We heartily endorse the assertion in the "Minimum Criteria for
an Archival Repository of Digital Scholarly Journals" that an
archival repository that acts to preserve digital scholarly
publications must be a trusted party that conforms to certain
minimum requirements agreed to by both scholarly publishers and
libraries. The most serious challenges and impediments to the
creation of an e-journal repository are political: they have to
do not with how the technology is designed, but rather with how
the essential stakeholders (publishers, libraries, the scientific
societies that support both, and the user) relate and work with
each other. Indeed, how they relate will to no small extent
determine how the technology evolves. What precisely is stored in
such a repository, how access to it is guaranteed, who owns it,
how and under what circumstances it is accessed, who authorizes
such access, how the entire operation is securely and regularly
funded--these and similar questions must be answered jointly by
the stakeholders before the building of a fail-safe repository
can commence. During the planning year, we will work with our
target publishers to formulate and develop provisional answers to
these basic business and technical questions. Negotiations with
publishers over the design, organization, and operation of the
digital repository will therefore be the primary activity during
the planning year.
While political issues may be the greatest challenge to the
successful implementation of an e-journal repository, serious
technical challenges also confront us. There are a number of
technical issues that must be identified and addressed in
conjunction with the negotiation with publishers. Some concern
the nature of the e-journal archive itself. Is it to be, for
example, a fail-safe repository of last resort whose contents are
shaped by a desire to ensure the longest possible lifespan, or
should it try to offer the full range of functionality found in
the e-journal itself? Can the repository be built so that both
options are possible? Once the nature of the archive is defined,
what systems are to be used for the ingest, organization,
maintenance, migration, and delivery of the e-journal files? What
is the place of redundancy in the system? The development of a
technical model for the e-journal repository will be the second
focus of the planning year.
In addition to our negotiations with publishers and the
development of a technical work plan, we will also use the
planning year to develop mechanisms for convincing the scholarly
community of the validity of the repository, explore
organizational and staffing models for any implemented
repository, and explore long-term funding options and growth
plans for the repository.
The planning year will be divided into seven separate but
related activities.
It is our belief that effective archiving of electronic
journals can only be accomplished through a publisher/librarian
partnership. The Mellon planning grant would allow us to work
with publishers to establish a set of responsibilities for both
Cornell, as the archiving institution, and the publishers, as
archival depositors. Along with those responsibilities, we must
establish conditions for inclusion, including copyright
clearance, that are broadly acceptable to the publishers, but
allow Cornell, as the archiving institution, the flexibility to
establish technical specifications and access policies that serve
users well. To be successful, these negotiations must identify
the benefits and drawbacks of the different configurations of an
e-journal archive and find an acceptable common ground for all
parties. This will then form the basis of the contracts with
publishers depositing files in the archive.
The first step in the acquisitions plan would be to develop
selection criteria that will allow us to prioritize from the list
of journals in Appendix B which of the publishers we wish to ask
to be part of Project Harvest. Twelve publishers are obvious
candidates with which to work. These publishers issue a large
number of the core titles; they are prominent in the field (and
hence likely to serve as models for others); and they represent a
wide variety of publishing models, including both profit and
non-profit. They include:
- Elsevier, with 16 journals on the list
- Either the Tri-Societies (American Society of Agronomy, Crop
Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America)
or Springer, which produces the journals
- The National Research Council of Canada. At one point, their
archiving policy was to maintain material "until they ran out of
room on their server"
- Annual reviews. This is available via Highwire, and offer a
way of working with another university
- University of Chicago Press. Titles include Economic
Development and Cultural Change, International Journal of
Plant Sciences, and American Naturalist;
- American Agricultural Economics Association
- Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology
- Cambridge University Press, with 7 journals on our list
- Entomological Society of America. We have already negotiated
permission with them to include several titles in the online Core
Historical Literature of Agriculture
- Kluwer, with 5 titles on list
- Oxford University Press, with 3 titles on list
- Blackwell Science, with 9 titles on list
After identifying the potential publisher partners, we will
then ask a pilot group to participate in Cornell's Project
Harvest. From those publishers expressing interest in
participating, we would gather a small development team to
consider the issues outlined above. The goal for the development
team would be to create, through an iterative process, a standard
agreement for archival deposit. Topics that would be identified
in the agreement include:
- The general responsibilities of the publishers and
Cornell
- Characteristics of the data, accompanying metadata, and any
additional documentation that are to be deposited
- Guidelines on transmission methods and media for deposit
- Procedures for the deposit
- Procedures and protocols Cornell will use to verify the
arrival and completeness of the data
- Rights of the depositing organizations to audit the
repository
- The respective roles, responsibilities, and rights of the
Cornell and the data producers with regard to the data
- Articulation of Cornell's responsibilities and capabilities
with regard to the accessioning, description, management, and
even transformation of the deposited data
- Access policies for users of the repository, and how they may
vary over time
- Conditions on the use of the data, and again how they may
vary over time
- Fees (if any) associated with the deposit
- Cornell's ability to share the data with partners to create
an agreed-upon level of redundancy
- Clarification of issues surrounding copyright retained by
authors
Other key issues defined by the development team
Assuming the implementation phase of the project is funded, we
anticipate contacting all the publishers from the list in
Appendix B to assess their interest in participating in the
project. Through the planning process, we would need to determine
the number of titles we can handle in the first years of the
project.
Cornell has had experience with this type of negotiations. We
worked with 68 publishers, including Elsevier, Kluwer, and
others, to secure rights to use material in TEEAL (The Essential
Electronic Agricultural Library) and The Core Historical
Literature of Agriculture. In the process of negotiations, staff
members developed a standard agreement similar in function (if
not in content) to the agreement we are proposing to develop for
Project Harvest. In Project TEEAL, once one major publisher
agreed to the TEEAL basic agreement many other publishers
followed. We anticipate a similar development with Project
Harvest. Project Euclid, like TEEAL, has been built on a
partnership of publishers and librarians. In the case of Project
Euclid, many of the publishers are scientific societies,
providing us with experience in learning and understanding the
concerns of a different group of publishers. We would use the
lessons we have learned from developing Euclid in shaping the
discussions for Project Harvest.
We would also draw on the lessons others have learned in
negotiating with publishers. The CLIR/DLF draft model license
found on the LIBLICENSE web site at Yale University
<http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/>, for example, is a
natural model on which to draw for our similar effort to develop
a model archiving agreement. The data depository program of the
Arts and Humanities Data Service
<http://ahds.ac.uk/deposit/depintro.html> will also provide
information on what is needed for a digital archive and what
creators are likely to be willing to deposit
The Cornell repository will only be successful if the
scholarly community is convinced that the journals deposited at
Cornell will remain accessible and readable over time. An
important component of the planning year therefore will be
assessing how scholars feel about e-journals and identifying
methods to build trust in the community.
In the matter of trust, Project Harvest is in a favored
position. Mann Library within the Cornell library system has had
a long history of preserving and making available to the
scholarly community the core literature of agriculture. An
ongoing and significant electronic initiative is the USDA
Economics and Statistics System with its statistical and textual
reports from the Agriculture Department's Economic Research
Service, National Agricultural Statistics Service, and World
Agricultural Outlook Board. Scholars know that Cornell has a
vested interest in the preservation of the literature of
agriculture, making this project mission-driven, rather than
external to the overall goals of the institution.
Given the confidence that the university already enjoys with
publishers, librarians, and scholars, some in the scholarly
community may be willing to accept whatever the university
proposes to do just because it comes from Cornell. However, it
will also be important to develop formal methods of representing
the organizational and technical competencies Cornell plans to
build during the course of Project Harvest. To meet this need,
the project team will develop a plan to outline the
organizational and technical components of the repository. We
assume that the success of the journal deposit system developed
during the course of the project will be heavily dependent on the
reliability and credibility of the organizational and technical
work plan. We will convince the repository's customers that
materials in the repository are in good hands by articulating for
them our plans for the building, maintenance, and management of
the repository.
One component part of our information campaign will be to
develop a mission statement for Project Harvest that can be
shared with the appropriate scholarly communities. The mission
statement will include the information recommended by the
"Minimum criteria for an archival repository of digital scholarly
journals," including the scope and nature of the materials to be
included in the repository, the strategy and methods we will
adopt to attract materials, and the user community we hope to
serve.
A second means of building scholarly acceptance of Project
Harvest will be to ensure that the archive conforms to generally
accepted standards for digital repositories. One of the
recommendations of the highly influential report of the Task
Force on Archiving of Digital Information was that standards and
criteria for the certification of digital information
repositories be developed. Several national and international
projects are exploring the process and methodology in defining
the requirements for a certified repository. Among the key
initiatives are:
- During the October 1999 ISO Archiving Workshop Series,
certification of archives (specifically within the framework of
the "Reference Model for an Open Archival Information System"
(OAIS)) was one of the key areas for workshop focus and possible
standardization efforts.[1]
- The upcoming Preservation 2000 conference, which is sponsored
by the UK's Cedars Project, RLG, and OCLC, will provide a
platform to continue the discussion of criteria for certification
at an international level.[2]
In March 2000 the Research Libraries Group (RLG) and the
Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) announced that they will
cooperate to create infrastructures for digital archiving. One of
their goals is to establish best practices and document the
attributes of digital archives for research repositories.
The Library's Digital Imaging and Preservation Research Unit
is an active participant in all of these initiatives. During the
planning phase of Project Harvest, the staff will closely monitor
this and related work in the certification of repositories and
will actively contribute to them by sharing Cornell's empirical
experience. As certification standards emerge, Cornell will
publicize our adherence to the standards as one more way of
ensuring trust in the user community.
Cornell will invest in a five-pronged effort that will focus
on: 1) establishing a baseline of e-journal software and file
format needs; 2) specifying the archival repository; 3)
specifying monitoring tools that will flag documents within the
repository that require migration; 4) specifying a baseline
hardware and software infrastructure to house the repository; and
5) exploring the need and implementation models for redundancy in
the repository.
1) Establish a baseline of formats and related
software.
Cornell will inventory file formats and software in use today
to store and manage e-journals in agriculture. We will collect
conversion routines that permit modifying these formats. We will
explore whether there is one "least common denominator" format
that has minimum software dependencies, and that can be used to
create one parallel copy of each journal in that format. Whether
or not there is such a format, we will also look at how we might
maintain the formats in use in the current live system. One area
we want to explore in particular is whether we can maintain both
systems: a system with high functionality based on current
software as well as one based on a more limited, but likely more
enduring, format.
2) Specify the archival repository.
Cornell will investigate potential architectures and design
criteria for the archive repository, and will choose an approach
that is the essence of simplicity. The repository will be based
on the OAIS reference model and compliant with Open Archives
Initiative protocols and other initiatives in the subject domain
of agriculture. (Cornell is already planning to implement OAI
protocols in Project Euclid.) The repository model will provide
for redundancy of instances. The repository architecture needs to
support establishing relationships among the e-journal components
without depending on specialized software that is itself subject
to technological obsolescence. An example of a possible
architecture would be one that relates internal components based
on sequence and naming conventions. The repository files will
contain metadata for each journal complying with contemporary
standards and files in multiple formats. It will include at least
the file format in common use for that journal today and an
additional "least common denominator" version, as well as
associated conversion software.
3) Specify a monitoring system.
Cornell will specify a software application to manage the
status of each member of the repository. It will be a tool that
includes a record for each member of the repository with
information needed to establish its age, migration status, and
technological dependencies (standards, software, etc). This
system will be used as a prediction tool. Criteria will be fed to
the system to identify changes in standards or versions of
software. The system will present specific e-journals in the
repository related to that criteria. These e-journals will then
require review to determine whether they need migration.
In investigating and developing the specification of such a
monitoring system, Cornell will build upon its previous and
current digital preservation investigations. For example, the
Risk Management of Digital Information project, which was
sponsored by CLIR, equipped the library with a better
understanding of the organizational and technical threats that
need to be monitored and controlled to ensure the longevity of
digital resources (report available at
<http://www.clir.org/pubs/abstract/pub93abst.html>). The
library's current DLI2 project focuses on digital preservation.
Particularly relevant to this proposal is a Web profiling tool
that is being developed by the library's Digital Imaging and
Preservation Unit and the Cornell Computer Science Department.
This web profiling software will attempt to gather information on
various characteristics of digital resources to support digital
preservation monitoring and decision-making. This tool provides a
technical background for the development of the proposed
assessment tool. Another library project, sponsored by an IMLS
grant, helped the library to develop a better understanding of
the role of preservation metadata in supporting the long-term
management of digital collections. The library is developing
guidelines for preservation procedures and metadata for digital
image collections that are to be deposited in a central digital
repository.
4) Establish baseline hardware infrastructure.
Cornell will specify hardware with modular storage components
to accommodate massive growth in the amount of material stored
and identify an architecture for data and system backup that is
automatic and self-reporting. Reliability and redundancy of
internal hardware components, combined with growth and migration
potential, will be priority attributes in the hardware plan.
Cornell will develop an RFI to distribute to hardware vendors for
their comment before the end of the planning year.
5) Investigate need for and approach to redundancy.
Along with the addition of new journals to the repository,
there is the possibility of mirroring and/or distributing some of
the repository functions to library collaborators. The land grant
community has strong ties and a history of cooperative
preservation efforts. Other institutions within the land grant
community could provide redundancy for the system Cornell
develops, or they might duplicate the procedures followed by
Cornell with other publishers and subjects. In either event, the
workload would be shared among other committed partners. During
the planning year, we would want to explore further the need for
redundancy in the repository, and begin to work with potential
partners. Cornell is a partner in the LOCKSS program from
Stanford University and Highwire Press. LOCKSS - Lots of Copies
Keeps Stuff Safe - is intended to be a revolutionary, distributed
archiving model. We will want to see if any of the lessons
learned from the LOCKSS project can be applied to Project
HARVEST.
During the planning year, we will develop a two-phased
acquisition and growth plan. The first phase will focus on the
addition of journals to the pilot agricultural repository. This
work will continue during the implementation phase. As new
journals are published in the field of agriculture, or as older
journals become more important, publishers could request to have
a journal included in Project Harvest. Journals could also be
nominated, possibly by an advisory board of agricultural scholars
who would recommend whether to seek out that journal for Project
Harvest. We may also wish to work with the agricultural library
community to ensure that at least one print copy of all
e-journals that also have a printed manifestation is retained.
This process would be explored fully during the planning
process.
More importantly, the implementation phase would give us hard
data on how the pilot could be expanded to other disciplines
and/or publishers in a second phase. Our experience may indicate
that future repositories should be developed around a subject
discipline, as with Project Harvest. We may also find that while
the subject approach proves useful in the pilot phase when the
primary task is negotiating a general agreement with publishers
(and Cornell's good relationship with agricultural publishers
makes this task possible), future repositories would be better
organized around publishers and their specific publishing systems
than by subject. One of the elements we will want to assess
during the planning year (and possibly after) is whether a
subject-based approach is appropriate for a repository, or
whether we should use the agreements we have developed with our
agricultural publishing partners as the basis for a general
agreement regarding the deposit of all of our partner's
publications, regardless of subject matter.
We can already see that the project will require collaboration
across normal institutional boundaries. We are structuring the
planning phase so that it will be a cooperative project drawing
on the expertise found in Mann Library, the Preservation and
Digital Libraries and Information Technologies (DLIT)
departments, and the Library's Institute for Digital Collections
(CIDC). Project Harvest will be overseen in the planning phase by
a steering committee consisting of representatives from the Mann
Library, DLIT, and the Preservation Department, with the
inclusion of a faculty member to represent the interest of
users.
The staffing model of the planning phase is based on the
functional activities suggested in the OAIS reference model.
Staff will be assigned to work in each of these four areas:
Submission
identify and contact publishers seeking collaboration
negotiate terms for submission, access, updates, and other
conditions
plan future growth and acquisitions
coordinate the role of Cornell in agricultural cooperative
preservation efforts
The submission activities of the planning phase will be the
primary responsibility of the Collection Development unit in Mann
Library. They will be assisted by a working group drawn from the
staff from the Preservation Department and license librarians in
Mann Library and CUL Central Technical Services. Legal advice
from the university's General Counsel's office will be sought as
appropriate when working out the details of the contract.
Ingestion
prepare data for archiving
profile resources - identify characteristics
chose standards, develop procedures
Planning for ingest will be a collaborative effort between the
Mann Library's Information Technology Section and the Digital
Library and Information Technology division in the Cornell
University Library system. A minimum of one half FTE will work in
this area and the subsequent area. The work will be informed by
the findings of the Submission group and the preservation
requirements identified by Preservation Department staff,
particularly in the area of standards.
Data Management, Archival Storage, and
Access
determine hardware and software needs
conduct requirements analysis to determine system
infrastructure
design the archival system (both ingest and access
components)
Again, Mann Library's Information Technology Section and the
Digital Library and Information Technology division in the
Cornell University Library system will collaborate on the design
of this aspect of the system.
Policy Development
facilitate the interaction of the different groups within the
library
contribute to the development of criteria for the
certification of archival repositories
develop economic models to ensure the long-term sustainability
of the repository
work closely with the technology team and the collection
development team to develop strategies for standards, file
formats used, preservation metadata, preservation strategies,
etc.
Staff of the Preservation Department will take the lead in
identifying the policy framework for the project. Their
investigations will be tempered by the work of the Submission
group and the technical requirements identified by the Ingest and
Data Administration groups.
Overall policy will be approved by a Steering Committee for
the project. The Steering committee will be composed of senior
administrators in the library (the directors of Mann Library and
the Digital Library and Information Technology division, the
Associate Director of the Preservation Department, and the
University Librarian serving as PI) and one faculty member,
representing the interests of some of the users.
A key question to explore during the planning year will be
whether digital repository functions can be absorbed within our
existing organizational model, or whether a new organizational
unit that cuts across current administrative, subject, and
functional lines is needed.
Publishers have been unwilling in the past to maintain large
print archives of back issues of their journals. Often libraries
hold the only complete back-run of print titles. E-journals,
while they do not require large warehouses or library shelves for
storage, do require electronic storage space and maintenance that
assures the integrity of the digital content. It is unclear
whether publishers intend to maintain archives their own
archives, but libraries are requiring this assurance when they
sign e-journal contracts. Many e-journal publishers are relying
on OCLC ECO (Electronic Collections Online) for archiving, but
OCLC cannot do it all, nor is the reliance on one sole archive
sound practice. Research libraries are, not surprisingly,
unwilling to discard print issues without long term guarantees
that e-journal files will be available.
This planning grant would allow us to explore two major
scenarios for an e-journal archive, the "dark archive" and the
"living archive." The "dark archive" model creates an archive
where stored files would only be used in an emergency. This model
is similar to the model of storing microfilm in the National
Underground Storage facility. In order to minimize the cost of
maintaining a "dark archive," e-journal content might be
converted on ingest to some common, stable, minimal format
(albeit with a concomitant loss of functionality). A "living
archive" of agricultural scholarship, in contrast, would be
modeled after JSTOR or OCLC and would provide access to back
files of e-journals that publishers no longer wished to maintain
or to which publishers are willing to provide additional access.
The publishers would of course still be able to provide access to
recent issues if they desired. As part of the planning process,
the development team would need to investigate the staffing,
contractual, economic and technical implications of both
options.
The living archive presents the greater challenge in that
publishers may be less willing to allow open access to their
material. The development team would have to carefully evaluate
the implications of the various access policies on the publishers
and the users. Issues such as when files would be made available,
mechanisms for allowing access, and comparability with the
original files, among other issues, must be addressed.
Libraries have traditionally assumed the cost of storing and
preserving paper copies of agricultural journals. While libraries
may be willing to absorb the cost of preserving electronic copies
of the same publications, it is more likely that a business model
that can make the preservation of e-journals self-sustaining must
be found. During the planning year, we will investigate several
approaches for making the repository economically self-sufficient
over the long-term. This requires that we account for the capital
costs associated with building and expanding the repository
infrastructure over time. We must also account for the operating
costs associated with maintaining and providing access to the
repository. [Guthrie, 2000]
There are several possible sources of funds that could be used
to maintain and grow the repository over time. They include:
agencies and foundations supportive of the need to preserve
the agricultural literature
publishers, who may be willing to pay on a per-journal basis
the cost for archiving the journal (perhaps by including an
archival surcharge with the electronic access surcharge common
among major publishers)
acquiring free or reduced subscriptions from publishers in
exchange for archiving their journals
charging fees for access to the archival repository
The last three options require the agreement and cooperation
of the publishers. Based on the results of the negotiations with
them, we anticipate being able to develop a business model that
will indicate how much, if anything, archiving agricultural
literature will cost Cornell University.
Project Harvest will be a Library-wide effort. The
following individuals will play key roles in its
implementation.
Sarah Thomas, University Librarian, will serve as
Principal Investigator of Project Harvest.
Peter B. Hirtle, Co-Director, Cornell Institute for
Digital Collections, will serve as Project Coordinator.
Three working groups will work directly with the Coordinator.
Each will be chair by a senior library staff member. Mary
Ochs, Head, Collection Development and Preservation at Mann
Library, will chair the Publisher Relations Group. Tim
Lynch, Head, Information Technology Section at Mann Library,
will chair the Technical Design Group. Oya Y. Rieger,
Acting Assistant Director of Preservation for Digital Imaging and
Preservation Research, will chair the Preservation Policy
Group.
A Publisher Relations Specialist, Preservation Policy Advisor,
and Administrative Assistant will be hired to work with Cornell
staff on Project Harvest.
A Steering Committee will be established to provide general
oversight. Anne R. Kenney, Co-Director, CIDC and Associate
Director of the Department of Preservation, will chair the
Steering Committee. Other members will include: Sarah
Thomas, University Librarian, Janet McCue, Director of
Mann Library, and H. Thomas Hickerson, Associate
University Librarian for Digital Libraries, Information
Technology and Special Collections.
Guthrie, Kevin. 2000. "Developing a Digital Preservation
Strategy for JSTOR, an interview with Kevin Guthrie." RLG
DigiNews 4:4 (15 August 2000)
<http://www.rlg.org/preserv/diginews/diginews4-4.html#feature1>
Gwinn, Nancy E. 1993. A national preservation program for
agricultural literature. S.l. : s.n.
Lawrence, Gregory W., William R. Kehoe, Oya Y. Rieger, William
H. Walters, and Anne R. Kenney. 2000. Risk Management of Digital
Information: A File Format Investigation. Washington, D.C. :
Council on Library and Information Resources.
Olsen, Wallace C., editor. 1991-1996. The Literature of the
Agricultural Sciences. Ithaca, N.Y. : Cornell University
Press.
Task Force on Archiving of Digital Information. 1996.
Preserving digital information: Report of the Task Force on
Archiving of Digital Information. Washington, D.C. : Commission
on Preservation and Access.
Uhlir, Paul. 1997. Framework for the preservation of and
permanent public access to USDA digital publications. S.l. :
s.n.
Note: lead participants are identified in italics after
each task.
(Prior to start of project)
Advertise and interview for project-funded positions:
Publisher relations specialist; Administrative support person
(Project coordinator, administrative staff)
Identify space and equipment for new Project Harvest
staff (Project coordinator, Library administration)
Jan. 2001 - March 2001
Hold Project Harvest organization meeting. Bring
together Project Harvest Team, Advisory Committee. Create
mission statement for the Project Harvest plan (Project
leader, Project Harvest team)
Develop selection criteria to allow prioritization of possible
partners (Publisher relations specialist, collection
development staff)
Contact an initial group of potential partners to identify
partners interested in the problem (Publisher relations
specialist, collection development staff)
Establish, based on the OAIS model and the "Minimum criteria"
what we feel are the ideal component parts of an e-journal
preservation system (Preservation policy advisor)
Establish a baseline of formats and software used in pilot
e-journals (Publisher relations specialist, Technology design
group)
Advisory Committee will meet to review progress (Project
coordinator)
April 2001 - May 2001
Hold negotiations with the pilot group of publishers on the
issues we have identified as core to a successful e-journal
archival policy (Publisher relations specialist, Preservation
policy advisor)
Investigate potential architectures for e-journal repository
that are both open and compatible with the needs identified in
the negotiations with the publishers (Technology Design
Group)
Identify the organizational and staffing model the Library
would follow in implementing Project Harvest (Project
leader, Project Harvest team)
Advisory Committee will meet to review progress (Project
coordinator)
June 2001 - July 2001
Develop a model license agreement based on the results of the
negotiations with the pilot group of publishers (Project
coordinator, Publisher relations specialist, Preservation policy
advisor, Legal counsel)
Contact additional publishers lower on the priority the list
in order to field test the license agreement. (Publisher
relations specialist)
Specify a software application to manage the status of each
member of the repository (Technology Design Group)
Advisory Committee will meet to review progress (Project
coordinator)
August - October 2001
Contact remainder of the publishers of the core journals in
agriculture to solicit interest in possible participation in the
project (Publisher relations specialist)
Establish the baseline hardware needed to implement Project
Harvest (Technology Design Group)
Investigate the place of redundancy in the archiving system
(Technology Design Group, Preservation policy advisor,
Publisher relationsspecialist)
Given the needed technological and organizational environment,
develop a business model that can make Project
Harvest financially acceptable to the Library (Project
Coordinator, Preservation policy advisor, Publisher relations
specialist)
Advisory Committee will meet to review progress (Project
coordinator)
November - December 2001
Assuming a sustainable business model can be identified,
prepare a grant application for the implementation of
Project Harvest based on the findings of the
previous year (Project Coordinator)
Develop an RFP for the hardware and software needed to
implement Project Harvest in a manageable, scalable, fashion. The
RFP will be ready to distribute as soon as implementation funding
is received (Technology Design Group)
Develop methods for representing the organizational and
technology competencies developed during the design of Project
Harvest to the scholarly and user communities (Preservation
policy advisor, Publisher relations specialist)
Develop formal acquisition and growth plans to guide the
implementation of Project Harvest. The plan will determine how
new journals are to be added to the implementation (Publisher
relations specialist, Project Coordinator)
Advisory Committee will meet to review progress (Project
coordinator)
Throughout the course of the project:
Share information about the design and implementation of
Project Harvest with relevant preservation and agricultural
information communities (Entire project team)