Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier

  As organizations continue to overwhelmingly abandon all forms of paper-based record keeping, libraries are still adapting to increased offers of born digital archival donations. Simple misunderstandings or disconnects between the units facilitating donations and maintaining born-digital collectio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Amanda Boczar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2025-01-01
Series:International Journal of Digital Curation
Online Access:https://ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/944
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832583275997036544
author Amanda Boczar
author_facet Amanda Boczar
author_sort Amanda Boczar
collection DOAJ
description   As organizations continue to overwhelmingly abandon all forms of paper-based record keeping, libraries are still adapting to increased offers of born digital archival donations. Simple misunderstandings or disconnects between the units facilitating donations and maintaining born-digital collections creates pain-points for donor relations and can result in a lack of transparency over how their records may be processed. To facilitate better donor transparency and cross-area collaboration over born digital records, Special Collections and archives need comprehensive policies and shifts in training and collaboration paradigms. This paper analyses the intersections of born digital archiving, collection development polices, donor relations, human-supported AI tools, and digital records education within American academic libraries to propose a functional toolkit for born digital acquisitions. Unrealistic expectations of collection processing, retention, growth, and publication onto openly accessible platforms can quickly overwhelm a libraries’ digital collections’ team due to size, need for digital forensics work, copyright limitations, or other capacity-related issues. Intertwined within this discussion is an additional discourse over the need to carefully curate our digital spaces not only for practical cost reasons, but due to the environmental costs of massive data storage solutions. Through an analysis of the elements stated above, the paper will reflect on the need to integrate born digital materials into archival acquisition procedures and provide practical solutions to meet this need. 
format Article
id doaj-art-0a2a5f8c907e46549f6a61d211273ca0
institution Kabale University
issn 1746-8256
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher University of Edinburgh
record_format Article
series International Journal of Digital Curation
spelling doaj-art-0a2a5f8c907e46549f6a61d211273ca02025-01-28T17:10:02ZengUniversity of EdinburghInternational Journal of Digital Curation1746-82562025-01-0119110.2218/v19i1.944Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it EasierAmanda Boczar0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8233-4025University of South Florida   As organizations continue to overwhelmingly abandon all forms of paper-based record keeping, libraries are still adapting to increased offers of born digital archival donations. Simple misunderstandings or disconnects between the units facilitating donations and maintaining born-digital collections creates pain-points for donor relations and can result in a lack of transparency over how their records may be processed. To facilitate better donor transparency and cross-area collaboration over born digital records, Special Collections and archives need comprehensive policies and shifts in training and collaboration paradigms. This paper analyses the intersections of born digital archiving, collection development polices, donor relations, human-supported AI tools, and digital records education within American academic libraries to propose a functional toolkit for born digital acquisitions. Unrealistic expectations of collection processing, retention, growth, and publication onto openly accessible platforms can quickly overwhelm a libraries’ digital collections’ team due to size, need for digital forensics work, copyright limitations, or other capacity-related issues. Intertwined within this discussion is an additional discourse over the need to carefully curate our digital spaces not only for practical cost reasons, but due to the environmental costs of massive data storage solutions. Through an analysis of the elements stated above, the paper will reflect on the need to integrate born digital materials into archival acquisition procedures and provide practical solutions to meet this need.  https://ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/944
spellingShingle Amanda Boczar
Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
International Journal of Digital Curation
title Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
title_full Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
title_fullStr Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
title_full_unstemmed Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
title_short Starting with the Digital Doesn’t Make it Easier
title_sort starting with the digital doesn t make it easier
url https://ijdc.net/index.php/ijdc/article/view/944
work_keys_str_mv AT amandaboczar startingwiththedigitaldoesntmakeiteasier