America's Heritage

Mission and Goals for a National Digital Library Federation

We, the undersigned, agree to collaborate towards the establishment of a National Digital Library Federation. The Federation's mission is to bring together--from across the nation and beyond - digitized materials that will be made accessible to students, scholars, and citizens everywhere, and that document the building and dynamics of America's heritage and cultures.

We have as our goals:

To these ends, we agree to establish a task force, to be coordinated by the Commission on Preservation and Access, composed of senior members of the staffs of the undersigned founding institutions. The task force will over the next 3 months develop a draft of a phased plan to accomplish these goals, and report back to the undersigned. A final plan will be produced in 6 months. This plan will also address involvement of institutions that are not initial members of the Federation.

We recognize and acknowledge the important leadership role that the Library of Congress has played in raising as a national issue the need for such a national digital library; and in recognizing the need for a broadly collaborative undertaking that brings together the expertise, collections, and capabilities of many institutions.

We understand that the accomplishment of the above goals raises significant issues of policy, funding, organization, scholarship, technology, and law, and will require the participation of many institutions of government, business, and education if the project is to be successful. We pledge that we and our staffs will work together to address these issues and to nurture such participation.

This statement is made in recognition of our common belief that problems and issues inhibiting the formation of digital libraries are best resolved through collaborative practical activity rather than through further theoretical discussion. The time is now ripe to establish a national digital library of sufficient size, scope, and complexity to support a meaningful test of the effect of distributed digital libraries on equitable access, on learning and scholarship, and on the economics and organization of libraries.

Signed, May 1, 1995:

Scott Bennett
University Librarian, Yale University
James H. Billington
Librarian of Congress, The Library of Congress
Nancy Cline
Dean of University Libraries,
Pennsylvania State University
Richard De Gennaro,
Roy E. Larsen Librarian of Harvard College,
Harvard University
Joan Gotwals
Vice Provost and Director of Libraries,
Emory University
Paula Kaufman
Dean of Libraries,
University of Tennessee
Michael A. Keller,
University Librarian and Director of Academic Information Resources, Stanford University
Nancy S. Klath
Acting University Librarian,
Princeton University
Paul LeClerc
President,
The New York Public Library
Peter Lyman
University Librarian,
University of California, Berkeley
Deanna B. Marcum
President,
Commission on Preservation and Access
Trudy Huskamp Peterson
Acting Archivist of the
United States,
National Archives and Records Administration
Donald E. Riggs
Dean of the University Library,
University of Michigan
Alain Seznec
University Librarian,
Cornell University
Lynn F. Sipe,
Acting Director of the University Libraries,
University of Southern California
Elaine Sloan,
Vice President for Information Services and University Librarian,
Columbia University

For More Information, contact:

M. Stuart Lynn
Vice President for Technology
(510) 548-2244 mslynn@cpa.org