commission.
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ASSESSING THE NETWORKED ENVIRONMENT
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Measuring the impacts and value of networking and networked
information has emerged as a major issue. In 1997-1998 the
Coalition conducted a coordinated field test of the
assessment measures outlined in McClure and Lopata's
Assessing the Academic Networked Environment: Strategies and
Options. The field test was intended to facilitate
institutional collaboration on assessment issues, to develop
a compendium of assessment measures, and to widely inform
the community on approaches and best practices in assessing
networked resources and services. In 1998-1999 we will
complete this effort by reporting results to the broader
community.
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POLICY ISSUES
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The move to networked information and electronic
communication is giving rise to a number of new
organizational policy issues. In 1998-1999 CNI will seek to
collect and facilitate discussion and formulation of best
practices in several of these areas. Our work in
authentication and access management has highlighted the
importance of reader privacy policies and also policies for
the gathering of statistical usage data to support
collection management and development, and we will focus on
these areas. In addition, we will begin a discussion of the
policy issues such as business continuity planning, records
management and institutional accountability that are raised
by the growing use of encrypted communications within
organizations.
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DISTANCE EDUCATION
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Distance education and instructional technologies are
emerging as important new programs for many institutions of
higher education; they are a central part of the Internet 2
initiative, which should enable greatly accelerated
progress. New institutional strategies, new collaborations,
and new kinds of networked information resources and
services will be needed if libraries are to be effective
partners with faculty and instructional technologists in the
implementation of these programs. Building on earlier
collaborations with the Educause National Learning
Infrastructure Initiative (NLII), CNI will work with both
ARL and Educause to explore institutional readiness factors
and organizational roles to support distance education and
digital instructional media.
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CNI
Program 1998-1999
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Building Technology, Standards and Infrastructure
CNI continues
to be actively engaged in key areas of
standards and infrastructure development. The Coalition is
particularly concerned with facilitating the difficult and
delicate transition of standards and technologies into
operational infrastructure within the CNI community.
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AUTHENTICATION AND AUTHORIZATION
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Authentication and authorization have emerged as essential
infrastructure requirements for network-based access to
information, and have become a particularly critical need as
institutions enter into site-license arrangements with
publishers and other information providers or form consortia
for resource sharing. The Coalition is pursuing a program to
define technology approaches, standards, best practices, and
policy and business issues for such an inter-organizational
authentication and authorization infrastructure, and to help
early adopter Task Force member organizations share
implementation experiences and explore interoperability
issues. Building on work done in 1997-1998 through the
development of the white paper on authentication and access
management (scheduled for release in final form in October
1998) we will be issuing a call for participation in public-
key based testbeds for access management, as well as trying
to illuminate many of the planning, operational and
budgetary issues involved in implementing public key
infrastructure.
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IDENTIFIERS FOR DIGITAL INFORMATION
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Identifiers for digital information -- such as the Internet
Engineering Task Force's Uniform Resource Names, the
publishing community's proposed Digital Object Identifier,
various bibliographic identifier standards, and the emerging
discussion of "human friendly identifiers" -- are an
essential part of the infrastructure that will allow access,
linkage and reference in the networked information
environment. CNI will continue to be actively engaged in
both standards work and inter-community dialog to help
further the development and deployment of such identifiers
and to inform the community about the capabilities and
appropriate uses of the various identifier systems.
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Z39.50 STANDARD
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CNI has been active in the development of a new attribute
set architecture for the Z39.50 information retrieval
protocol. We will be continuing this work through the Z39.50
Implementor's group with the goal of defining and deploying
new attribute sets that conform to that architecture.
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INSTRUCTIONAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM & LIBRARIES
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Working with the Educause NLII project, we will convene a
working group to explore the definition and design of
interfaces between the Instructional Management System and
library systems.
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INTERNET2
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Internet 2 is emerging as a key testbed for many of the
next-generation networked information applications; it will
offer not only much higher bandwidth between Internet 2-
connected sites than can be reliably obtained through
today's Internet, but several fundamentally new network
services. Quality of service management allows users to
obtain guaranteed bandwidth and delivery and is particularly
important in the support of multimedia applications.
Multicasting, an efficient way of supporting multi-point
distribution and interchange of network traffic, offers new
ways to think about information distribution. CNI will
continue to seek to highlight novel Internet 2 applications
to the CNI membership, and to promote the development of
networked information applications for Internet 2 by serving
as a bridge between the library and networking communities.
In addition, CNI will be focusing on three specific areas
related to Internet 2 during 1998-1999: the management and
policy issues involved in implementing quality of service
technology; the infrastructure to support large scale
multicasting for information distribution; and the role of
storage and delivery of digital video content, with
particular emphasis on the roles of research libraries in
managing digital video materials.
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Finally, CNI is working with both Educause and the
University Consortium for Advanced Internet Development on
strategies for extending the knowledge and experience gained
with advanced Internet 2 applications to the broader higher
education community. A National Science Foundation sponsored
strategy development workshop on this topic will be held in
January 1999.
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