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                  <text>Digital archiving is gaining increased attention by both the general public and the scholarly community. The proliferation of digital content through networked channels raises cultural awareness of the ephemeral as well as ubiquitous nature of digitization. This collection highlights critical arguments regarding the digital humanities and digital archiving. The featured studies provide a broad cultural context and essential questions for archive creation and scholarly digital humanities research.</text>
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                <text>“Libraries Face the Challenge of Archiving Digital Material” by IEEE Computer Society is a podcast about how libraries are facing the problems that are presented by the modern day digital material. This podcast is used to introduce the ongoing problems of preserving printed and digital materials that libraries face. It goes into how digital material owned by libraries is being converted or transitioning printed materials into digital copies and how to preserve those copies from degradation. Libraries have faced the problem of preservation of printed materials before. Now, libraries are facing the challenge of preserving digital materials. Digital materials in terms of videos, recordings, artwork and more. The libraries now have to look into preserving enormous information. The differences between written/printed material that are preserved by libraries and the digital copies that are preserved by servers. The difficulties lay in how materials are preserved and how to categories the information. This would be a good addition to the archive by way of Digital Humanities. It is the history of how libraries are dealing with the ongoing problem of preserving materials, both in printed form and digital form. It shows how libraries are facing these problems and the solution in terms of preservation of information. </text>
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                <text>Clara Pulido, Jacquelyn Curtin, Truc Duong</text>
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                <text>IEEE Computer Society, September 7, 2010. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/libraries-face-challenge-archiving-digital-material/id382136308?i=1000084801063.</text>
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                  <text>Public interest in accessing and archiving digital audio and visual collections is finding support and expression in digital archives, digital libraries,digital museums and digital cultural heritage institutions. Large digital archives and institutions commonly provide instruction and community support for digitizing audio and visual content. In addition to these practical issues, this collection addresses the digital migration and representation of audiovisual and photographic artifacts.</text>
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                <text>The authors of this book argue that libraries are institutions of human rights and social justice and should fully embrace this role. They outline ways in which preservation institutions can integrate social justice and human rights in their practice and policies. Jaeger et al. start out by introducing the notions of social justice and human rights, and historically trace how the two concepts intersect with information and literacy. Then, they examine how policies and regulations for library and preservation institutions implement human rights today. Examples of current practices illustrate what that entails. The authors also address reasons why libraries have struggled with incorporating social justice in some ways, and finally propose ways in which such obstacles can be overcome. </text>
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                <text>7.	Jaeger, Paul T., Natalie Greene Taylor, and Ursula Gorham. Libraries, Human Rights, and Social Justice: Enabling Access and Promoting Inclusion. Lanham, MD: Rowanman &amp; Littlefield, 2015&#13;
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                <text>All rights reserved except those which may be granted by Sections 107 and 108 or the Copyright Revision Acy of 1976</text>
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                <text>Harris, Lesley Ellen. &lt;em&gt;Licensing Digital Content: A Practical Guide for Librarians&lt;/em&gt;. Chicago: American Library Association, 2009. Print.</text>
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                  <text>This collection represents the delicate balance digital archivists seek when designing an archive that preserves and provides access, while also ensuring all parties' right to privacy and intellectual property. Also known as risk management, archives must anticipate potential infringements of intellectual property and privacy rights, and guard the public's right to free and open access. Items in the collection address risk management issues and underscore the necessity for keeping current in legal and ethical archival practices.</text>
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                <text>In this academic journal, the authors discuss how the survey aspect of social media, Twitter in particular, presents an opportunity for a new way to collect data. It goes on to explain the complications in ethics  that requires “a deeper understanding of the nature and composition of Twitter data to fully appreciate the risks of disclosure and harm to participants.” The authors discuss three studies and how they have to do with informed consent regarding archiving social media content. Due to the concern the information might not be meant to be shared, they discuss how to maintain ethics while keeping the nature of the shared information in mind in this discussion.&#13;
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                <text>Al Baghal, Tarek;  Jessop, Curtis; Sloan, Luke; Williams, Matthew&#13;
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                <text>Alexis Cosio</text>
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                <text>Sloan, Luke, Curtis Jessop, Tarek Al Baghal, and Matthew Williams. “Linking Survey and Twitter Data: Informed Consent, Disclosure, Security, and Archiving.” Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics 15, no. 1–2 (February 2020): 63–76. doi:10.1177/1556264619853447.&#13;
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                <text>In his foundational new media text, Nelson describes literature itself as a series of interconnecting documents, and suggests that society needs a universal system for storing and preserving texts. Though he writes in the early 1980s, Nelson's proposal pinpoints many of the facets that today are defining features of the digital archive: the user's ability to search for and recall the correct text; evolving storage structures; and linked elements such as placemarkers, footnotes, and hypertextual jumps. Nelson's system, like a digital archive, would be open to the public, but the option would also exist for personal, private archiving.</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Preservation in the archive involves the process of historical representation and connotes security, safety, and assurance that the collections will remain intact and uncorrupted for future generations to enjoy. Digital collections pose unique preservation challenges and require an assessment of risks, both material and intellectual, as part of the planning and  management policies. These entries illuminate standard archival preservation practices and present future trends.</text>
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                <text>“The Long term preservation of digital documents” is a book published in the year 2015. It was originally written in German but was eventually translated to English to reach a wider array of audiences. It is categorized as a digital preservation of electronic information resources. It includes sixty-two figures and thirty-two tablets with a list of informational bibliography references used within the book. The purpose of the novel is to understand and explain the importance of preserving digitized information and what are the best resources and methods to efficiently do so correctly. The book is set up in a textbook format divided by prefaces of specific subject headings followed by chapters that break down the individual information. This is a valuable addition to the archiving website because the importance of archiving digital documents is getting less and less relevant over time as generations are becoming less informed on the proper way to reserve documents and media. The textbook does have a lot of information and therefore has to be divided into concise paragraphs using small fonts. Thankfully, it is available for download in different formats helping readers to individually decide in what type of format would be most comfortable for them to read the given information. </text>
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                <text>Borghoff, Uwe M. Long-Term Preservation of Digital Documents: Principles and Practices. Berlin: Springer, 2010.</text>
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                  <text>Preservation in the archive involves the process of historical representation and connotes security, safety, and assurance that the collections will remain intact and uncorrupted for future generations to enjoy. Digital collections pose unique preservation challenges and require an assessment of risks, both material and intellectual, as part of the planning and  management policies. These entries illuminate standard archival preservation practices and present future trends.</text>
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                <text>Long-Term Preservation of Digital Documents: Principles and Practices</text>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Technology holds the key to the future when it comes to preserving our rich history. Trends are quickly and have ultimately moved towards preserving data and printed text by transposing them into digital text. However, just like tangible text data, information on both storage devices such as servers and even a desktop hard drive have a preservation life in which software engineers and IT management must go in and maintenance this data in order to keep it from deterioration. This book references this process and how much work goes into preserving digital data. </text>
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                <text>Uwe M. Borghoff, Peter Rödig, Jan Scheffczyk, Lothar Schmitz. Faucette, Thomas. Long-Term Preservation of Digital Documents: Principles and Practices. Science &amp; Business Media. 2007. https://books.google.com/books?id=sZpm0dBV5MwC&amp;dq=Long-Term+Preservation+of+Digital+Documents:+Principles+and+Practices&amp;source=gbs_navlinks_s</text>
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                  <text>Archives may represent any number or size collection and institution. These different types of archives may include governmental, non-selective collecting, thematic or activist, with corresponding missions and purposes unique to each institution. The items of this collection engage the processes of archive planning, building, and curation, and also represent notable digital archives whose collections reflect their respective institution's history and community.</text>
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                <text>Authors Sandy Green and Gareth Winter narrate the history of the Wairarapa Archive located in southeast New Zealand. They attribute the popularity and growth of this archive to its successful partnerships and community outreach program, as well as its adherence to archival standards. Green and Winter’s historical account traces the archive’s beginning as a print and photo-based collection housed in the basement of the local library, to a dynamic archive comprised of several collections, many of which are digitized. Wairarapa archive’s popularity is largely to due to what author/archivist Gareth Winter, describes “keeping the gate open.” The “open gate” refers to the accessibility of the archive and the staff’s willingness to provide several services and cooperative programs with the community. Services and collaborations include sponsoring oral history projects, supporting both technically and physically, the local genealogical society, digitizing photographs, records, and newspapers for other institutions as well as its own collections and providing both published works and school field trips to provide continuing education to its public.&#13;
&#13;
The archive thus evolved from primarily functioning as a holding repository for local historical and governmental records, to providing educational and historian services. The variety and extent of the collaboration between the Wairarapa archive and several local and national organizations is fundamental to the archive’s ongoing success and funding.</text>
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                <text>Polk, Victoria</text>
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