ARL Discussion Report on Special
Collections
Over the last two years I've had the opportunity of participating
in the discussions of a wonderful Association of Research Libraries
(ARL) Working Group on Special Collections led by Alice Prochaska of
Yale University. This working group has now released what I think is
an enormously helpful report that will advance thinking about how to
intellectually position research library special collections in the
broad context, as well as thoughtfully considering several dimensions
of the interactions between information technology and special
collections. The report can be found at
Highly Reccomended. I have also reproduced below part of
the ARL press release on the report for additional
background.
Clifford Lynch
Director, CNI
------------------------
Washington DC--The Association of
Research Libraries (ARL) Working
Group on Special Collections, formed in 2007, has released a
discussion report that identifies key issues in the
management and exposure of
special collections material in the 21st century.
The report uses a broad definition of
"special collections," which
encompasses distinctive material in all media and attendant
library services. The group's
main focus was on 19th- and 20th-century
materials, including emerging digital materials and media, but
most of the report applies with equal force to
collecting and caring for
materials from previous centuries. While the report focuses on
special collections in North American research
libraries, it has potential
application more broadly.
Working group members represent a range
of constituencies, including
directors of research libraries, heads of special
collections departments, and other
professional leaders with particular concern for
traditional and digital special collections. To engage
further constituencies, the chair of the working
group, Alice Prochaska,
University Librarian, Yale University, presented preliminary
findings and recommendations in June 2008
at the annual conference of the Rare Books
and Manuscripts Section (RBMS) of the Association of College
and Research Libraries, and subsequently
circulated a draft of the report to
representatives of both RBMS and the Society of American
Archivists. This report reflects extensive comments
received from those bodies.
The report includes overviews of and
recommendations in three areas:
1. Collecting Carefully, with Regard to Costs, and
Ethical and Legal Concerns
2. Ensuring Discovery and Access
3. The Challenge of Born-Digital
Collections
It highlights the need for research
library leadership to support
actions that will increase the visibility and use of
special collections and promote both
existing and developing best practices in the
stewardship of special collections.
The working group also invites
discussion among the many
professionals who are charged with the perplexing challenges
of handling rare, unique or unusual material about the
extraordinary
challenges they face as collectors and stewards of special
collections in libraries and archives in the 21st
century. This report provides a framework
within which important discussions of policy may take
place.
The report is also intended to promote
an enhanced and extended understanding within research
communities more generally of the unique and
irreplaceable contribution that special collections make to
scholarship and learning, and to the general public
good.
ARL will host a related forum on special
collections in the 21st
century, immediately following the fall ARL Membership Meeting
in Washington DC,
October 15-16, 2009. In addition to addressing emerging
issues for traditional special collections, the forum will
explore new kinds of born-digital resources that
increasingly comprise the unique content
collected by research libraries. The forum agenda and
registration information will be released on the ARL Web site
this
summer.
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