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Introduction Introduction Introduction Introduction Introduction
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4a. Trusted Digital Repositories:
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| Organizational requirements: | |
| >> | enact all relevant policies and procedures for specified tasks and functions, document all practices |
| >> | establish monitoring mechanisms to ensure continued operation of systems and procedures |
| >> | record and justify preservation strategies |
| >> | set up feedback mechanisms to support problem resolution and negotiate evolving requirements between providers and consumers |
| 0101 The technological
side is to respond to ongoing organizational needs, to anticipate
those needs when possible, and to develop mechanisms for automatically
generating and capturing the necessary documentation. In some
cases, compliance will require direct technical input and
documentation.
$$$$ The resources required to ensure procedural accountability (e.g., staff time to develop policies and procedures, programming time and ability to develop and implement automated protocols) are often overlooked or underestimated. Resources need to be allocated to this essential responsibility. |
Background note: This is perhaps the most archival of the attributes, and an aspect of digital preservation that is often overlooked or underestimated. An organization with a mature digital preservation program must determine the policies, procedures, and approaches it will adopt; document decisions and practices as they are implemented; and trace that documentation over time to ensure consistency in practice and comprehensive scope. This attribute will enable and sustain the certification of an organization's digital archive.
Exercise |
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1. Identify the documentation that your organization could provide to support compliance with community-based standards. 2. Verify that you have a mechanism in place to develop and maintain requisite policies. 3. Would someone be able to identify outdated policies
on your website? |
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This SpaceDigital
Preservation Repository Certification In February 2007, the Digital Preservation Repository Certification Task Force, sponsored by RLG and the National Archives and Records Administration, published the Trustworthy Repositories Audit & Certification: Criteria and Checklist. This task force represents the ongoing developmental objectives of the Open Archival Information System (OAIS) Working Group to produce certification requirements (both self-assessment and external), delineate a process for certification, and identify a certifying body (or bodies) to implement the process. The host of the final version and the OAIS task force is the Center for Research Libraries (CRL). The final report is informed by the foundation documents: Trusted Digital Repositories and the OAIS Reference Model. The Center for Research Libraries conducted a research project, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, to test the use of the checklist in a series of real-life assessments of repositories and develop the processes and activities required to audit and certify digital archives. (For an extensive review, see the RLG DigiNews special issue on certification.) An ISO working group is in the process of producing a draft standard on digital repository audit and certification by March 2009. The group is currently working to identify the necessary requirements for the standard and develop independent criteria for audit and certification using TRAC as a starting point. The standard will then be taken to ISO by the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS), in the same manner the OAIS Reference Model. Further developments in certification activities include the work of the Network of Expertise in Long-Term Storage and Long-Term Availability of Digital Resources in Germany (nestor) and the development of the Digital Repository Audit Method Based on Risk Assessment (DRAMBORA) toolkit. nestor introduced the Catalogue of Criteria for Trusted Digital Repositories for small institutions to perform their own audit and certification activities. DINI, the German Initiative for Networked Information, builds on nestor by outlining a set of minimum requirements for institutional repositories to meet for certification. DRAMBORA provides an online interactive toolkit with an evaluation methodology for repository administrators to use risk management to assess their repositories and chart improvement. The toolkit allows administrators to identify risks at every stage of their activities, assess the probability of occurrence, and determine an action plan should a situation arise. Certification Principles
Certification Questions Consider these community implementation questions:
Consider these questions for your institution:
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