PAN Print Archive Agenda Annual 2021

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PAN Print Archive Agenda Annual 2021 PRINT ARCHIVE NETWORK FORUM Agenda Friday, June 25, 2021, 12:00- 2:00 PM (Eastern) Location: Online All are welcome 12:00-12:05 (Eastern) Welcome & Announcements (5 minutes) (Matthew Revitt, Maine Shared Collections & EAST) 12:05-12:45 Updates (40 minutes) Rosemont: Last Copy Initiatives (Mark Jacobs, Executive Director, Washington Research Library Consortium (WRLC)) Partnership for Shared Book Collections: Research Agenda Ideas (Susan Stearns, Project Director, Eastern Academic Scholars' Trust (EAST)) WEST: Update to Disclosure Guidelines (Anna Striker, Shared Print Operations and Collections Analyst, WEST and UC Libraries; Cathy Martyniak, Director, UC SRLF; Corrie Hutchinson, Associate Director of ACTS Division & Head of Acquisitions at the University of Missouri.) 12:45-1:45 Shared Print in Collection Development (60 minutes) Retention, intention, and collaborative collection initiatives in Australian academic libraries (Ruth Baxter, Associate Director Collection Access and Development - University of Melbourne, Lisa McIntosh, Director Access Service, Sydney University and Monika Szunejko, Director Resources and Technology, Monash University) COPPUL Digitization and Collective Collections Services (Doug Brigham, SPAN Coordinator and Rebecca Dickson, Digital Stewardship Network Coordinator, COPPUL) Big Ten Alliance Collective Collection (Rebecca Crist, Project Manager Library Initiatives, Big Ten Academic Alliance) 1:45-2:00 Short Subjects (5 minutes) CRL’s Superseded Reference Book Collection (Jazmyn Taylor, Archivist in Residence, Center for Research Libraries) 2:00 Adjourn Sponsored by the Center for Research Libraries Founded in 1949, the Center for Research Libraries is a consortium of over 250 academic and independent research libraries in the U.S., Canada and Hong Kong. CRL supports advanced research and teaching in the humanities, sciences and social sciences by preserving and making available to scholars the primary source materials critical to those disciplines. .
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