Science and Research Content

CARL, OCUL, and University of Toronto Libraries sign MOU to develop a national institutional repository service -

The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL), the Ontario Council of University Libraries (OCUL), and University of Toronto Libraries have announced the signing of an MOU outlining their collaborative intent to develop a National Institutional Repository Service to be hosted by Scholars Portal.

The agreement establishes a framework for collaboration among the three parties involved in the planning, hosting, supporting, and providing access to the service. It articulates a cooperative planning process for piloting and hosting a production implementation of the open-source software, DSpace. The University of Toronto Libraries will be responsible for managing the software which will be available to institutions across Canada through Scholars Portal.

Starting with a pilot program of a limited number of institutions, the ultimate goal is to create a robust and scalable multi-institutional national repository service – one that is strengthened by a responsive, collaborative community of experts and repository practitioners. Scholars Portal will provide reliable technical hosting, security measures, monitoring, and technical support in line with other services currently being offered, with the potential for integrating digital preservation and other services/workflows, as a benefit to participating organizations.

Three initial areas of partnership will be outlined in subsequent work plans following this agreement.

One or more Technical Pilots, whereby the partners, led by Scholars Portal, will identify a sample number of institutions from across Canada, with varying use cases and size, and undertake to develop, test, migrate data, and refine a viable institutional repository hosting service that can be scaled out to other organizations as a nationally available service.

A Governance and Financial Model, developed in collaboration with CARL (lead convenor) and regional consortia, including OCUL, University of Toronto Libraries, and Scholars Portal. The model will determine the costs of start-up, ongoing operations, data migration, and sustainable long-term financial planning, in alignment with practical and responsive governance based on services like Borealis. The governance model will reflect the principles and interests of stakeholders, including regional and national consortia.

Network of Experts and Working Groups, facilitated by CARL, whereby the partners cultivate a network of experts from institutions across the country, to study problems, identify opportunities, and inform decisions related to the service, its policies, metadata and other best practices, workflows, and other areas of related interest.

Click here to read the original press release.

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