The University of California libraries 鈥 which comprise the largest university research library in the world 鈥 are launching a landmark research project to investigate the potential for expanded lawful use of digitized books held by academic and research libraries.
The is providing $1.1 million support for Project LEND (Library Expansion of Networked Delivery), a two-year project that the 嘿嘿视频 Library will lead on behalf of the 10-campus UC system.
Learning from the pandemic
When college campuses and libraries across the country closed during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, many began offering greater access to digital books as an emergency measure. These programs met an immediate need 鈥 and raised a host of questions about copyright law, the role of libraries and the potential for technology-enabled research that were unforeseen even a few decades ago.
鈥淥ne of the key lessons we learned during the pandemic is that increasing researchers鈥 access to digital books enables innovation,鈥 said Rice Majors, the associate university librarian for scholarly resources at 嘿嘿视频 and the project鈥檚 principal investigator. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why, as we explore what future services might look like, we want to leave the door open to future uses of digital books that may be enabled by artificial intelligence or other research methodologies that have yet to be invented."
Aims to extend role of academic libraries
The project鈥檚 broad investigation aims to extend and strengthen the historical role of academic libraries in making information as broadly accessible as possible for use in research and education. Project teams will:
- use focus groups and other methods to understand the needs of UC faculty and students for a range of research, education and clinical care scenarios
- evaluate the legal frameworks under which libraries could provide expanded access to digitized books, including those still in copyright
- review and analyze existing technology platforms and systems for sharing and interacting with digital books, and explore the possibilities for creating new systems and services
- determine the optimal composition of a digital book collection to meet user needs; what digitized collections are currently available or where more digitization efforts may be required; and how best to manage both print and digitized collections
During a , also supported by the Mellon Foundation, the UC libraries laid the foundation for this large-scale research and service design work.
Informed by existing models, HathiTrust
The research will be informed by existing models including a set of practices and technologies by which some libraries lend digital surrogates of their print materials. It will also draw on UC鈥檚 experience with pandemic-era programs such as HathiTrust鈥檚 , or ETAS, which offered temporary access to digitized versions of in-copyright print books held by the user鈥檚 library. Because of HathiTrust鈥檚 work and understanding of the current digital library experience, the team will coordinate closely with HathiTrust to lay the groundwork for a potential role in implementation.
Augmenting print access with digital access
鈥淯ltimately, we envision a service that leverages large collections of digitized books to better support scholarship and offer transformative advantages to scholars by augmenting print access with digital access to our collections,鈥 said Erik Mitchell, the Audrey Geisel University Librarian at UC San Diego. He and G眉nter Waibel, associate vice provost and executive director of the California Digital Library, are co-principal investigators for the project.
嘿嘿视频 to manage Project LEND
Project LEND will be managed by Majors of 嘿嘿视频 with a leadership team that includes UC faculty, postdoctoral fellows and librarians; senior personnel from HathiTrust; and an expert in e-book user experience from the . To ensure service models are broadly applicable, the project team will also consult periodically with an advisory group of representatives from academic libraries outside UC.
The project鈥檚 funding counts toward 嘿嘿视频鈥 $2 billion fundraising campaign, , the largest philanthropic endeavor in 嘿嘿视频 history.
More information about Project LEND, the organizations involved and the team leaders is available on the or by contacting projectlend@ucdavis.edu.
Media Resources
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Jessica Nusbaum, 嘿嘿视频 Library, jlnusbaum@ucdavis.edu, 530-752-4145
- Nikki Kolupailo, UC San Diego Library, for the UC libraries, nkolupailo@ucsd.edu, 858-242-0539
- Julia Ann Easley, 嘿嘿视频 News and Media Relations, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu, 530-219-4545