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*Call for Nominations: National Forum Attendance
<https://collectionsasdata.github.io/nominations/>*

In order to further diversify representation of perspectives at the Always
Already Computational: Library Collections as Data
<https://www.imls.gov/grants/awarded/LG-73-16-0096-16> national forum, the
project team is issuing a call for nominations / self-nominations for
individuals to attend and contribute to the meeting. Individuals at all
levels of experience are highly encouraged to apply. Travel, lodging, and
subsistence costs for selected national forum attendees will be covered by
grant funds.

With support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Always
Already Computational: Library Collections as Data will foster a strategic
approach to developing, describing, providing access to, and encouraging
reuse of library collections that support computationally-driven research
and teaching in areas including but not limited to Digital Humanities,
Public History, Digital History, data driven Journalism, Digital Social
Science, and Digital Art History. In the first stage, a national forum will
bring together an expert group of librarians, archivists, museum
professionals, researchers and practitioners, and technologists for 2.5
days at the University of California Santa Barbara from February 28 - March
3, 2017.

During the national forum, participants will work to draft a framework that
will (1) articulate computationally amenable library collection use cases
and (2) initiate a collection of best practices that support developing,
describing, and providing access to computationally amenable library
collections. Participants will also help develop a dynamic feedback
structure that enables a wide range of communities, outside of the forum,
to shape and play a primary role in the production of final project
outputs. Review of the grant narrative
<https://www.imls.gov/grants/awarded/LG-73-16-0096-16> provides a more
granular description of anticipated work during the forum.

Following the national forum, the project team will iteratively refine and
extend forum outputs via 6 disciplinary and professional conferences,
virtual events, and this project website. At the end of the 18 month grant
period, the project will produce a library collections as data framework,
use cases and user stories, functional requirements for technical solutions
that support library collections as data, methods for making these types of
collections more discoverable, and a summative white paper.

Given calendars filling for Spring 2017, please submit
nominations/self-nominations
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSesPxgwaDqhnbew_IWg5juTCnZVNNj5gkpCvIGwJ7F4ehfoOg/viewform>
 by Thursday, 11/10/2016.

Thomas Padilla (University of California Santa Barbara)
Laurie Allen (University of Pennsylvania)
Stewart Varner (University of Pennsylvania)
Sarah Potvin (Texas A&M University)
Elizabeth Russey Roke (Emory University)

*Thomas G. Padilla*
Humanities Data Curator
UCSB Library
805-893-7046
thomaspadilla.org

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