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Major Library Partners Launch HathiTrust Shared Digital Repository
*Please excuse multiple postings*
Major Library Partners Launch HathiTrust Shared Digital
Repository - There's an Elephant in the Library; Organizers
Promise It Will Never Forget
A group of the nation's largest research libraries are
collaborating to create a repository of their vast digital
collections, including millions of books, organizers announced
today. These holdings will be archived and preserved in a single
repository called the HathiTrust. Materials in the public domain
will be available for reading online.
Launched jointly by the 12-university consortium known as the
Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) and the 11
university libraries of the University of California system, the
HathiTrust leverages the time-honored commitment to preservation
and access to information that university libraries have valued
for centuries. UC's participation will be coordinated by the
California Digital Library (CDL), which brings its deep and
innovative experience in digital curation and online scholarship
to the HathiTrust.
"This effort combines the expertise and resources of some of the
nation's foremost research libraries and holds even greater
promise as it seeks to grow beyond the initial partners," says
John Wilkin, associate university librarian of the University of
Michigan and the newly named executive director of HathiTrust.
Hathi (pronounced HAH-tee), the Hindi word for elephant
incorporated into the repository's name, underscores the
immensity of this undertaking, Wilkin says. Elephants also evoke
memory, wisdom, and strength.
As of today, HathiTrust contains more than 2 million volumes and
approximately 3/4 of a billion pages, about 16 percent of which
are in the public domain. Public domain materials will be
available for reading online. Materials protected by copyright,
although not available for reading online are given the full
range of digital archiving services, thereby offering member
libraries a reliable means to preserve their collections.
Organizers also expect to use those materials in the research and
development of the Trust.
Volumes are added to the repository daily, and content will grow
rapidly as the University of California, CIC member libraries,
and other prospective partners contribute their digitized
content. Also today, the founding partners announce that the
University of Virginia is joining the initiative.
Each of the founding partners brings extensive and highly
regarded expertise in the areas of information technology,
digital libraries, and project management to this endeavor.
Creation of the HathiTrust supports the digitization efforts of
the CIC and the University of California, each of which has
entered into collective agreements with Google to digitize
portions of the collections of their libraries, more than 10
million volumes in total, as part of the Google Book Search
project. Materials digitized through other means will also be
made available through HathiTrust.
HathiTrust provides libraries a means to archive and provide
access to their digital content, whether scanned volumes, special
collections, or born-digital materials. Preserving materials for
the long term has long been a mission and driving force of
leading research libraries. Their collections, accumulated over
centuries, represent a treasury of cultural heritage and
investment in the broad public good of promoting scholarship and
advancing knowledge. The representation of these resources in
digital form provides expanded opportunities for innovative use
in research, teaching, and learning, but must be done with
careful attention to effective solutions for the curation and
long-term preservation of digital assets.
"The CIC Libraries have always worked at a large scale, with big
collections, big user communities and high expectations for
service. They are not intimidated by big challenges, and will
bring their comfort with this to the development of the shared
digital repository," says Mark Sandler, director of the CIC
Center for Library Initiatives.
"The University of California libraries have an unparalleled
reputation for innovation in digital library development and
inter-institutional collaboration," says Laine Farley, interim
executive director of the California Digital Library.
"Participation in the HathiTrust continues this tradition and
will enable UC to provide its students and scholars with access
to one of the most significant digital collections ever
assembled." Adds Brian Schottlaender, the Audrey Geisel
University Librarian at UC San Diego, "The University of
California Libraries are pleased to work collaboratively with our
CIC colleagues to build a rich and coherent resource accessible
to scholars for the long-term."
"Researchers will benefit from the expert curation and consistent
access they have long associated with the CIC research
libraries," says Michael McRobbie, president of Indiana
University. "Great libraries have long been essential to
outstanding scholarship, and the HathiTrust collaboration among
the CIC institutions, the University of California and others
provides an essential tool for 21st- century scholars."
"Digitization of print texts has the promise of being
transformative of scholarship and of library practice," says Paul
Courant, University of Michigan librarian, dean of libraries, and
former provost. "In both areas, the ability to search many texts
and to preserve texts accessibly creates tremendous opportunities
for collaboration amongst scholars and universities. HathiTrust
has made a good start, and like the elephant for which it is
named, we expect that it will prove able to carry and deliver
valuable resources with grace and reliability."
"Before this collaboration," Wilkin says, "the collections in
each library existed in isolation. Now we are bringing them
together, pooling resources and eliminating redundancies, and
producing a valuable research tool that will be greater than the
sum of its parts."
The CIC and the University of California each produce an
estimated 10 percent of the new Ph.D.'s granted in the United
States each year and together serve more than 600,000 students.
The Midwest-based Committee on Institutional Cooperation includes
the universities of the Big Ten, plus the University of Chicago.
Partner libraries represent Indiana University, University of
Illinois, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Iowa,
University of Michigan, Michigan State University, University of
Minnesota, Northwestern University, Ohio State University, Penn
State University, Purdue University and University of
Wisconsin-Madison. Combined, they serve more than 385,000
students, employ more than 190,000 faculty and staff, and expend
$6 billion in research and development.
The University of California system includes ten research
universities at Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Merced,
Riverside, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, and Santa
Cruz plus the systemwide California Digital Library, with more
than 220,000 students, 170,000 faculty and staff, and more than
1.5 million alumni living and working around the globe. The
University of California Libraries together comprise the largest
single university library system in the world.
Contact: Liene Karels, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
734 764 6338 or lkarels@umich.edu
www.hathitrust.org