-------- Original Message -------- Subject: Looking for Examples of Digital Resources Collection Development/Policy Date: Fri, 1 Jun 2012 21:33:45 +0000 From: Kathy Stroud <[log in to unmask]> To: Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship ([log in to unmask]) <[log in to unmask]> All, I’m looking for examples of acquisitions policies/guidance for digital resources that are expected to be stored/hosted in the library. By stored/hosted in the library, I mean that the digital information resides on physical media (e.g., CD, DVD, thumb drive, portable hard drive) in the library or is stored on library maintained servers (or cloud space?) and delivered to patrons via circulation of the physical media or the Library’s Intranet or Internet. (To clarify, I am not talking about digital information that the library purchases or licenses access to, and is permanently hosted outside of the library and delivered to patrons via Internet access. (Procedures, policy, and guidance for handling subscriptions to article databases, e-journals, and ebook packages are generally already in place.) As a map/GIS/Geography librarian, I deal with lots of GIS data that falls in the category of digital information we have acquired, and I weigh storage/access/longevity into my data acquisitions decisions. However, an increasing number of subject specialists are also purchasing digital items such as databases, ebooks that come as PDFs via FTP, linguistics resources that have different copyright/license restrictions than a standard music recording, etc. Our library is looking to address some of the overarching considerations with digital acquisitions and develop guidance for subject specialists when dealing with these additional issues when making collection development decisions. I will be happy to summarize and share. Thanks, Kathy Stroud David and Nancy Petrone Map/GIS Librarian Knight Library 1299 University of Oregon Eugene, OR 97403-1299 541-346-3051