To submit the project, fill out the form on the link below. For more information on project planning, please refer to the Digital Project Development Guide or contact the digital collection project manager Angela Waarala waarala 2@illinois.edu.
Digital collection represents a great investment in staff and financial resources and can not digitize all precious collections. In order to select the proposed project, the library developed a policy to evaluate the digitized project proposal and decided its priority. Please note that depending on the condition and copyright state, the size of the collection, the digitization is an intricate process that can take more than a few months to complete
Proposals need to be submitted to digitalinitiatives@lclark.edu. Before the project is started, Watzek Library staff and administrators review the project summary and approve or reject the project according to the following criteria: If approved, the library will override other digital projects based on consistency with the following standards. The librarian will make the dean of the university understand the current digital project and try to directly approve projects that have significant impact on ongoing resources. The Director also notifies the Library / Education Technical Committee of valid digital projects and adjusts project priorities based on those inputs.
The CURA publication library is now digitized by the University of Minnesota Digital Preservation University. Once the project is complete, the entire CURA publication library will be online and fully searchable. Unfortunately, in the process, we can not fulfill the individual requirements for publications. In addition, there is no longer a substantial copy of the publication being sent.
The digital version of the entire collection of Congress library books can now be put in shoe boxes and the future of modern libraries can contest. The New York Public Library recommends reconstructing the Manhattan headquarters, which has gained the most remarkable attention among the discussions that have been going on since the mid-1990s, in the Berlin media and a series of large city central libraries projects. Singapore, Seattle and other places How should modern libraries be?