New York University Libraries, in collaboration with partners including CLOCKSS, Portico, and several university presses, have released updated Guidelines for Preservability in New Forms of Scholarship and a new Preservability Self-Assessment Tool. These resources are designed to help scholars and institutions evaluate and enhance the long-term viability of complex, digital, and multimodal scholarly works.

Scholars are increasingly using digital technologies to express their research in innovative ways. These include publications with embedded visualizations, multimedia, datasets, maps, complex interactivity, or dependencies on third-party platforms like YouTube or Google Maps. While these formats offer rich opportunities for scholarly communication, they also pose significant challenges for long-term preservation.

To address these challenges, NYU Libraries led a multi-institutional, Mellon-funded project, Enhancing Services to Preserve New Forms of Scholarship. The project brought together preservation organizations (CLOCKSS, Portico, and the libraries of NYU and the University of Michigan) and publishers (NYU Press, Michigan Publishing, UBC Press, Stanford University Press, and University of Minnesota Press). Together, they studied enhanced digital publications, identified which features can be preserved at scale, and developed practical guidance for scholars, publishers, and preservation staff.

At UCalgary, if you’re considering a non-traditional thesis format, we recommend consulting with Libraries and Cultural Resources early in your process. We can help you consider preservation from the outset—whether you're embedding media, linking to datasets, or designing interactive elements.

Learn more: https://libguides.ucalgary.ca/theses/non-traditional/describe-archive