The UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive was built following the devastating earthquakes that hit the Canterbury region in the South Island of New Zealand from 2010 – 2012. 185 people were killed in the 6.3 magnitude earthquake of February 22nd 2011, thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed, and the local community endured over 10,000 aftershocks. The program aims to document and protect the social, cultural, and intellectual legacy of the Canterbury community for the purposes of memorialization and enabling research. The nationally federated archive currently stores 75,000 items, ranging from audio and video interviews to images and official reports. Tens of thousands more items await ingestion. Significant lessons have been learned about data integration in post-disaster contexts, including but not limited to technical architecture, governance, ingestion process, and human ethics. The archive represents a model for future resilience-oriented data integration and preservation products.
The UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive contains tens of thousands of high value cultural heritage items related to a long series of earthquakes that hit Canterbury, New Zealand, from 2010 - 2012. The archive was built by a Digital Humanities team located at the center of the disaster in New Zealand's second largest city, Christchurch. The project quickly became complex, not only in its technical aspects but in its governance and general management. This talk will provide insight into the national and international management and governance frameworks used to successfully build and deliver the archive into operation. Issues that needed to be managed included human ethics, research ethics, stakeholder management, communications, risk management, curation and ingestion policy, copyright and content licensing, and project governance. The team drew heavily on industry-standard project management methods for the basic approach, but built their ecosystem and stakeholder trust on principles derived directly form the global digital humanities community.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Containers'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Containers'.
Summary of oral history interview with Krystal about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Oral history interview with Alice Ridley about her experiences of the Canterbury earthquakes.
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Page 3 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 28 August 2014.
An entry from Gallivanta's blog for 22 February 2014 entitled, "Praise Be".
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Lichfield Street'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Lichfield Street'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'High Street'.
An entry from Gallivanta's blog for 25 June 2014 entitled, "Recorded Time".
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Cotter Building'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Cotter Building'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'High Street'.
A photograph of a postcard depicting Julia Holden's painting 'Containers'
An entry from Deb Robertson's blog for 27 February 2014 entitled, "#havethechat".
Canta Volume 85 Issue 9 from 14 May 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 7 from 8 April 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 17 from 13 August 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 18 from 20 August 2014
A photograph of a postcard depicting Julia Holden's painting 'High Street'.
A photograph of Julia Holden's painting 'Blue Building'.
Canta Volume 85 Issue 4 from 19 March 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 3 from 12 March 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 24 from 15 October 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 22 from 1 October 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 20 from 17 September 2014
Canta Volume 85 Issue 2 from 5 March 2014