Institutional Strategies - Standards and Best Practice Guidelines

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Standards

Using file format standards (see Media and Formats) and encouraging best practice in data creation and preparation of digital resources for deposit has been a key part of many digital preservation programmes. Combined with collaboration and outreach (see Collaboration and Outreach) it can be an effective method of addressing some other challenges in digital preservation.

The use and development of reliable standards has long been a cornerstone of the information industry.Their existence facilitates the discovery and sharing of resources. Standards are also relevant to the digital environment and provide the same prospects for resource discovery and interoperability between diverse systems.

There are also specific advantages in terms of digital preservation:

While undeniably important, there are also factors which inhibit the use of standards as a digital preservation strategy:

The above factors mean that standards will need to be seen as part of a suite of preservation strategies rather than the key strategy itself.The digital environment is far less inclined to be constrained by rigid rules of any kind and recent years have witnessed a change of emphasis, from reliance on standards towards establishing common approaches which are sufficiently flexible to adapt to both changing circumstances and individual requirements.

Best practice

The necessity for a more fluid approach has led to increased efforts to establish best practice. Increasingly this is being refined into concepts of "ideal practice","acceptable practice", and "unacceptable practice" to aid implementation.There is still some distance to go before best practice in all aspects of digital preservation can be definitively articulated and in such a rapidly changing environment it may never be categorically established. There are beginning to emerge common approaches based on increasing practical involvement with the many and varied issues. For example, NEDLIB, Cedars, the British Library, and the National Library of Australia have all either adopted the OAIS Reference Model or have taken account of it in their system specifications.There are also increased efforts to define a whole range of acceptable practices, particularly in the creation of digital resources (see also Creating Digital Materials), many of which will significantly assist later digital preservation efforts.This guidance invariably includes, but is not limited to, the use of appropriate standards.

Common elements of good practice in creation include:

References

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  1. DLM Forum. (1997). Guidelines on Best Practice for Using Electronic Information.
    http://europa.eu.int/ISPO/dlm/documents/gdlines.pdf [PDF]
    Update 19 March 2008
    No longer available - information at
    http://ec.europa.eu/archives/ISPO/dlm/

See Exemplars and Further Reading