PACKED advocates for open data in the cultural heritage sector. They discuss infrastructure for publishing open data, including using persistent URI's and platforms like Wikidata. They provide training on topics like data cleaning and enrichment. Their goal is to help cultural institutions share their collections as open data by developing tools like CultURIze and advocating for more open infrastructures.
The King Baudouin Foundation collection is dispersed across many institutions. They worked with Wikimedia to publish the collection on Wikimedia platforms by normalizing the data to make it linkable using identifiers.
The Flemish Art Collection's Arthub and Datahub platforms aim to automate sharing collection data between applications using pipelines. The Datahub centrally stores
- PACKED advocates for open data in the cultural heritage sector through various projects and training. They developed CultURIze, a tool to help small museums assign persistent URIs to collection items.
- The King Baudouin Foundation shares collection data on Wikimedia platforms like Wikidata to make it more accessible. Challenges include normalizing data from different sources and systems.
- The Flemish Art Collection's Arthub and Datahub projects aim to publish collection data as open data through APIs and formats. An ETL pipeline extracts, transforms and loads data from various museum databases into a central repository for reuse.
This document discusses automatic publication of library data under the linked data paradigm. It provides an overview of key concepts like open data, linked open data, and the semantic web. It also describes the ALIADA project which aims to develop an open source application to help libraries and museums automatically publish metadata as linked open data. This will allow their collections to be more accessible and interoperable online.
The document discusses the Datahub project, which aims to create an open source framework for cultural institutions to manage and share their collection data. The project involves designing a universal datahub architecture, developing an open source software package, and deploying a reference implementation across seven Flemish museums. The goals are to make data more accessible and reusable, enrich it through links to external authorities, and lower the barriers for museums to connect their data to modern technologies. When complete, the datahub will aggregate collection information from multiple institutions into rich, standardized formats.
This document discusses the use of persistent identifiers (PIDs) to improve access to museum collection data for digital humanities research. It notes that researchers need trustworthy, machine-readable data from reliable sources. However, museums struggle to keep their online data up-to-date, complete, and published in open formats. Assigning PIDs to artworks, data, representations and related entities allows museums to act as publishers of their collection information. This makes the data more findable, linkable, and reusable over time. The project aims to assign PIDs to the works and entities in 10 museum datasets to demonstrate improved data retrieval and enrichment for researchers.
The document discusses the collection and storage of digital cartographic data by libraries in Utrecht. It covers: (1) the various forms digital cartographic data can take, such as maps from the internet, digitized maps, and cartographic databases; (2) how Utrecht archives and makes accessible this growing virtual collection, through centralized storage and remote access including in the map library; and (3) challenges around accessibility due to the large volume of data and legal implications, and potential future solutions through increased cooperation and cataloguing at a national or international level.
- PACKED advocates for open data in the cultural heritage sector through various projects and training. They developed CultURIze, a tool to help small museums assign persistent URIs to collection items.
- The King Baudouin Foundation shares collection data on Wikimedia platforms like Wikidata to make it more accessible. Challenges include normalizing data from different sources and systems.
- The Flemish Art Collection's Arthub and Datahub projects aim to publish collection data as open data through APIs and formats. An ETL pipeline extracts, transforms and loads data from various museum databases into a central repository for reuse.
This document discusses automatic publication of library data under the linked data paradigm. It provides an overview of key concepts like open data, linked open data, and the semantic web. It also describes the ALIADA project which aims to develop an open source application to help libraries and museums automatically publish metadata as linked open data. This will allow their collections to be more accessible and interoperable online.
The document discusses the Datahub project, which aims to create an open source framework for cultural institutions to manage and share their collection data. The project involves designing a universal datahub architecture, developing an open source software package, and deploying a reference implementation across seven Flemish museums. The goals are to make data more accessible and reusable, enrich it through links to external authorities, and lower the barriers for museums to connect their data to modern technologies. When complete, the datahub will aggregate collection information from multiple institutions into rich, standardized formats.
This document discusses the use of persistent identifiers (PIDs) to improve access to museum collection data for digital humanities research. It notes that researchers need trustworthy, machine-readable data from reliable sources. However, museums struggle to keep their online data up-to-date, complete, and published in open formats. Assigning PIDs to artworks, data, representations and related entities allows museums to act as publishers of their collection information. This makes the data more findable, linkable, and reusable over time. The project aims to assign PIDs to the works and entities in 10 museum datasets to demonstrate improved data retrieval and enrichment for researchers.
The document discusses the collection and storage of digital cartographic data by libraries in Utrecht. It covers: (1) the various forms digital cartographic data can take, such as maps from the internet, digitized maps, and cartographic databases; (2) how Utrecht archives and makes accessible this growing virtual collection, through centralized storage and remote access including in the map library; and (3) challenges around accessibility due to the large volume of data and legal implications, and potential future solutions through increased cooperation and cataloguing at a national or international level.
Museums in Flanders are contributing their artwork data to Wikidata to make it available to a broader audience. The data, including persistent identifiers and links to external authorities, was uploaded under a CC0 license. This provides benefits like low costs, increased reach through Wikipedia, and placing the works in a wider context. Museums can now get back an RDF export of the data and see their works integrated in the linked open data cloud. Next steps include adding more detail to artist biographies and correcting any errors or duplicates in the data.
Presentada en la Jornada Internacional sobre Archivos Web y Depósito Legal Electrónico, en la Biblioteca Nacional de España (BNE), el día 9 de julio de 2013.
Developing a webarchiving strategy for national movements in FlandersTom Cobbaert
The document discusses the development of a web archiving strategy for the Archives and Documentation Centre for the Flemish Movement (ADVN). ADVN aims to selectively harvest websites of Flemish nationalist organizations and politicians on a quarterly basis using tools like Web Curator Tool or Wget to archive websites, blogs, Twitter, and Facebook pages. Collaboration may include the Internet Archive and ArchiveTeam since there is no national web archiving in Belgium currently. Issues to address include permissions, authenticity, access within privacy and copyright laws, and long-term digital preservation challenges.
CEMEC Discovery Programme discussion digital heritageMarco Streefkerk
The document summarizes a meeting about the Digital Heritage Netherlands (DEN) Foundation and its CEMEC project. DEN is the Dutch knowledge hub for digital culture that supports good practices for digitization at cultural heritage institutions. Its core mission is to share knowledge and experiences about technology and practices for digital heritage. DEN encourages institutions to invest in open technologies, create sustainable services, and use common standards to jointly create a national Digital Cultural Collection. The CEMEC project aims to establish shared digital heritage services at a national level in the Netherlands.
This document discusses the interaction between digital libraries and digital humanities. It begins by defining digital libraries and digital humanities, noting that digital libraries have advanced digitization efforts and made data more open and reusable, which supports digital humanities work. Digital humanities drives new approaches and questions in digital libraries. The document then discusses specific examples of digital library and digital humanities collaboration in Serbia and through organizations like DARIAH and LIBER. It concludes by questioning whether the relationship between digital libraries and digital humanities will be a long-term partnership or a short-term convenience.
This document summarizes past hackathons in Brussels that were supported by the BRIC. It lists 19 hackathons from 2014-2017 on open data topics. The hackathons aimed to help data consumers and producers and support social innovation. One notable hackathon in November 2016 was the "Brussels goes gender-smart" event, which aimed to promote gender equality and women in technology through workshops and challenges to develop apps using gender-related open datasets.
3D reconstructions for story telling and understandingCARARE
This slidedeck was prepared for a webinar exploring some of the ways that 3D reconstructions are being used for story telling and to aid understanding. Following an introduction to the webinar Daniel Pletinckx of Visual Dimension bvma gave a presentation on 'Interactive storytelling in virtual worlds' which is followed by a presentation by Catherine Cassidy of the Open Virtual Worlds group at the University of St Andrews on 'Dissemination Methods for 3D Historical Virtual Environments'.
The document summarizes developments at the Rijksmuseum related to their digital collections and open data initiatives. It discusses their large collection of over 1.2 million objects, with over 550,000 objects and 230,000 high-resolution images available online. It describes their digitization efforts to have the full collection online by 2020. It also outlines their shift to an open data policy in 2011, making collections available under a CC0 license. Future plans include consolidating collection data and extending their open data strategy.
This document summarizes Harvard's integration of IIIF and Mirador to provide access to digital collections across the university. It describes how Harvard became interested in these technologies to support teaching, research, and digital access. The summary chronicles Harvard's involvement with IIIF from 2010 to present day, including launches of digital collections and tools using these standards. It highlights cross-campus collaboration between groups like the libraries, art museums, and academic technology services.
European databases in cultural heritage: making connectionsCARARE
This document summarizes information about several European databases and initiatives for sharing cultural heritage data online. It introduces CARARE, which helps institutions share digital content with Europeana. It then discusses Europeana, a platform for over 50 million digital cultural heritage items, including 1.5 million archaeology items. The document outlines challenges of aggregating data from different sources and standards into Europeana, and how CARARE and other aggregators work to map metadata into a common format. It also introduces the ARIADNE Plus research infrastructure, which aims to support archaeology researchers through an online catalogue of datasets and related services and tools.
This talk showcases PACKED vzw's linked open data-projects on persistent identification, opening up data, data enrichment and the potential of the Wikimedia ecosystem BUT also the areas where the Wikimedia platforms and its present tools could be improved. We make an argument for attracting more people with an IT background in the cultural sector, better open infrastructures and tools that make linked open data publishing and reuse possible: resolvers, datahubs, api tools - tools for publication of data and images: specific tools for mix’n match, tools which can deal with what heritage professionals have already produced (excel files). Lastly we encourage the public to solicit the heritage sector and create demand for LOD services ‘as if’ you already live in a society where citizens can take access to digital cultural resources for granted and as if you have no idea about the contradictions that cause institutions to delay opening up their collections.
This talk showcases PACKED vzw's linked open data-projects on persistent identification, opening up data, data enrichment and the potential of the Wikimedia ecosystem BUT also the areas where the Wikimedia platforms and its present tools could be improved. We make an argument for attracting more people with an IT background in the cultural sector, better open infrastructures and tools that make linked open data publishing and reuse possible: resolvers, datahubs, api tools - tools for publication of data and images: specific tools for mix’n match, tools which can deal with what heritage professionals have already produced (excel files). Lastly we encourage the public to solicit the heritage sector and create demand for LOD services ‘as if’ you already live in a society where citizens can take access to digital cultural resources for granted and as if you have no idea about the contradictions that cause institutions to delay opening up their collections.
This document discusses challenges and opportunities for linked open data in cultural heritage institutions. It summarizes that while many institutions have digitized collections and data, their "digital mindset" and outdated systems have limited data sharing and reuse. The document outlines recent and ongoing projects by PACKED to address this, such as developing tools to publish structured data on Wikimedia platforms, and a "datahub" and "resolver tool" to facilitate internal data management and linking to external references. Next steps include expanding these projects and conducting a survey to understand demand for cultural heritage data. The overall aim is to make institutions' data and collections more accessible and reusable on the web.
Presentation by Alina Saenko and Sam Donvil at Open Belgium 2018 -
http://2018.openbelgium.be/session/linked-open-data-limbo-co-creation-catalyst-cultural-heritage-resources
Facilitating digital research in the humanities: from local services to Europ...Sally Chambers
This presentation was given as part of the 'Séminaire Européen de l’Ecole doctorale' on 'Les Infrastructures de la recherché, quels enjeux pour les humanités numériques ?' held at the University of Lille on 3 March 2016, see:
http://geriico.recherche.univ-lille3.fr/index.php?page=annee-2015---2016
Museums in Flanders are contributing their artwork data to Wikidata to make it available to a broader audience. The data, including persistent identifiers and links to external authorities, was uploaded under a CC0 license. This provides benefits like low costs, increased reach through Wikipedia, and placing the works in a wider context. Museums can now get back an RDF export of the data and see their works integrated in the linked open data cloud. Next steps include adding more detail to artist biographies and correcting any errors or duplicates in the data.
Presentada en la Jornada Internacional sobre Archivos Web y Depósito Legal Electrónico, en la Biblioteca Nacional de España (BNE), el día 9 de julio de 2013.
Developing a webarchiving strategy for national movements in FlandersTom Cobbaert
The document discusses the development of a web archiving strategy for the Archives and Documentation Centre for the Flemish Movement (ADVN). ADVN aims to selectively harvest websites of Flemish nationalist organizations and politicians on a quarterly basis using tools like Web Curator Tool or Wget to archive websites, blogs, Twitter, and Facebook pages. Collaboration may include the Internet Archive and ArchiveTeam since there is no national web archiving in Belgium currently. Issues to address include permissions, authenticity, access within privacy and copyright laws, and long-term digital preservation challenges.
CEMEC Discovery Programme discussion digital heritageMarco Streefkerk
The document summarizes a meeting about the Digital Heritage Netherlands (DEN) Foundation and its CEMEC project. DEN is the Dutch knowledge hub for digital culture that supports good practices for digitization at cultural heritage institutions. Its core mission is to share knowledge and experiences about technology and practices for digital heritage. DEN encourages institutions to invest in open technologies, create sustainable services, and use common standards to jointly create a national Digital Cultural Collection. The CEMEC project aims to establish shared digital heritage services at a national level in the Netherlands.
This document discusses the interaction between digital libraries and digital humanities. It begins by defining digital libraries and digital humanities, noting that digital libraries have advanced digitization efforts and made data more open and reusable, which supports digital humanities work. Digital humanities drives new approaches and questions in digital libraries. The document then discusses specific examples of digital library and digital humanities collaboration in Serbia and through organizations like DARIAH and LIBER. It concludes by questioning whether the relationship between digital libraries and digital humanities will be a long-term partnership or a short-term convenience.
This document summarizes past hackathons in Brussels that were supported by the BRIC. It lists 19 hackathons from 2014-2017 on open data topics. The hackathons aimed to help data consumers and producers and support social innovation. One notable hackathon in November 2016 was the "Brussels goes gender-smart" event, which aimed to promote gender equality and women in technology through workshops and challenges to develop apps using gender-related open datasets.
3D reconstructions for story telling and understandingCARARE
This slidedeck was prepared for a webinar exploring some of the ways that 3D reconstructions are being used for story telling and to aid understanding. Following an introduction to the webinar Daniel Pletinckx of Visual Dimension bvma gave a presentation on 'Interactive storytelling in virtual worlds' which is followed by a presentation by Catherine Cassidy of the Open Virtual Worlds group at the University of St Andrews on 'Dissemination Methods for 3D Historical Virtual Environments'.
The document summarizes developments at the Rijksmuseum related to their digital collections and open data initiatives. It discusses their large collection of over 1.2 million objects, with over 550,000 objects and 230,000 high-resolution images available online. It describes their digitization efforts to have the full collection online by 2020. It also outlines their shift to an open data policy in 2011, making collections available under a CC0 license. Future plans include consolidating collection data and extending their open data strategy.
This document summarizes Harvard's integration of IIIF and Mirador to provide access to digital collections across the university. It describes how Harvard became interested in these technologies to support teaching, research, and digital access. The summary chronicles Harvard's involvement with IIIF from 2010 to present day, including launches of digital collections and tools using these standards. It highlights cross-campus collaboration between groups like the libraries, art museums, and academic technology services.
European databases in cultural heritage: making connectionsCARARE
This document summarizes information about several European databases and initiatives for sharing cultural heritage data online. It introduces CARARE, which helps institutions share digital content with Europeana. It then discusses Europeana, a platform for over 50 million digital cultural heritage items, including 1.5 million archaeology items. The document outlines challenges of aggregating data from different sources and standards into Europeana, and how CARARE and other aggregators work to map metadata into a common format. It also introduces the ARIADNE Plus research infrastructure, which aims to support archaeology researchers through an online catalogue of datasets and related services and tools.
This talk showcases PACKED vzw's linked open data-projects on persistent identification, opening up data, data enrichment and the potential of the Wikimedia ecosystem BUT also the areas where the Wikimedia platforms and its present tools could be improved. We make an argument for attracting more people with an IT background in the cultural sector, better open infrastructures and tools that make linked open data publishing and reuse possible: resolvers, datahubs, api tools - tools for publication of data and images: specific tools for mix’n match, tools which can deal with what heritage professionals have already produced (excel files). Lastly we encourage the public to solicit the heritage sector and create demand for LOD services ‘as if’ you already live in a society where citizens can take access to digital cultural resources for granted and as if you have no idea about the contradictions that cause institutions to delay opening up their collections.
This talk showcases PACKED vzw's linked open data-projects on persistent identification, opening up data, data enrichment and the potential of the Wikimedia ecosystem BUT also the areas where the Wikimedia platforms and its present tools could be improved. We make an argument for attracting more people with an IT background in the cultural sector, better open infrastructures and tools that make linked open data publishing and reuse possible: resolvers, datahubs, api tools - tools for publication of data and images: specific tools for mix’n match, tools which can deal with what heritage professionals have already produced (excel files). Lastly we encourage the public to solicit the heritage sector and create demand for LOD services ‘as if’ you already live in a society where citizens can take access to digital cultural resources for granted and as if you have no idea about the contradictions that cause institutions to delay opening up their collections.
This document discusses challenges and opportunities for linked open data in cultural heritage institutions. It summarizes that while many institutions have digitized collections and data, their "digital mindset" and outdated systems have limited data sharing and reuse. The document outlines recent and ongoing projects by PACKED to address this, such as developing tools to publish structured data on Wikimedia platforms, and a "datahub" and "resolver tool" to facilitate internal data management and linking to external references. Next steps include expanding these projects and conducting a survey to understand demand for cultural heritage data. The overall aim is to make institutions' data and collections more accessible and reusable on the web.
Presentation by Alina Saenko and Sam Donvil at Open Belgium 2018 -
http://2018.openbelgium.be/session/linked-open-data-limbo-co-creation-catalyst-cultural-heritage-resources
Facilitating digital research in the humanities: from local services to Europ...Sally Chambers
This presentation was given as part of the 'Séminaire Européen de l’Ecole doctorale' on 'Les Infrastructures de la recherché, quels enjeux pour les humanités numériques ?' held at the University of Lille on 3 March 2016, see:
http://geriico.recherche.univ-lille3.fr/index.php?page=annee-2015---2016
In order for museums to truly reap the benefits of publishing their collections online in a sustainable way, PACKED vzw presents the results of its Linked open data project as a best practice guide for the Flemish heritage sector.
Europeana Creative - What is this Europeana thing?Europeana
Europeana is a website and API that provides access to over 26 million digital objects from museums, libraries, archives and collections across Europe. It is operated by the Europeana Foundation along with contributions from cultural heritage organizations. The documents discusses Europeana projects like Europeana Creative that enable reuse of content. It aims to aggregate cultural works, facilitate the cultural heritage sector, and distribute content to users. Initiatives to better engage users include virtual exhibitions, professional sites, and crowdsourcing campaigns. The presentation encourages partnerships and an open lab network to further these engagement goals.
Linked Open Data Publications through Wikidata & Persistent Identification...PACKED vzw
In order for museums to truly reap the benefits of publishing their collections online in a sustainable way, PACKED vzw presents the results of its Linked open data project as a best practice guide for the Flemish heritage sector.
Open Cultuur Data is a Dutch network that aims to make cultural data from institutions openly available and accessible in order to create new cultural applications. The network includes cultural professionals, developers, and open data experts. It works to collect and publish open cultural datasets from organizations like museums and archives. It also organizes events like hackathons to encourage developers to build apps using this open cultural data. The goal is to make culture more accessible to the public in new ways through open data and new applications.
Developing a national digital library stapel - meijers 20160302Enno Meijers
In 2015, the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB) became legally responsible for the digital infrastructure of the Dutch public libraries.
The KB wants to offer a platform where people and information come together. Their most important task for the years to come is the development of a national digital library - together with their partners in the network.
In this session, representatives from the KB will present their approach towards the Dutch digital library infrastructure. They will address some issues and welcome input from colleague librarians that are facing the same challenges.
B1 maria teresanatale_storytelling_movioevaminerva
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
DM2E Community building (Lieke Ploeger – Open Knowledge) at Enabling humanities research in the Linked Open Web – DM2E final event (11 December 2014, Navacchio, Italy)
B1 maria teresanatale_storytelling_movioevaminerva
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
The document summarizes presentations from the OpenGLAM Working Group at Wikimania 2014 in London. It describes initiatives in several countries to open cultural data from galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAMs) and promote best practices. The Netherlands program includes OpenGLAM masterclasses to train GLAMs on open data. Germany's program included a cultural data hackathon. Switzerland conducted an OpenGLAM benchmark survey of heritage institutions and a pilot project encouraging institutions to contribute to Wikipedia.
From Catalogue 2.0 to the digital humanities: exploring the future of librari...Sally Chambers
This document discusses the evolving role of libraries and librarians in supporting digital scholarship and the digital humanities. It describes how traditional cataloguing tools like MARC are changing to incorporate new metadata standards and linked data. Research libraries' engagement with research infrastructures has been low but is increasing as opportunities arise in areas like research data management, digital repositories, and scholarly communication. The document argues libraries have important roles to play in discovery, data management, and as embedded partners supporting digital humanities researchers and their evolving needs. Collaboration between libraries and digital humanities centers is highlighted as a way to advance both fields.
Similar to 20190304 shifting minds open belgium 2019 (20)
Hoe bepaal je welke delen van je collectie niet auteursrechtelijk beschermd zijn, en dus tot publiek domein behoren? Wat zijn mogelijke uitdagingen bij de bepaling van de publiekdomeinstatus? Wat kun je doen met collecties die zich in het publieke domein bevinden? Hoe kun je ze toegankelijk en herbruikbaar maken en wat levert dat op? Deze en nog veel meer vragen beantwoordden we tijdens deze sessie.
Presentatie van de namiddagsessie "Bevindingen uit het vooronderzoek naar een uitwisselplatform" tijdens meemoo's partnerevent op 30 november 2023.
Een professioneel uitwisselplatform zou het hergebruik van jouw archiefmateriaal extra kunnen stimuleren bij professionals uit de erfgoed-, media- en creatieve sector en de valorisatie ervan bevorderen over instellingen en sectoren heen. Je kwam er al even mee in aanraking door de bevraging aan contentpartners vorige zomer. Aangezien die bevraging maar een klein onderdeel was van een veel breder vooronderzoek, was het tijd om de belangrijkste resultaten en inzichten met jou te delen.
Presentatie van de namiddagsessie "Deep dive in hetarchief.be" tijdens meemoo's partnerevent op 30 november 2023.
Op zoek naar manieren om vlot audiovisueel archiefmateriaal te ontsluiten? Tijdens deze sessie doken we diep in hetarchief.be: o.a. publieke ontsluiting, de sleutelgebruikerrol en de bezoekertoolfunctionaliteit kwamen aan bod. Een contentpartner deelde bovendien de ervaringen en inzichten van de eigen organisatie over het gebruik van hetarchief.be.
Presentatie van de namiddagessie "GIVE or take: het nut van kwaliteitscontrole bij digitalisering" tijdens meemoo's partnerevent op 30 november 2023.
Een van de grootste uitdagingen in een digitaliseringsproject is het bepalen en controleren van de kwaliteit van je resultaten. Wanneer en hoe bouw je dit in? Doet de Metamorfoze-richtlijn misschien een belletje rinkelen? Hoorde je al over RIPT, QM-tool en ‘targets’? Tijdens deze sessie kwam je te weten wat deze richtlijnen, standaarden en tools voor jouw digitaliseringsproces kunnen betekenen! We deelden graag onze ervaring met kwaliteitscontrole in de GIVE-projecten én gaven plaats voor het uitwisselen van eigen ervaringen en ideeën.
Presentatie namiddagsessie "GIVE-metadata: over verrijking via artificiële intelligentie" tijdens meemoo's partnerevent op 30 november 2023.
Op 160.000 uur audio en video pasten we in het GIVE-metadataproject spraakherkenning en entiteitsherkenning toe. Op 120.000 uur video ook nog eens gezichtsherkenning. Goed voor een heleboel nieuwe metadata! In anderhalf uur ontdekte je hoe die metadataverrijking via AI juist verliep en welke resultaten dat opleverde.
Public Domain Day in Belgium celebrated works that entered the public domain in 2023. Several institutions showcased how they uploaded public domain collections in 2022 and 2023, including the Passchendaele Museum which shared experiences from an upload workshop and the Agentschap Onroerend Erfgoed which highlighted architectural drawings. Other showcases were from the KBR on their Public Domain Day uploads and Europeana's findings from five years of their Open GLAM survey on sharing cultural heritage collections. The event advocated for better sharing of cultural heritage in the public domain.
Presentaties van de sectordag voor museale contentpartners georganiseerd door meemoo, Vlaams instituut voor het archief, in het FOMU in Antwerpen op 10 november 2022.
More from meemoo, Vlaams instituut voor het archief (20)
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
Indira awas yojana housing scheme renamed as PMAYnarinav14
Indira Awas Yojana (IAY) played a significant role in addressing rural housing needs in India. It emerged as a comprehensive program for affordable housing solutions in rural areas, predating the government’s broader focus on mass housing initiatives.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
AHMR is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed online journal created to encourage and facilitate the study of all aspects (socio-economic, political, legislative and developmental) of Human Mobility in Africa. Through the publication of original research, policy discussions and evidence research papers AHMR provides a comprehensive forum devoted exclusively to the analysis of contemporaneous trends, migration patterns and some of the most important migration-related issues.
Contributi dei parlamentari del PD - Contributi L. 3/2019Partito democratico
DI SEGUITO SONO PUBBLICATI, AI SENSI DELL'ART. 11 DELLA LEGGE N. 3/2019, GLI IMPORTI RICEVUTI DALL'ENTRATA IN VIGORE DELLA SUDDETTA NORMA (31/01/2019) E FINO AL MESE SOLARE ANTECEDENTE QUELLO DELLA PUBBLICAZIONE SUL PRESENTE SITO
This report explores the significance of border towns and spaces for strengthening responses to young people on the move. In particular it explores the linkages of young people to local service centres with the aim of further developing service, protection, and support strategies for migrant children in border areas across the region. The report is based on a small-scale fieldwork study in the border towns of Chipata and Katete in Zambia conducted in July 2023. Border towns and spaces provide a rich source of information about issues related to the informal or irregular movement of young people across borders, including smuggling and trafficking. They can help build a picture of the nature and scope of the type of movement young migrants undertake and also the forms of protection available to them. Border towns and spaces also provide a lens through which we can better understand the vulnerabilities of young people on the move and, critically, the strategies they use to navigate challenges and access support.
The findings in this report highlight some of the key factors shaping the experiences and vulnerabilities of young people on the move – particularly their proximity to border spaces and how this affects the risks that they face. The report describes strategies that young people on the move employ to remain below the radar of visibility to state and non-state actors due to fear of arrest, detention, and deportation while also trying to keep themselves safe and access support in border towns. These strategies of (in)visibility provide a way to protect themselves yet at the same time also heighten some of the risks young people face as their vulnerabilities are not always recognised by those who could offer support.
In this report we show that the realities and challenges of life and migration in this region and in Zambia need to be better understood for support to be strengthened and tuned to meet the specific needs of young people on the move. This includes understanding the role of state and non-state stakeholders, the impact of laws and policies and, critically, the experiences of the young people themselves. We provide recommendations for immediate action, recommendations for programming to support young people on the move in the two towns that would reduce risk for young people in this area, and recommendations for longer term policy advocacy.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
A Guide to AI for Smarter Nonprofits - Dr. Cori Faklaris, UNC CharlotteCori Faklaris
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
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20190304 shifting minds open belgium 2019
1. Shifting minds in the
cultural sector
Towards open data in practice
Open Belgium 04.03.2019
Sam Donvil Alina Saenko
sam@packed.be alina@packed.be
@PACKEDvzw
2. • Non-profit
• 2006 - 2010: Platform for Archiving and Conservation of Art on Electronic and Digital Media
• 2011 - 2018: Centre of Expertise Digital Heritage
• from 2019: A department in VIAA - Flemish Institute for Audiovisual Archiving
• Flemish, Belgian and European projects
• Support for ICT-processes at heritage and arts organisations (o.a. creating, storage,
cataloguing, online access, exchange and reuse) and policy thereof
• Central concern: sustainability (digital heritage is vulnerable)
www.packed.be | www.viaa.be | www.projectcest.be | www.scart.be | www.projecttracks.be | www.scoremodel.org ...
3. Programme ‘Shifting minds’ session
- PACKED:
- Open GLAM community: International and in Belgium
- PACKED: open data projects: persistent identification and publishing of data
- PACKED: advocacy en training
- Conclusions and wishlist
- Use cases from the cultural heritage sector:
- Wikimedia publication of King Baudouin Foundation collections - Olivier Van
D’huynslager
- Flemish Art Collection: Arthub/Datahub - Matthias Vandermaesen
6. Infrastructure for open data in the cultural sector
Data:
- Messy and not complete, but a lot of potential knowledge
- Captured on different carriers (systems, digital and analogue files)
- Often closed (and obsolete) software
- ‘4-star’ data is becoming reachable for the cultural heritage sector
- ‘5-star’ Linked Open Data: persistent URI’s solution?
Publishing:
- Where? Own platforms vs existing Open Data Repositories
7. Infrastructure: Persistent URI’s
- Nobody knows what PIDs are and why you should use it
- Not that obvious in the cultural heritage sector
- Not just a standard part of the used collection mgmt systems,
- Not just something that you ask your IT to configure (because there is no IT)
- PID-projects (2013-2016) - Resolver-tool v1
- Open Summer of code 2018 - redevelopment
8. What is cultURIze?
Culturize is a tool for museum administrators to share data about
their collection using persistent URI’s.
Who needs CultURIze?
Registrars, curators and managers of small or medium cultural heritage
collections.
https://github.com/PACKED-vzw/CultURIze
https://github.com/PACKED-vzw/CultURIze/wiki
- prototype developed during Open Summer of code 2018 in Belgium
- inspired by W3id on Github
9. How does it work?
CultURIze is four-step process to create a persistent URI for a collection
item on the web:
- Record persistent URI's and the corresponding webresources in a
spreadsheet
- Turn the spreadsheet into a server configuration file
- Upload the file to a code sharing platform
- Periodically update your webserver to activate the persistent
URI's.
CSV-file
cultURIze app
Github repo
Webserver
10. 2019: Governance and contribution project
- Research on a sustainable governance model for the CultURIze
project.
- How to generate financial means and create a community of
developers around the CultURIze?
- Partners:
- Open Knowledge Belgium
- Flemish Art Collection
- Flemish Architecture Institute
> input is very welkom!
11. Infrastructure: Platforms for publishing open data
Use/Build your own platforms:
- Own website (download file)
- Own API’s, OAI-PMH and SPARQL endpoints
- Local/National/International cultural heritage aggregators
and datahubs
12.
13.
14.
15.
16. Infrastructure: Platforms for publishing open data
Use already existing open data repositories:
- Government Open data platforms
- Github (download file)
- Wikidata/Wikimedia Commons
17.
18.
19.
20. Infrastructure: Wikimedia platforms
Cultural heritage sector and living heritage on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons:
- 2016: Groeningemuseum, KMSKA, MSKGent, SMAK, MuZEE, Museum M
Leuven
- 2017 - …: Centrum voor Agrarische Geschiedenis, Musea en Erfgoed
Antwerpen, Museum Plantin-Moretus, Rubenshuis, Gruuthuse Museum,
University of Antwerp library / Prentenkabinet, University of Ghent Library,
Royal Library Brussels, Letterenhuis, Horta museum, Fondation CIVA, King
Baudouin Foundation, Vlaams Architectuurinstituut VAi, MAS museum,
Iedereen leest, Kunstenpunt, De Witte Raaf, ...
- https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Flemish_art_collections,_Wikidata_and_Linked_Open_Data
- https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiproject/Procesbeschrijvingen_Belgisch-Nederlandse_podi
umkunsten
21.
22. Advocacy and Training: Open Data Bootcamp
Presentations:
● Rights clearance and rightsstatements
● Datacleaning and persistent identification
Hands-on workshops:
● Datacleaning (Openrefine)
● Enrichment (Openrefine)
● Persistent identification
(Resolver tool -> Culturize)
23. Advocacy and Training: Wikidata Birthday
Hands-on workshops:
● Manual Wikidata editing
● SPARQL-querying
Presentations:
● Upload projects
● LOD research methods
● New Wikidata features: federated
querying, …
● Data visualisations
24. Advocacy and Training: Public Domain Day
Annual Royal Library Public Domain Day
edit-a-thon after image/data donation by
institutions
Annual mini-conference
25. Advocacy and Training: Public Domain Day reuse
activities by Constant vzw
Remix Wonder Woman & Victor
Horta by Plus-tôt Te laat
Cinema Nova: performance music
by Reynaldo Hahn & screening
Ernst Lubitsch
The Death of the Authors, 1946: Xavan & Jaluka
door Peter Westenberg / Constant vzw
26. Advocacy and training: Wiki Loves Art / Heritage
Crowdsourcing
Donations images and data by
institutions
27. Challenges for LOD in cultural sector
digital movement <> no digital mindset
reducing costs <> out-of-control IT-budgets
new ‘digital’ audiences <> losing ‘traditional’ audiences
showing off with fancy tools <> locked up in obsolete technology
engaging with the ‘crowd’ <> abandoned web portals
28. Wishlist
● More IT profiles in the cultural heritage sector and less dependence on the providers
● More freedom to play around and test things out
● Better open infrastructures and tools that make better internal workflows and LOD
possible:
○ Back office tools: Collection Management Systems, DAMs , Datahubs…
○ Publishing online tools: Resolvers, API’s...
○ Reusing: Wikimedia art viewers, apps...
○ etc...
● Vocal and demanding audience:
○ curating/enriching data
○ (examples of) reuse:
■ ie. unisex Hokusai kimono by Noir Noir
29. In 2019 PACKED wants to continue to push for open data in the heritage sector:
● Projects:
○ Projects which pool resources for infrastructure on a sector-wide scale:
■ Option 1: sharing ‘one big machine’
■ Option 2: ‘networked’ infrastructure - several machines talk to each other
○ Structured Data on Commons pilots
○ Public domain publication
○ Multilingual information museums of Bruges
○ ...
● More focus on training, institutions publish LOD (semi-)autonomously
Do you see yourself contributing to one of the projects or to the wishlist?
Idea’s or feedback? Please contact us!
PACKED vzw 2019 -...
32. Infrastructure at the King Baudouin Foundation
- Messy and incomplete data
- Works in collection are dispersed over 80+ institutions (depot).
- Registered differently according to its location
- Huge gap! (7000 records of aprox. 26.000 pieces)
- Shared in different ways
- Analog x digital (closed x open(?))
- Webportals
- DAMS
- Arthub
- Overall → DISPERSED
33. Challenges (case: Collection Van Herck)
- Collect data from various
sources:
- Sculptures and drawings
- 4 institutions (3 dutch / 1 french)
- Normalize data so the metadata
becomes linkable:
- inventory numbers from various
locations:
- CVH 11A(1)
- Inv 30A
- IB00.106
34. Challenges (case: Collection Van Herck)
- Collect data from sources
- Normalize data so the metadata
becomes linkable:
- inventory numbers from various
locations:
- Different titles;
- Aaron
- Aäron
- Aaron
- Different thesauri
- …
35. WIKIDATA
Arthub (VKC)
DAMS Antwerpen
(plantin-Moretus &
Rubenshuis)
Webportal KBS
CMS
(Adlib Museum)
URI’s
KMSKA
Normalization
/ Cleaning /
Linking
spreadsheet
Grouped
XML
Manual
reconciliation
(not open)
Open
Refine
Wikimedia
Commons
Wikipedia
Processing
Quick
Statements
Pattypan
38. Results
- Response and commitment → sensibilisation
- Want to commit but find it hard to let go <> volunteers
- Multilingual and connected to authorities and identifiers:
- AAT / RKD
- Access anywhere
- Ingest DAMS (translations titles)
39. - Open web portal for collections that don’t own one
40. - Wikidata Query Service as a tool to distribute on
other Wikimedia projects:
48. Leveraging museal data is challenging
● Getting registration data out of collection management systems
○ No API’s (manual exchange)
○ Proprietary vendor formats
○ Legacy systems
○ Different institutions, different contexts.
● Quality of the data
○ Inconsistent registration (decades of organic growth)
○ No normalisation (no or limited authorities: VIAF, AAT, ICONCLASS,...)
● Which data to use?
○ Context dependent: online browseable collections.
○ Currently: Basic registration (24 base fields)
○ SPECTRUM 5.0: 21 procedures (Acquisition, Loan in/out, Condition,...)
49. Goals
● Automate sharing museal data between applications
○ Less time between registration and publishing online
● Connect complementary collections and museums
○ Fashion, Industry, Art, Folklore,...
○ Location and time period
● Audit museal data
○ Quality assessment v. digital (re)usability
○ Enrich data with external authorities (linked data)
● Open up collections
○ Publish museal data under Creative Commons licenses.
52. Arthub Flanders
● Online catalogue of the Flemish museums of Fine Arts and Contemporary Arts.
● Currently disseminates collections of:
○ Groeningemuseum (Bruges)
○ Museum of Fine Arts Ghent
○ Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp
● Usable discovery interface
○ Search should yield relevant search results
○ Fast delivery of search results
○ Presentation should be usable for humans
https://arthub.vlaamsekunstcollectie.be
57. The Datahub
● Aggregation
○ Central “hub” for collection records from different sources
● Persistent storage of a copy of the collection records
○ But NOT a collection management system.
● Publication of collection records via web services
○ Open protocols: HTTP REST API & OAI-PMH
○ Open formats: LIDO XML
60. ETL Pipelining
● Extract Transform Load
○ Fetch data from a source (database, flat file, API,...)
○ Transform the data (different format, different structure)
○ Load transformed data to a destination (database, flat file, API,...)
● A pipeline is actually an automated ETL process on a server
○ Reliable
○ Modifiable
○ …
● Mappings between CMS’es, The Datahub and Arthub Flanders
○ Based on context specific business rules
○ Only: Basic registration fields
○ Concerns: Security, Confidentiality, Privacy, Copyright.
http://librecat.org
61. Data Quality
● What does “Quality” mean?
○ Does the data yield relevant answers?
○ Can I import the data in my application?
○ Can I combine the data with other datasets?
○ Can I present the data with low effort?
○ ...
● Quality is context dependeable
○ Who uses the data? Museum workers, researchers, policy makers,...
○ Where is the data used? Exhibition hall, at home, at an office,...
○ When is the data used? Before a visit, during a meeting,...
https://dashboard.vlaamsekunstcollectie.be
65. Next up
● Expanding the number of art collections on Arthub Flanders
○ Mu.ZEE, M HKA, Middelheim, S.M.A.K.
● Integrate IIIF support and offer improved image quality
○ International Image Interoperability Framework
○ https://iiif.io
● Expand towards other interested museums
○ Complementary collections in similar platforms
○ Requires further valorisation of collections out there
● Find new use cases for open museal data
○ Improve operations in museums themselves
○ Sharing knowledge with other organisations
○ Creative industries
○ Tourism & Marketing
○ ...
66. Find us on Github
https://github.com/thedatahub
https://github.com/vlaamsekunstcollectie