A committee on campus has been formed to try to figure out some strategies for managing institutional documents (both print and digital). Yes, this is obviously an enormous undertaking and there are commercial solutions that are worth exploring. My question is whether anyone has tried something like this at a large scale with similar kinds of documents, perhaps using open-source components like Fedora. I need to emphasize how diverse the documents are (in content, in medium, etc.) and the need for records management pieces like retention and access policies.
Institutional Records Repository Software
(6 posts) (4 voices)-
Posted 5 years ago Permalink
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Hi, Stefan,
You might want to keep an eye on the #idcc10 hashtag on Twitter. We've been discussing this heavily at the International Digital Curation Conference. Unfortunately, wireless here is chancy, so I can't give the lengthy response I want to just yet.
People you should follow definitely include Chris Prom and his Practical E-Records blog. Emerging tools in this area include Archivematica, Curator's Workbench, and the Duke Data Accessioner.
Fedora Commons is indeed being used as the underlying storage in such projects, but it's not the only storage layer by any means.
Posted 5 years ago Permalink -
Thanks for the quick response Dorothea!
I'd welcome any other suggestions or advice folks may have.
Posted 5 years ago Permalink -
I've heard vague rumbling rumours in the past that the Kuali (http://kuali.org) people were working on records management software, but digging around their site doesn't really yield anything solid, although I suppose that their student records management, financial, and/or grants tracking software might cover some of what people are looking for.
Posted 5 years ago Permalink -
Will dig deeper into those suggestions John and Richard – thanks!
Posted 5 years ago Permalink
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