"The Puzzle of Large-Scale Digital Collections: Have We Reached an Inflection Point?"


Shared Collections allows institutions either to have JSTOR harvest their digital collections of documents, photos, and other special collections from a local Digital Asset Management System, or to create and share those same collections through JSTOR’s collection management tool. . . . While Shared Collections appears to represent a significant advance, the jury will be out for some time. The fundamental issues facing DPLA and Shared Collections are simply difficult, and the struggles with them have little or nothing to do with the skills or intentions of the capable people of both organizations. It is both a tough economic problem and an outcome of what we might call "rugged individualism in heritage collections": while shared descriptive efforts have been in place for books for more than a century, many standards for heritage collections have emerged since 2000. It’s a symptom of under-investment in cultural heritage in the United States.

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Author: Charles W. Bailey, Jr.

Charles W. Bailey, Jr.