Trustworthiness is crucial for digital archives. Archivists need policies, standards and procedures to warrant the trustworthiness of digital archives when they make them accessible on the internet and exchange data online, as well as a secure environment. They also need such instruments to ensure the trustworthiness of archives created, used and preserved in cloud environments. At this International Symposium InterPARES Trust and German archives researchers will present their findings on these issues and discuss them with German archivists.
The first panel will discuss “Access in the Cloud” including open government strategies. “Control in the Cloud” is the theme of the second panel, which will focus on issues such as how to manage contracts with providers of cloud services.
Marburg Archives School is a partner of InterPARES Trust since 2013. “InterPARES Trust (ITrust 2013-2018) is a multi-national, interdisciplinary research project exploring issues concerning digital records and data entrusted to the Internet. Its goal is to generate theoretical and methodological frameworks to develop local, national and international policies, procedures, regulations, standards and legislation, in order to ensure public trust grounded on evidence of good governance, a strong digital economy and a persistent digital memory.” (https://interparestrust.org/trust).
The International Symposium is open to all archivists and other researchers interested in trustworthy digital archives in the cloud.
The programme is available in English language (PDF).
Prof. Dr. Luciana Duranti
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
The InterPARES Trust Project
Assoc Prof. Gillian Oliver
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Understanding trust issues relating to digitized indigenous language resources: A case study of Te Reo Maori
Prof. Dr. Julie McLeod
Northumbria University Newcastle, UK
Public Trust in online records: The case of the UK care.data programme
Jim Suderman
InterPARES Research Project, Toronto, Canada
Contexts of open government: cloud computing and record keeping
Prof. Dr. Robert Kretzschmar / Prof. Dr. Christian Keitel
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart, Germany
The Archiving System DIMAG and its Development by Cooperation and Collaboration. Political, Professional and Technical Aspects
Prof. Dr. Giovanni Michetti
Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy
PaaST: Preservation as a Service for Trust
Prof. Dr. Özgür Külcü
Hacettepe University, Cankaya, Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey
Evaluating Metadata Description Schemas of the Cultural Heritage Organizations in Electronic Environments for Interoperability
Dr. Christopher Prom
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A.
Archival Arrangement and Description in the Cloud: A Preliminary Analysis of Practices and Issues
Lluís-Esteve Casellas
City Council of Girona, Girona, Spain (Catalonia)
E-Services between Public Administrations and Records Management, from the Local Government viewpoint in Catalonia
Dr. Corinne Rogers
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Your Cloud Service Provider and You. Does Your Contract Protect the Trustworthiness of your Records?
Stand: 28.11.2016 - Heidi Becker