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Notes and Updates from the 2020 Midwinter PAN meeting

PAPR Database Enhanced

September 20, 2019

Infrastructure and interface enhancements to the PAPR registry will enable addition of more serials records from repositories recommended by the community, such as JSTOR, HathiTrust, and Scholar’s Portal.

The PAN Forum on shared print activities met Friday, June 21, 2019, in Washington, DC, followed by a meeting of the Partnership for Shared Book Collections. Presentations updated aproximately 100 attendees about shared print programs. 

The PAN Forum met Friday, January 26, 2019, in Seattle Washington for another informative event.

Shared print meeting held in Charleston to discuss improvements to the OCLC WorldCat database and CRL's Print Archives Preservation Registry (PAPR).

In June 2018 the Print Archive Network (PAN) Forum brought together leading practitioners of shared print initiatives to exchange information, expertise, and best practices on the strategic management of print holdings.

Highlights from the 2018 PAN Forum at ALA 2018 Midwinter conference titled, “Validation of Shared Print Collections.”

Through an NEH-funded planning effort, CRL will mine bibliographic records for historical print serials reformatted through major humanities preservation efforts, to address a significant gap in “actionable” information for libraries responsible for the stewardship of critical humanities resources.

Highlights from the 2017 PAN Forum at #ALA annual conference titled, “Validation of Shared Print Collections.”

CRL and partners continue their support for preservation and digtiization of historical agricultural publications through Project CERES

CRL libraries are helping grow and strengthen the print journal holdings maintained under the Global Resources Partnership in Science, Technology and Engineering, to ensure the availability of knowledge resources vital to research and learning.

Highlights from the January 2017 PAN Updates.

The dashboard, developed as a result of recent community discussions, provides a high-level view of the progress of shared print archiving efforts.

Project Ceres grants a total of $48,839.43 to projects from five universities.