|
CNI PROJECTS

EXECUTIVE
ROUNDTABLE
Summary
Report of the December 8, 2003
CNI Executive Roundtable on Institutional Repositories
The CNI Executive
Roundtable is an opportunity for roughly ten institutional teams composed of
paired senior library and information technology leaders to hold a focused discussion
on a topic of current interest. These Roundtables are intended to inform the
participating institutions andthrough the meeting summariesthe broader
community, and to provide insights that can help to shape the Coalition's program.
In the interest of candid discussion, we do not record actual minutes of these
meetings, and do not normally attribute observations to specific institutions.
The topic for
the December 8, 2003 Roundtable was institutional repositories. Among
the specific issues discussed were:
- constructing the case
for institutional repositories within the campus community.
- varying strategic approaches
to getting started in repository activities (for example, an initial focus
on different sectors of the campus community or different types of content).
- policy questions raised
by institutional repositories.
- funding questions, models,
and strategies.
- organizational collaborations
needed to make progress.
- roles and responsibilities
of different organizational units in the repository effort.
- preservation plans.
- prospects and directions
for inter-institutional collaboration, both in developing repositories and
in federating institutional repositories in various ways.
Below are some of the key
points that emerged from the discussion.
In many ways, discussing
"institutional repositories" is misleading, in that the term is too limiting
and focuses on a tool rather than the strategic imperative, which is planning
for institution-wide digital asset management and developing both infrastructure
components and a range of applications to support this.
There is a good deal of commonality
in the long-term vision of how institutional repositories might ultimately evolve,
but the first steps that institutions are taking vary widely and are strongly
driven by local institutional culture and priorities.
There was a range of opinion
and some very interesting observations about building the case for institutional
repositories. Many participants believed that pilot projects were a particularly
effective strategy; at the same time, there was a great deal of concern expressed
about how we were developing de facto institutional repositories in inappropriate
settings (for example, using proprietary learning management systems). There
was also discussion about when to shift from a bottom-up pilot project approach
to a more systematic and institution-wide one. Questions were raised about whether
it was appropriate to frame institutional repositories as new initiatives (requiring
new funding) as opposed to simply new expressions of ongoing core responsibilities.
One participant also observed that "we did not build the case for the Web."
We need a much better understanding
of the high-level architectural issues involved in digital asset management
- services, roles, components, and interrelationships. For example, it seems
clear that there are a number of infrastructure components (i.e. identifier
management, perhaps some abstractions of storage systems) that could serve a
wide range of digital asset management applications, not just institutional
repository systems, and we should be thinking about articulating and designing
such services explicitly as infrastructure that will support this broader context.
Other applications that might share infrastructure with institutional repositories
include learning management systems, departmental or research-project-based
repositories, or various kinds of records management or data management systems.
The boundaries of institutional
repositories are going to be very problematic. It is clear that the large scale
science initiatives proceeding under banners such as "cyberinfrastructure" or
"e-science" will lead to a growing number of repositories for various materials
organized and managed along disciplinary lines. At the same time, it is equally
clear that there will be a great deal of material that doesn't fit within the
available constellation of disciplinary repositories, and that this constellation
of disciplinary resources will change over time; responsibility for managing
this material will fall primarily to specific higher education institutions.
A high priority should be establishing conversations with funding agencies,
leading Principal Investigators, and Vice Provosts of Research to try to ensure
that disciplinary and institutional efforts are coordinated, follow common standards
and architectures where possible, and evolve in a complementary fashion. We
will need to understand how and when transitions of materials between institutional
and disciplinary systems should take place. There are also questions here involving
funding agency mandates and responsibilities for the preservation and distribution
of digital assets and how these should be reflected in determination and allocation
of indirect costs.
In a sense, the institutional
repository is part of the public view of an organization's digital assets. A
number of policy issues surrounding the image of an institution (or units within
the institution) emerge in this context, just as they have with Web sites. Socially,
politically or artistically controversial materials are an obvious example,
but there are many others. For example, a department may become very concerned
about its reputation as expressed by material in a repository and attempt to
establish review/refereeing procedures, which will slow down dissemination and
potentially transform a review process that is traditionally disciplinary in
scope to one that is institutional. We need to be very careful about the boundaries
between scholarly publishing and repositories.
There are also boundary problems
between institutions that follow from faculty collaborating across institutions.
Faculty members also move frequently from one institution to another. We need
to think hard about how to define institutional responsibility in these settings
and about how institutions relate to each other and distribute effort in support
of the collaborations of their faculty.
The Roundtable discussion
illuminated a number of interesting policy issues connected to access management
and stewardship of materials. We have tended in the past to focus very much
on traditional legal rights (e.g. copyright): Do we have permission to host
the material and make it available? Who owns the rights? These questions are
problematic enough as we deal with material that faculty may also place with
publishers, material with multiple authors (including students), and material
that has been created elsewhere that higher education institutions would like
to adopt and take responsibility for. But it also becomes clear that as we deal
with scholarly material we must consider ethical questions and disciplinary
and institutional norms; consider here problems involving cultural heritage
materials or field observations from ethnographic or anthropological research.
How do we deal with policies that say "anyone may use this material, provided
that it is treated and presented with respect and not re-used out of context"?
It is clear that we will need an extended dialogue with scholars across the
disciplines on these topics.
In terms of collaboration
between institutions, one key opportunity is for institutions to work together
to promote an organized dialogue with funding agencies and with specific scholarly
disciplines (as represented both by individual disciplinary leaders and by scholarly
and professional societies). CNI can play a valuable role in facilitating this
collaboration and these discussions.
Privacy Statement
Copyright Policy
Coalition for Networked
Information
21 Dupont Circle
Washington, DC, 20036
202.296.5098
202.872.0884 (fax)
<info@cni.org>
|