VU e-Archive description
DiscoverArchive: Vanderbilt University's Electronic Archive
 

About Communities and Collections

DiscoverArchive, an institutional repository, is being created to house, preserve, and distribute digital materials of general interest that are produced by Vanderbilt communities, and that might otherwise disappear. As DiscoverArchive neither can nor should preserve every document produced on campus, VUSpace and web pages still retain relevant roles. Vanderbilt’s own e-journals also constitute a separate entity, although the lines distinguishing these and other digital options are often blurred. Restrictions of the peer review process, commercial publishing, and copyright do set some limits on which documents may be added to an institutional repository. Nevertheless, the University contains many digital materials both appropriate and desirable for storage, access, and preservation via DiscoverArchive.

 

DiscoverArchive is organized hierarchically into communities and collections to represent the interests of faculty, staff, and students.

 

A DiscoverArchive community:

 

DiscoverArchive communities need not mirror the existing University organizational structure.  Any faculty member (including non-tenure track and visiting faculty), and any representative of any administrative or other academic organizational unit on campus should be allowed to propose a DiscoverArchive community. Groups wishing to establish a DiscoverArchive community that does not conform to this definition will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

 

A DiscoverArchive collection is a sub-unit of a community designed to contain materials with some characteristic in common, such as departmental working papers, issues of a newsletter, preprints, committee minutes, etc. Individual faculty members may submit items to collections through an established community in DiscoverArchive. An individual may belong to more than one community.

 

DiscoverArchive communities will take responsibility for defining their membership and submitting content. Once a community has been established within the policy guidelines, the library will provide assistance as needed, however the library will not directly supervise communities’ use of DiscoverArchive. Communities will be responsible for reviewing material submitted for permanent retention and display prior to storage. Once in DiscoverArchive, materials will not be removed or modified unless forced by legal issues.

 

For DiscoverArchive, the library will:

 

The goal is for DiscoverArchive to be both a scholarly and an archival resource. A balance between scholarly and archival materials is desirable, however the aim is to build DiscoverArchive to meet faculty, student, and staff needs for broad access and long-term preservation of their digital materials. Research material, data, working papers, books, pre- and post-prints, supporting materials, and learning objects are highly sought. Minutes, newsletters, publicity documents, and other archival materials that showcase the university, its centers, departments, or committees, or its history and development are also desirable. Each community may include either or both types of materials within its various collections. The library maintains a list of formats that it will support within DiscoverArchive pages. This list will be updated as the technology changes or evolves.

 

As the library solicits participation in DiscoverArchive by various communities across campus, efforts will focus on trans-institutional centers, departments, and faculty to represent a wide range of disciplines. In addition to soliciting communities, the library will establish communities as they contact us, responding to any group that is willing to participate and meets the criteria for establishment as a community.

 


DSpace is a trademark of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology