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[PADG:1380] Re: Revision of the ALA Preservation Policy
- To: <padg@xxxxxxx>, <abbeypub@xxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [PADG:1380] Re: Revision of the ALA Preservation Policy
- From: "Karen Muller" <kmuller@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 9 Jul 2001 07:34:25 -0700
- Message-id: <sb497779.057@smtp.ala.org>
I am attaching a Word copy of it.
I have asked the ALA IT department to get it posted in the same place as the old one, but with a better link from a closer to the home page link.
-- Karen Muller
Librarian and Knowledge Management Specialist
American Library Association
50 East Huron Street
Chicago, IL 60611 USA
Toll free: 1-800-545-2433 x 1-5031
Direct: 312-280-5031
Fax: 312-280-3255
http://www.ala.org/library
"The ALA is working to improve our web site.
You can help us by completing our web user survey at www.ala.org/survey."
>>> abbeypub@xxxxxxxxx 07/07/01 09:28PM >>>
Dear Folks at PADG - How can I get hold of a copy of the new preservation
policy?
>Good News! The revised ALA Preservation Policy was approved by ALA
>Council! This is a major accomplishment we should be proud of, especially in
>light of the negative publicity preservation has received due to the Baker
>book.
>We received very solid support from Council, and Ross Atkinson, the ALCTS
>representative to Council, did a great job in presenting our case.
>
>Thank you to everyone who submitted suggestions. A special thanks goes out
>to Irene Schubert (chair) and the PARS Policy, Planning and Research Committee
>who organized the revision, solicited input, and actually drafted the changes.
>
>Joy
>
>
>
>
>Joy Paulson email: jp243@xxxxxxxxxxx
>Preservation Librarian phone: (607) 255 - 7950
>A.R. Mann Library fax: (607 255 - 0318
>Cornell University
>Ithaca, 14853
Preservation Policy
American Library Association
Preamble: The American Library Association's policy on preservation is based on its goal of ensuring that every person has access to information at the time needed and in a useable format. ALA affirms that the preservation of library resources protects the public's right to the free flow of information as embodied in the First Amendment to the Constitution and the Library Bill of Rights.
The Association supports the preservation of information published in all media and formats. The Association affirms that the preservation of information resources is central to libraries and librarianship.
Librarians must be committed to preserving their collections through appropriate and non-damaging storage, remedial treatment of damaged and fragile items, preservation of materials in their original format when possible, replacement or reformatting of deteriorated materials, appropriate security measures, and life-cycle management of digital publications to assure their usefulness for future generations. Preservation issues should be addressed while planning for new construction or the renovation of existing buildings.
Librarians who create, maintain, and share bibliographic records and other metadata associated with physical and digital objects in their collections enhance security, access, and preservation and facilitate collaborative efforts to protect the Nation's cultural heritage.
Librarians must educate the public about the choices and the financial commitments necessary to preserve our society's cultural and social records.
NATIONAL INFORMATION SERVICES AND RESPONSIBILITIES
Standards
The Association and its Divisions will work closely with standards-setting organizations to identify and develop standards relevant to the preservation of library collections, participate in their periodic review and updating, identify and develop new standards when needed, and promote compliance with existing standards.
The Association will actively support its Divisions and other organizations in developing preservation guidelines that may serve as catalysts for official national and international standards.
Usability, Longevity, and Durability of Library Collection Media
Manufacturers, publishers, distributors and purchasers of information products must work in tandem to improve the usability, durability, and longevity of the media (e.g., paper, film, magnetic tape, optical disk) that ensure the persistence of these products.
It is the Association's official position that publishers and manufacturers have an obligation and a responsibility to libraries and to the public to report appropriate information about the usability, durability and longevity of media. The Association urges publishers to use paper and other media that meet standards promulgated by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the International Standards Organization (ISO) for all publications of enduring value. Publishers should include a statement of compliance on the verso of the title page of a book or the masthead or copyright area of a periodical, and in catalogs, advertising, and bibliographic references.
The Association will engage in active education and public relations efforts to develop, promote, and publicize standards for the usability, longevity, and durability of information media.
Preservation of Digital Information
Publishers and distributors of content in digital form must address the usability and longevity of their electronic works. The Association encourages publishers to provide to libraries metadata that will facilitate the life cycle management of works in digital formats and to deposit digital works in repositories that provide for the long-term persistence and usability of digital content. The Association will work with the publishers of content in digital form to develop guidelines on the preservation of digital information to help ensure that such information will not be lost when publishers can no longer retain and disseminate it.
The Association encourages research on metadata, software, operating systems, and life cycle management techniques that may affect the preservation of digital works.
Public Education on Preservation of Primary Source Documents
Primary source documents from individuals, local governments, and private and public organizations are the fundamental evidence of cultural and social life. Although citizens may sense the instability of newsprint, for example, they may be less likely to know that media such as color film and videotape pose significant preservation challenges. The preservation of primary source documents, if not pursued aggressively, has enormous consequences on our right to know about and understand ourselves and the community in which we live. Libraries have an obligation (a) to inform donors, users, administrators, and local officials about the ephemeral nature of primary source materials, (b) to promote strategies for the proper care, handling, and storage of these materials, and (c) to recommend the use of durable media and methods of documentation.
The Association will help libraries stimulate public interest in this issue and will make information available regarding how concerned individuals, organizations, and governments may act on behalf of preservation.
Federal Legislative Policy
The federal government must provide leadership in developing an expansive and inclusive national preservation policy. This policy should reinforce the mutual efforts of national, state, and local libraries to preserve materials that document our cultural heritage and make them widely available to all citizens. The federal government, by example, by policy, and by the efforts of its historical, cultural, and information institutions, should affirm the responsibility of all cultural institutions, including local and state libraries, to preserve and provide access to historical documents. The federal government should provide incentives that encourage private institutions to participate in the national preservation effort.
The Association urges the federal government to take responsibility for the longevity of information that it publishes on paper, in microform, and in digital formats.
The Association, through its ALA Washington Office and its Legislation Agenda, will strongly support the efforts of librarians to increase federal government funding for preservation programs.