Impressed by the potential EAD offers for intellectual access to manuscript collections via publication of their finding aids on the World Wide Web, the University of Vermont Libraries supported Special Collections in accumulating the tools and knowledge needed to convert printed inventories to Web-publishable documents. Staffed by one faculty member and two undergraduate students, all on a part-time basis, and with support from the library's systems staff, the EAD Project published its first inventory in March 1997. The project raised many questions, such as what constitutes accurate and appropriate use of EAD markup, what are the differences between publishing on paper and publishing the same information electronically, how to handle vocabulary control, and what is the most appropriate technology for electronic access to a variety of finding aid formats.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Article|
September 01 1997
EAD and the Small Repository
Elizabeth Dow
Elizabeth Dow
1
University of Vermont
Search for other works by this author on:
The American Archivist (1997) 60 (4): 446–455.
Citation
Jackie Dooley, Elizabeth Dow; EAD and the Small Repository. The American Archivist 1 September 1997; 60 (4): 446–455. doi: https://doi.org/10.17723/aarc.60.4.83n2005k00n27411
Download citation file:
38
Views
0
Citations
Citing articles via
Get Email Alerts
Pragmatic Principles for Archival Linked Data
Elizabeth Russey Roke, Ruth Kitchin Tillman
Digital Processing: Exploring the Enigma
Erin Faulder, Laura Uglean Jackson
“It's a Trap”: Complicating Representation in Community-Based Archives
Joyce Gabiola, Gracen Brilmyer, Michelle Caswell, Jimmy Zavala
Understanding the Unseen: Invisible Disabilities in the Workplace
Ann Abney, Veronica Denison, Chris Tanguay, Michelle Ganz
Toward a Conceptual Framework for Technical Debt in Archives
Déirdre Joyce, Laurel McPhee, Rita Johnston, Julia Corrin, Rebecca Hirsch