This document discusses a project investigating the use of Archivematica for long-term digital preservation of research data. The project is a collaboration between researchers at the University of Hull and University of York. Archivematica is an open source digital preservation system that packages preservation tools. The project aims to set up local implementations of Archivematica at Hull and York and explore integrating it more broadly. Work in Phase 2 included enhancing Archivematica, spreading awareness of the project, and planning for sustainability and outreach in a potential Phase 3.
Research data spring - Jisc Digital Festival 2015Jisc
This demonstration explored a few ideas and the collborative process implemented by Jisc R&D to select ideas and gather feedback for technical tools, software and service solutions to support the management of research data.
Closing plenary - John Wilkin and David MaguireJisc
Infrastructure for US research and scholarship
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Efficient infrastructure for UK research
Speaker: David Maguire, vice-chancellor of the University of Greenwich and chair of Jisc.
Jisc and CNI conference, 6 July 2016
Research data spring - Jisc Digital Festival 2015Jisc
This demonstration explored a few ideas and the collborative process implemented by Jisc R&D to select ideas and gather feedback for technical tools, software and service solutions to support the management of research data.
Closing plenary - John Wilkin and David MaguireJisc
Infrastructure for US research and scholarship
Speaker: John Wilkin, dean of libraries and university librarian at the University of Illinois, previous executive director, HathiTrust.
Efficient infrastructure for UK research
Speaker: David Maguire, vice-chancellor of the University of Greenwich and chair of Jisc.
Jisc and CNI conference, 6 July 2016
Show me the money - the long path to a sustainable RDM FacilityJisc RDM
Show me the money - the long path to a sustainable RDM Facility
A presentation by Marta Teperek from Cambridge University about the challenges encountered in developing business case and costing models for managing research data. Session held at Cardiff University for the Research Data Network event in May 2016.
What I wish I’d known at the start! What I wish I’d known at the start! Lessons learned the hard way when setting up RDM services;
Stephen Grace, London South Bank University, Sarah Jones, DCC; Research Data Network
Introduction to data and text mining - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
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This workshop will show the value and benefits of TDM techniques and demonstrate how ContentMine aims to liberate 100,000,000 facts from the scientific literature, and ContentMine will provide a hands on demo on a topical and accessible scientific/medical subject.
Are we failing users? Can open approaches meet their needs? - Maura MarxJisc
Are we failing users? Can open approaches meet their needs?
Maura's plenary presentation at the Jisc/British Library Discovery Summit 2013
February 2013, London
Researcher data management shared service for the UK – John Kaye, Jisc
Hydra - Tom Cramer, Stanford University and Chris Awre, University of Hull
Addressing the preservation gap at the University of York - Jenny Mitcham, University of York
Emulation developments - David Rosenthal, Stanford University
Jisc and CNI conference, 6 July 2016
Collaboration through technology: moving from possibility to practice - Marti...Jisc
Led by Martin Hamilton, futurist, Jisc.
With contribution from Daniel Fairbairn, e-learning manager, Uxbridge College.
This session will explore the potential that technology can bring to all forms of collaboration, and consider the difference that it has made to some local organisations and their practices.
Connect more in London, 28 June 2016
Making the most of digital resources - Penny Robertson, Neil Stapleton and Cl...Jisc
This session will be led by Penny Robertson, account manager, Jisc.
With contributions from Neil Stapleton and Clare Pelling, technology enhanced learning manager and lead learning resource officer, The College of West Anglia.
In this session you’ll hear from local colleagues, explaining how they are making the most of some of the digital resources available through Jisc.
Connect more in Nottingham, Tuesday 12 July 2016.
How OA compliant is your institution - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
To comply with funders' policies HE institutions will need to record data about their open access (OA) research outputs in a consistent way.
In this session we’ll provide an overview of the Jisc-led tools and services that can support you with this. There will be an opportunity to discuss your workflows, plans, challenges and opportunities for RCUK and REF compliance and an HEI will provide an overview of their funder reporting and workflows.
Kit-Catalogue - Discovering the Value of Equipment Sharing - Universities UK ...Martin Hamilton
Universities UK (UUK) 4th Annual Efficiency in Higher Education Conference talk from me and UCL's Jacky Pallas on accelerating equipment sharing. This covers Jisc initiatives such as our shared data centre and VAT cost sharing group, and our pilot of the Kit-Catalogue equipment database software - with a case study from UCL showing how they have used Kit-Catalogue.
Helping you shape infrastructure to implement open access efficientlyJisc
This session focused on two projects Jisc monitor and Jisc publications router that will develop prototype solutions and other outputs that point to ways to radically reduce the administrative burden of implementing open access.
HESA data, describing research activity and #REF2021Jisc RDM
Research Data Network
Dan Cook, Head of Data Policy & Development at HESA;
An update on the work Hesa is doing in relation to research data, especially in the context of the forthcoming REF.
The research data spring project "DataVault" slides for the third sandpit workshop. Project led by University of Manchester and University of Edinburgh.
Show me the money - the long path to a sustainable RDM FacilityJisc RDM
Show me the money - the long path to a sustainable RDM Facility
A presentation by Marta Teperek from Cambridge University about the challenges encountered in developing business case and costing models for managing research data. Session held at Cardiff University for the Research Data Network event in May 2016.
What I wish I’d known at the start! What I wish I’d known at the start! Lessons learned the hard way when setting up RDM services;
Stephen Grace, London South Bank University, Sarah Jones, DCC; Research Data Network
Introduction to data and text mining - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
Text and data mining (TDM) techniques can be applied to a wide range of materials, from published research papers, books and theses, to cultural heritage materials, digitised collections, administrative and management reports and documentation, etc. Use cases include academic research, resource discovery and business intelligence.
This workshop will show the value and benefits of TDM techniques and demonstrate how ContentMine aims to liberate 100,000,000 facts from the scientific literature, and ContentMine will provide a hands on demo on a topical and accessible scientific/medical subject.
Are we failing users? Can open approaches meet their needs? - Maura MarxJisc
Are we failing users? Can open approaches meet their needs?
Maura's plenary presentation at the Jisc/British Library Discovery Summit 2013
February 2013, London
Researcher data management shared service for the UK – John Kaye, Jisc
Hydra - Tom Cramer, Stanford University and Chris Awre, University of Hull
Addressing the preservation gap at the University of York - Jenny Mitcham, University of York
Emulation developments - David Rosenthal, Stanford University
Jisc and CNI conference, 6 July 2016
Collaboration through technology: moving from possibility to practice - Marti...Jisc
Led by Martin Hamilton, futurist, Jisc.
With contribution from Daniel Fairbairn, e-learning manager, Uxbridge College.
This session will explore the potential that technology can bring to all forms of collaboration, and consider the difference that it has made to some local organisations and their practices.
Connect more in London, 28 June 2016
Making the most of digital resources - Penny Robertson, Neil Stapleton and Cl...Jisc
This session will be led by Penny Robertson, account manager, Jisc.
With contributions from Neil Stapleton and Clare Pelling, technology enhanced learning manager and lead learning resource officer, The College of West Anglia.
In this session you’ll hear from local colleagues, explaining how they are making the most of some of the digital resources available through Jisc.
Connect more in Nottingham, Tuesday 12 July 2016.
How OA compliant is your institution - Jisc Digifest 2016Jisc
To comply with funders' policies HE institutions will need to record data about their open access (OA) research outputs in a consistent way.
In this session we’ll provide an overview of the Jisc-led tools and services that can support you with this. There will be an opportunity to discuss your workflows, plans, challenges and opportunities for RCUK and REF compliance and an HEI will provide an overview of their funder reporting and workflows.
Kit-Catalogue - Discovering the Value of Equipment Sharing - Universities UK ...Martin Hamilton
Universities UK (UUK) 4th Annual Efficiency in Higher Education Conference talk from me and UCL's Jacky Pallas on accelerating equipment sharing. This covers Jisc initiatives such as our shared data centre and VAT cost sharing group, and our pilot of the Kit-Catalogue equipment database software - with a case study from UCL showing how they have used Kit-Catalogue.
Helping you shape infrastructure to implement open access efficientlyJisc
This session focused on two projects Jisc monitor and Jisc publications router that will develop prototype solutions and other outputs that point to ways to radically reduce the administrative burden of implementing open access.
HESA data, describing research activity and #REF2021Jisc RDM
Research Data Network
Dan Cook, Head of Data Policy & Development at HESA;
An update on the work Hesa is doing in relation to research data, especially in the context of the forthcoming REF.
The research data spring project "DataVault" slides for the third sandpit workshop. Project led by University of Manchester and University of Edinburgh.
Research data spring: extending the OPD to cover RDMJisc RDM
The research data spring project "Extending the Organisational Profile Document to cover Research Data Management" slides for the third sandpit workshop. Project led by Joy Davidson from the Digital Curation Centre.
Research data spring: giving researchers credit for their dataJisc RDM
The research data spring project "Giving researchers credit for their data" slides for the third sandpit workshop. Project led by the University of Oxford Bodleian Libraries.
Research data spring: streamlining depositJisc RDM
The research data spring project "Streamlining deposit: an OJS to repository plugin" slides for the third sandpit workshop. Project led by Ernesto Priego of City University London.
Jenny Mitcham from the University of York and Chris Awre from the University of Hull share lessons learned from their project to explore the potential of the digital preservation solution Archivematica to help manage research data that academics within the University produce. The project 'Filling the Digital Preservation Gap' has been carried out with funding from Jisc as part of their Research Data Spring program and was a collaboration of the University of York and the University of Hull. The project did not only explore Archivematica as a possible solution but also how it could integrate with the repositories and other systems for the management of research data.
The Series is jointly sponsored by ANDS and CAUL.
National Monographs Strategy - Project OverviewBen Showers
An introduction to the National Monograph Strategy project. The project is a collaboration between Jisc, SCONUL and RLUK to explore the potential for a national approach to the collection, management, preservation and digitisation of scholarly monographs.
"Filling the digital preservation gap" with ArchivematicaJenny Mitcham
A presentation given by Jenny Mitcham at the iPRES conference on 6th November 2015 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. It describes work underway in the "Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" project using Archivematica to preserve research data
Presentació a càrrec de Lluís Anglada, director de Ciència Oberta al CSUC, duta a terme dins del workshop "Open Data Strategy" organitzat per la Institució CERCA el 6 de juny de 2019.
A collaborative approach to "filling the digital preservation gap" for Resear...Jenny Mitcham
A presentation given by Chris Awre, Jenny Mitcham and Sarah Romkey at RDMF14 (the DCC's Research Data Management Forum) on 9th November 2015 in York. It describes work underway in the "Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" project using Archivematica to preserve research data
The Future of Finding: Resource Discovery @ The University of OxfordMegan Hurst
The report is the culmination of a one-year multi-strand research project, and examines how users of the museums and libraries at the University of Oxford find the information they need (known as “resource discovery”), current practices among other institutions, and trends and possibilities for resource discovery in the future.
Athenaeum21 led the end-user research and needs assessment portion of the project, and then led the synthesis and analysis of the data across all of the research strands, making the recommendations and writing the final report. The report defines the resource discovery strategy for the University for the next 5 years.
The Future of Finding: Resource Discovery @ The University of OxfordChristine Madsen
The report is the culmination of a one-year multi-strand research project, and examines how users of the museums and libraries at the University of Oxford find the information they need (known as “resource discovery”), current practices among other institutions, and trends and possibilities for resource discovery in the future.
Athenaeum21 led the end-user research and needs assessment portion of the project, and then led the synthesis and analysis of the data across all of the research strands, making the recommendations and writing the final report. The report defines the resource discovery strategy for the University for the next 5 years.
"Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" with ArchivematicaJenny Mitcham
A webinar given by Jenny Mitcham and Simon Wilson to Digital Preservation Coalition members on 25th November 2015. It describes work underway in the "Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" project using Archivematica to preserve research data
Project update: A collaborative approach to "filling the digital preservation...Jenny Mitcham
A presentation given by Julie Allinson at the UK Archivematica group meeting on 6th November 2015 in Leeds. It describes work underway in the "Filling the Digital Preservation Gap" project using Archivematica to preserve research data
Birgit Plietzsch “RDM within research computing support” SALCTG June 2013SALCTG
An overview of Research Data Management: the research process from developing ideas to preservation of data; funder perspectives, the impact on the wider service, Data Asset Frameworks, preservation and access, and cost implications.
Preservation Issues:Other Sources of Information and Next StepsMarieke Guy
Preservation Issues:Other Sources of Information and Next Steps - presentation given by Marieke Guy, UKOLN at RLUK Approaches to Digitisation day at British Library, Wednesday 9th February 2011
Digital Preservation: Other Sources of InformationMarieke Guy
Digital Preservation: Other Sources of Information - talk given by Marieke Guy, UKOLN, at Approaches to Digitisation course run by Research Libraries UK at the British Library, Wednesday 9th February 2011.
Recent national and international mandates and reports seek to promote an open research infrastructure which facilitates easy access to knowledge and information for all. For example, The UK Open Research Data Task Force report, released in February 2019, recommends user-friendly services for research data management and infrastructure to maximise interoperability and discoverability.
Jisc has built the Open Research Hub (JORH), which integrates a repository, preservation, reporting and storage platform. This cloud-based service is a community governed, multi-tenant solution for universities and other research institutions to manage, store, preserve and share their published research data. Based on existing open standards, the service’s open and extensive data model incorporates best practice from across the sector, including DataCite, CrossRef, CERIF, Dublin Core and PREMIS.
While the Hub was built to address the needs of research data curation, its adoption of open, best practice standards means it has the potential to allow the service to handle a much wider range of digital research objects, including Open Access articles, theses and software. The data model, rich messaging layer and an open API facilitate interoperability with other institutional and scholarly communications systems. This provides the potential for the Hub to underpin infrastructure capable of meeting the requirements of an ever-evolving open research agenda.
This talk will introduce some of the key initiatives seeking to shape open research infrastructure and discuss how the Hub’s current and future development is directed towards facilitating open research best practice. Consideration will be given to how the Hub either meets or can meet recent recommendations such as FAIR, Plan S, ORDTF and the COAR’s Next Generation Repositories.
Jisc Research Data Shared Service - a Samvera case studyJisc RDM
As part of its Research Data Shared Service (RDSS), Jisc has been developing a repository component as part of its core architecture . Through making an integrated research data management platform available to UK Universities, there is a growing demand from small to medium HEIs for the RDSS to provide a single repository solution that fits their needs for publications and data with workflows for Open Access and REF submissions. To achieve this, the repository must be integrated with other Jisc Open Access services such as Sherpa, Jisc Monitor and Publications router, along with those provided by external stakeholders such as ORCID, Crossref, DataCite and OpenAIRE.
This presentation is a case study in evaluating Samvera for this role, and its suitability as a multi-tenanted, sustainable hybrid repository that is both attractive to researchers and universities and aligns with the broader international objectives of the community, the FAIR agenda and open science.
Stories from the Field: Data are Messy and that's (kind of) okJisc RDM
Jude Towers and David Ellis on research data at Lancaster Unviversity and within their own disciplines. At the Research Data Champions Day 26 March 2018.
'Making the case for a research data shared service' in the Measuring Success and Changing Culture session Presented during the National RDM Strategies session of the Göttingen-CODATA RDM Symposium 2018
Title: Monitoring institutional compliance with RDM policy
database that is used by the team to monitor compliance.
Research Data Network
University of Strathclyde
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Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
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Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
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2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
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Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
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Research data spring: filling in the digital preservation gap
1. Research data spring
Filling the Digital Preservation Gap10/12/2015
Investigating Archivematica to preserve research
data for the longer term …because digital
preservation won’t just go away
2. Team
2
University of Hull:
• Chris Awre
• Richard Green
• Simon Wilson
University of York:
• Julie Allinson
• Jen Mitcham
3. Project aim
3
“…to investigate
Archivematica and explore
how it might be used to
provide digital preservation
functionality within a wider
infrastructure for Research
Data Management.”
4. Why?
4
....because we believe that digital preservation
should be a key element of the infrastructure for
managing research data for the long term
(From RDMSS PQQ)
“...preservation actions should ensure that data
remains authentic, reliable, and usable while
maintaining integrity.”
5. Why Archivematica?
5
....because it is open source,
standards compliant, flexible
and customisable and packages
a range of preservation tools
together
...if you want to know
more you can read our
phase 1 report
7. The Archivematica development model
7
Artefactual develop
Archivematica
Archivematica
released
as open source
Community of users
identifies enhancements
Enhancements
sponsored
by one or more users
RDS /
Research data
UK users
COPPUL
8. Progress in phase 2
»Planning our own local
implementations
»Hull
»York
»Considering above campus
option for Archivematica
»Liaising with other projects
»Phase 2 Report: now available!
8
9. Progress in phase 2
»Enhancing Archivematica:
»DIP regeneration
»METS parsing
»Generic search API
»Choice of checksum
»Pronom integration
»Documentation
9
10. Progress in phase 2
Not all of the work we
have sponsored is ‘visual’
but much of it is
fundamental to the
future development of
Archivematica. Our work
is enabling
10
“The Jisc work has helped to
modernise some of the
internal infrastructure of
Archivematica”
Sarah Romkey, Artefactual Systems,
8th December 2015
14. Impact and demand
14
Yes….sounds like a
pragmatic solution
Yes! Low down learning
curve and Archivematica
sounds just the ticket :-)
Possible but too
early to say
Do you see Archivematica as a possible digital preservation
solution for your institution? Why?
Yes - University Archivist is an
advocate and want to link in
collaboratively with the
institution's RDM developments
Possibly if it can
integrate with Pure...
Yes
16. Sustainability
»All developments funded in phase 2 will be
incorporated into the main code base to be
supported for the long term by Artefactual
–look out for these in version 1.6 (due Spring 2016)
»There are already plans to build on some of the
work we have funded
–for example AIP re-ingest work from Zuse Institute
–...and more...see phase 2 report
16
17. Next phase
» Implement our local proof of concepts at Hull and York
» Outreach
» Paper at IDCC conference
» Presentation at UK Archivematica group meeting
» Poster at Open Repositories conference
» Poster at UK Archives Discovery Forum
» more blogs
» end of project event to disseminate our case studies
» Phase 3 project report (with assessment of success of
PoCs)
17
18. What we will spend the money on
»Managing and funding our own internal development work
» 2 weeks support from Artefactual Systems
» 4 new research data file signatures from The National
Archives (and further engagement on generic process)
» Outreach (conference fees, travel etc)
» Putting on our own dissemination event
18
19. Working for other repositories
» Archivematica -> repository
› Our model: Archivematica -> Fedora/Hydra
› Unpack a DIP and create Fedora objects
– Similar model for EPrints/DSpace?
› Could just store the DIP, but this limits access options
» Repository -> Archivematica
› Push content to Archivematica from a repository for
dark archiving
› Possible via DSpace, planned for Fedora/Hydra at Hull
19