Abstract

In 1994 the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB) decided to include electronic publications in its deposit collection. This was considered as a logical extension of the deposit for printed publications already in place. In December 2002, after a few years of experimenting, the current e-Depot was delivered, with the IBM Digital Information and Archiving System (DIAS) as its technical 'heart'. The e-Depot is now fully operational and imbedded in the KB organisation. The emergence of the electronic journal creates new challenges to the traditional deposit model. Because of the involvement of international publishers of Dutch origin, the e-Depot has had an international dimension right from the start. In 2002 the KB signed an historic electronic archiving agreement with Elsevier Science, which covered the entire set of Elsevier journals. This arrangement turned the KB into the first official digital archive in the world for journals published by international scientific publishers. A year later the KB concluded a similar agreement with Kluwer Academic Publishers. Other publishers followed, also from outside the Netherlands: Biomed Central, Blackwell, Oxford University Press, Taylor and Francis, Sage, Springer and Brill Academic Publishers. On the basis of these agreements the e-Depot will eventually hold 9 million articles. The annual increase in the number of articles from these publishers will be around 400,000. Publishers are required to deposit their publications free of charge. Access is restricted: only on-site, for any registered user of the KB. Remote access is only offered with permission of the publisher. On-site retrieval, access, printing, downloading is for private use only, systematic reproduction is not allowed. Documents are available for interlibrary document supply within the Netherlands. The archive serves as a guarantee to all licensees worldwide. In case of calamities or in case the publisher does not meet his obligations, the KB safeguards the access that licensees have paid for. Primarily, long-term preservation is a way of managing risk and a kind of insurance against loss or disrupted access. The KB expects that worldwide permanent archiving of STM literature will be taken care of by a limited number of institutions dedicated to this task (Safe Places Model). Libraries should invest in a qualified archiving solution and should effectively demand archival deposit by publishers as a condition of licensing electronic journals. The KB’s e-Depot strategy for the coming years includes: Further developing the technical and organisational infrastructure, which is now put to an external audit. Continuing the Research & Development effort concentrating on the full range of available preservation techniques. The KB has developed its own R&D-programme and is an initiating partner in the European project PLANETS. Concluding archiving agreements with more of the major international scientific publishers. The KB would like to reach 80% coverage of the total world production of STM literature. Promoting the creation of a European infrastructure for long-term preservation and access to the records of science, including large scientific organisations like ESA, CERN and the British CCLRC, but also JISC, the European Science Foundation, the International Association of STM Publishers, and national libraries like The British Library and the KB. Discussing the feasibility of new business models to cover the costs of storage space, the processing and management of the material, and R&D efforts.

Highlights

  • What education and training needs emerge from the changing roles and new tasks? How might we identify the needs for continuing professional development? And how can we maintain and update skills and competencies acquired maybe 25 years ago? These are key questions – to be addressed to library managers, and to be considered carefully by those institutions responsible for continuing education and professional development of library staff

  • Agreements were signed with the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB) and the Publishers Association, which still form a solid basis for the deposit collection

  • The technical 'heart' of the e-Depot is the IBM Digital Information and Archiving System (DIAS), which is compliant to the OAIS reference model (Open Archival Information System)

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Summary

THE KB DEPOSIT COLLECTION

In the Netherlands the practice of depositing publications at the national library is relatively new. The voluntary scheme is successful: recent research shows that 97% of the production of official Dutch publishers is included in the deposit collection This success was a key factor in the decision of the government to officially grant the KB the title of National Library in 1982, at the occasion of the inauguration of the new building next to The Hague Central Station. In the beginning temporary solutions were implemented, first AT&T Right Pages (software long forgotten) and later IBM Digital Library These systems did not have the functionality of a full-scale deposit system. The technical 'heart' of the e-Depot is the IBM Digital Information and Archiving System (DIAS), which is compliant to the OAIS reference model (Open Archival Information System) It is integrated with other library modules and has the following functionalities: http://liber.library.uu.nl/ Volume 16 Issue 3/4 2006

Permanent Access to the Records of Science
INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS
CONDITIONS FOR ARCHIVING AND ACCESS
BENEFIT TO LIBRARIES AND USERS
SAFE PLACES MODEL
MATERIAL AND STAFF COSTS
EUROPEAN TASK FORCE ON PERMANENT ACCESS
MORE AMBITIONS
NEW BUSINESS MODELS FOR PERMANENT ACCESS
Findings
WEB SITES REFERRED TO IN THE TEXT
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