Policy Development for the Digital Library:
Institutional, Legal, and Financial Issues
Information Infrastructure Project
Science, Technology and Public Policy Program
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Harvard University in cooperation with
The Harvard University Library
Universities face a fundamental, longterm shift from local collections of owned
physical objects to participation by contract in distributed globally oriented
publishing enterprises or libraries. The higher education community is already
sensitized to digital library issues because of the rising costs of acquiring
and manage information, the apparent advantages of the electronic publication,
and the successful use of information technology in support of higher education
and research.
With support from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the Science,Technology and
Public Policy Program is undertaking a four-year project to analyze the
institutional, financial, and legal issues involved in developing "digital
libraries." The project is designed to broaden awareness and understanding of
these issues within higher education, funding agencies, and the policy
development community and to thereby facilitate integration of information and
knowledge management functions within and across universities.
The project builds on the Science, Technology and Public Policy Program's
NSF-funded work on scholarly communications in the networked environment. We
will work with other efforts, especially programs of national higher education
associations, by helping in the formulation and implementation of model
policies and practices to support higher level infrastructure for research and
education, including digital libraries and new forms of noncommercial
publishing. Drawing on this experience in implementing new information
infrastructure, we will also work in concert to develop and articulate public
policy that reflects traditional principles of higher education.
To further this agenda, the project will produce original policy research and
analysis, convene meetings of experts with different disciplinary perspectives,
generate and publish collections of analytic papers, assemble a sourcebook of
primary material, and contribute to curriculum development for library and
related information resource management professionals. Beginning in September
1996, the project and the Harvard University Library will host a visiting
fellow.