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Literary and Linguistic Computing Advance Access originally published online on September 16, 2005
Literary and Linguistic Computing 2005 20(4):399-413; doi:10.1093/llc/fqi045
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© The Author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ALLC and ACH. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org

Systematic Approaches to Long Term Digital Collection Management

Edmund Balnaves

University of Sydney, Australia

Correspondence: Edmund Balnaves, School of Information Technologies, University of Sydney, Sydney NSW 2007, Australia. E-mail: ejb{at}it.usyd.edu.au
Digital-only subscription is increasingly popular as a means of journal and book delivery among our major libraries. The advantages of digital delivery are apparent, but unlike traditional publications, digital subscriptions are commonly not housed within national boundaries. With an increasingly large proportion of book and journal subscriptions being digital only, this presents an as yet unquantified risk to the collections of the major research and state libraries. At present very little attention is directed to the continuity of access to increasingly important research resources through periods of economic, social or military instability. This is typical of long-term resource management on the Internet. A model for managing the risks associated with these new directions must address both business risks of digital collection continuity and systems issues of content discovery, sharing and reuse. Escrow contracts are an established method to guarantee continuity of business when licensing business-critical software applications. The article examines low cost community driven resource sharing networks (the GratisNe case study) and new approaches to content syndication. A case for the establishment of a digital escrow database at the community level is presented with an architecture that embraces both the business and systems issues of long-term management of the digital resource supply.


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