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Representatives from CNI member organizations gather twice annually to explore new technologies, content, and applications; to further collaboration; to analyze technology policy issues, and to catalyze the development and deployment of new projects. Each member organization may send two representatives. Visit https://www.cni.org/mm/spring-2018 for more information.
Friday, April 13 • 1:00pm - 2:00pm
Developing Library Support for Publishing Expansive Digital Humanities Projects

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This session will explore how research libraries can support expansive digital humanities publishing projects-projects that are interactive and dynamic in their content as they span and often grow over time across multiple content types, audiences, and contributors. Recognizing that the digital humanities are often not static, and change and grow as the scholarship and its community expands, what role can libraries and the institutions that back them play in planning, growing and sustaining these publications? How can institutions adequately evaluate and reward this type of scholarship, particularly when the audiences and collaborators for these publications extend beyond the academic community? This session is based on work done under a new Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant to address library services in support of expansive digital publishing. The grant focuses on investigating five areas of support: 1) planning, 2) resource allocation and production; 3) discovery; 4) evaluation; and 5) preservation and sustainability. Workshop leaders will briefly introduce each of these ideas, and participants will be asked to actively contribute in a roundtable discussion format structured around each topic. The aim of that discussion is to help form a collective understanding of what works and what doesn't in establishing ongoing institutional support for expansive digital projects. We also plan to incorporate elements of this discussion into a comprehensive report, to be released in summer 2018, that will offer a framework for research libraries to develop sustainable services within their institutional context in support of expansive digital publishing.

Speakers
avatar for David Hansen

David Hansen

Associate University Librarian for Research, Collections & Scholarly Communication, Duke University
I'm Duke's librarian responsible for the Libraries' general research services and collections. My division of the library includes support for Duke researchers across the scholarly communication lifecycle, from the development of the library collections in anticipation of researcher... Read More →
avatar for Paolo Mangiafico

Paolo Mangiafico

Scholarly Communications Strategist, Duke University
Paolo Mangiafico is the Scholarly Communications Strategist at Duke University, and co-director of ScholarWorks, a Center for Scholarly Publishing at Duke University Libraries (scholarworks.duke.edu). He is also Director of the Triangle Scholarly Communication Institute (trianglesci.org... Read More →
avatar for Liz Milewicz

Liz Milewicz

Department Head, liz.milewicz@duke.edu
Project planning, management, and transitioningDigital scholarly publishing and preservationInternships and other experiential training in digital scholarshipBuilding new forms of literacy (e.g., publishing) into academic courses


Friday April 13, 2018 1:00pm - 2:00pm PDT
Plaza C