Category: Annual Meetings

The Chinese Canadian Migration Project

Recently one of my history colleagues and I completed the digitization of the Register of Chinese Immigrants to Canada from 1885 to 1949.  The list includes just under 100,000 names of individual immigrants, most of whom paid an entry tax designed to limit immigration from China to Canada.  Our intent has always been to allow public access to this information for research purposes, and to this end we have entered into a partnership with Library and Archives Canada that now allows the database to be used for genealogical research.  While I began this project as an historian, when I started my work in the UBC Library I could see new opportunities for collaboration with librarians and, by extension, similar collaborative opportunities for many faculty members in the social sciences and humanities.  My presentation outlines the nature of the research project, identify some of its preliminary findings, and comments on the possibilities for new forms of collaboration.

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Open Access, Modernity, and Culture Change

The broad topic of the paper is digital and intellectual property rights management and the open access movement. These will have an enormous impact on the dissemination of very current research at costs far below those charged by commercial publishers, in some cases at no charge. This reformation of scholarly communication processes will allow very rapid advancement of developing nations, and may bring beneficial as well as detrimental change to those nations and the rest of the world. My approach will be from the perspective of a librarian with a doctoral degree in cultural anthropology.

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Otago Biodiversity Research Data Management Project

A 12-month University of Otago Library feasibility project aims to examine some of the key challenges and potentials of managing, curating and sharing digital and digitized research data from our own academic institution. The Project is ‘wrapped around’ the context of biodiversity or ‘biological diversity of life’. (New Zealand is an internationally recognised ‘biodiversity hotspot’ with a high number of globally unique and threatened species.)

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