In
December 2000, in response to a call from the Mellon Foundation,
the Cornell University Library received a grant to develop a plan
for a repository of electronic journals in the field of agriculture.
The Mellon Foundation recognized that solutions to the problem
or preserving electronic journals can only be solved if done in
cooperation with the publishers. From January 2001 through March
2002 the Cornell Mellon teamed worked together and with the project
teams from the other Mellon planning grant recipients to deepen
our knowledge of the digital archiving problems.
Project
Harvest, as the project came to be known, built on Cornells
historic excellence in preservation in general and the preservation
of agricultural literature in particular. During the course of
the year we initiated a dialogue with a number of agriculture
publishers with whom we have successfully cooperated on other
projects. We sought to explore the conditions under which a publisher
might be willing to participate in a subject-based repository.
In addition, we surveyed specialists in the field of agricultural
preservation in order to determine the requirements of librarians
for digital archives. Finally, we spent much of the year exploring
potential business models for a successful digital repository.
The Final Report of the project is available here [.pdf, 260KB]:
<http://www.library.cornell.edu/harvest/Final-Report.pdf>
One
of the general conclusions we reached was that it was very difficult
for an individual library to build a business plan that could
justify building and maintaining an e-journal archive. Focus shifted
instead to doing this in a collaborative fashion, with special
emphasis on the role that JSTOR might be able to play. As a result,
the Mellon Foundation has decided to continue the e-journal archiving
initiative under the auspices of JSTOR. You can find more on this
development at: <http://www.jstor.org/news/2002.09/EarchivingBornDigitalContent.html>