A Community Approach to Preservation: Experiences with Social Science Data ASIST Summit 2010...
-
Upload
lauren-bradford -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of A Community Approach to Preservation: Experiences with Social Science Data ASIST Summit 2010...
A Community Approach to Preservation: “Experiences with Social Science Data”
ASIST Summit 2010
Jonathan Crabtree
April 9, 2010
The Odum Institute
• Oldest Institute or Center at UNC-CH Founded 1924
• Mission: Teaching, research, & service for social sciences
• Cross-disciplinary focus
Odum’s Multidisciplinary Mission
• Diverse areas of study• Culture of multidisciplinary collaboration• Focus on data reuse• History of data stewardship• Successful at relationship building
Social Science Archives in Collaboration for Preservation
• Strategic partnership agreements• Coordinated operations• Joint best practices• Shared federated catalog• Shared tools & technologies
The Plan• Identify significant data collections (classic)
• Identify important contemporary data (“at risk”)
• Develop common standards and procedures across partnership
Partnership Goals
• Use technological advances to encourage metadata standards and a shared catalog
• Establish a replicated storage network• Develop common standards and activities• Determine how the partnership can expand
Dataverse Network
• Open source platform
• OAI server
• DDI metadata standards
• Federated approach
Overview of How Catalog Works
Access DataWith Extraction and Analysis, Through CatalogDirect to Partner Sites
View Information on DataThrough CatalogLink to Data at Partner Site
Search Shared Catalog
Data Mirror
MetadataCatalog
Harvester
Online Catalog
Online Analysis
Multi-Archival: Syndicated Storage Platform
Dual Approach to Replication
• Private LOCKSS Network– Peer to Peer
• iRODS Datagrid– Client Server
Syndicated Storage Platform (SSP)
iRODS extension of the NARA Transcontinental Persistent Archive Prototype (TPAP)
• OAI-PMH based transfer• XML/XSL Translation• iRODS rules and microservices
Nexuses for Preservation Failure• Technical
– Media failure: storage conditions, media characteristics– Format obsolescence– Preservation infrastructure software failure– Storage infrastructure software failure– Storage infrastructure hardware failure
• External Threats to Institutions– Third party attacks – Institutional funding– Change in legal regimes
Replication as Part of a Multi-Institutional Preservation and Sustainability Strategies
There are potential single points of failure in both technology, organization and legal regimes:
• Diversify your portfolio: multiple software systems and hardware
• Find diverse partners – diverse business models, funding sources, and legal regimes
• Use strategic partnerships to achieve a balance• Diversify your holdings• Develop macro appraisal policies• Develop data-transfer agreements that ensure sustainability
Summary
• Replication ameliorates institutional risks to preservation
• Data PASS requires policy based, auditable, asymmetric replication commitments
• Sustainability is attained through diversification• Strategic partnerships must be made• Data reuse is enhanced through macro appraisal
policies