Bibliography
A number of sources were used in the compilation of information for managing digital records. The sources of most value include:
- Charles Dollar, Archival Preservation of Smithsonian Web Resources: Strategies, Principles, and Best Practices,(July 2001).
- Gregory S. Hunter, Preserving Digital Information: A How-To-Do-It Manual, New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers, (2000).
- Charles R. McClure and J. Timothy Sprehe, Guidelines For Electronic Records Management On State And Federal Agency Websites, Final Report to National Publications and Research Commission, (January 1998).
- Managing Electronic Mail Guidelines for State of Ohio Executive Agencies,Ohio Electronic Records Subcommittee Report, (2000).
- Standards for An Electronic Records Policy, developed by the Committee on Institutional Cooperation University Archivists Group, (endorsed December 2001).
Where to Learn More
- Archives and the Public Good : Accountability and Records in Modern Society, edited by Richard J. Cox and David A. Wallace, Westport, Conn. : Quorum Books (2002).
- Phil C. Bantin, Records Management in a Digital World, Research Bulletin, EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research, Volume 2002, Issue 16, (August 6, 2002). Available online in the EDUCAUSE Information Resources Library.
- Terry Cook, It's 10 O'Clock: Do You Know Where Your Data Are? , Technology Review, 98:48-53 (Jan 1995). Available online.
- Hedstrom, Margaret. Building Record-keeping Systems: Archivists are Not Alone on the Wild Frontier, Archivaria (1998).
- Margaret Hedstrom, Digital Preservation: A Time Bomb For Digital Libraries, Computers and the Humanities, 31 no 3:189-202 (1997). Available online.
- Jeff Rothenberg, Avoiding Technological Quicksand: Finding a Viable Technical Foundation for Digital Preservation, (1999). Available online
