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                <title>Naming the unnamed, speaking the unspoken, depicting the undepicted: <hi
                        rend="italic">The Australian Women’s Register</hi> story</title>
                <author>
                    <name>Evans, Joanne</name>
                    <affiliation>The <orgName>University of Melbourne</orgName>, <country>Australia</country></affiliation>
                    <email>joanne.evans@unimelb.edu.au,</email>
                </author>
                <author>
                    <name>Morgan, Helen</name>
                    <affiliation>The <orgName>University of Melbourne</orgName>, <country>Australia</country></affiliation>
                    <email>helen.morgan@unimelb.edu.au</email>
                </author>
                <author>
                    <name>Henningham, Nikki</name>
                    <affiliation>The <orgName>University of Melbourne</orgName>, <country>Australia</country></affiliation>
                    <email>n.henningham@unimelb.edu.au</email>
                </author>
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                <publisher>Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London</publisher>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Strand, London WC2R 2LS, England, United Kingdom. Tel:+44 (0) 20 7836 5454</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>http://www.kcl.ac.uk/cch/</addrLine>
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                <date>2010-04-16</date>
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                <date>2010-06-09</date>
                <name>JL</name>
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                <p>Ensuring evidence of women’s experiences and contributions to our world are kept
                    for the public record and adequately represented in memory institutions has been
                    a key challenge for many inside and outside of the academy over the last half
                    century. This material is vital in order to continue the work of retrieving
                    women’s history from ‘the shrouds of silence and obscurity’ and ‘fill in the
                    blank half of a huge canvas’.<note>The title of this paper owes much to the
                        wonderful words of Australia’s first female Governor General, Quentin Bryce,
                        when re-launching the <hi rend="italic">Australian Women’s Register</hi> on
                        the 13 October 2009. In her speech she highlighted the words of Adrienne
                        Rich, American poet and feminist, ‘Whatever is unnamed, undepicted in
                        images, whatever is omitted from biography, censored in collections of
                        letters, whatever is misnamed as something else, made difficult-to-come-by,
                        whatever is buried in the memory by the collapse of meaning under an
                        inadequate or lying language – this will become, not merely unspoken, but
                        unspeakable.’ See <ref
                            target="http://www.gg.gov.au/governorgeneral/speech.php?id=625"
                            type="external"
                            >http://www.gg.gov.au/governorgeneral/speech.php?id=625</ref>. The
                        wordes in quotes come from the same source.</note></p>
                <p>Over the past decade, the Australian Women’s Archives Project (AWAP) has been
                    developing the Australian Women&apos;s Register (<ref
                        target="http://www.womenaustralia.info/" type="external"
                        >http://www.womenaustralia.info/</ref>) as a central part of its strategy to
                    encourage the preservation of women’s archival heritage and to make it more
                    accessible to researchers. The Register is a specialist central access point to
                    information about Australian women and their achievements and the multifarious
                    resources in which varying aspects of their lives are documented. It provides a
                    gateway to archival and published material relating to women held in Australian
                    cultural institutions as well as in private hands. A series of small and large
                    grants have contributed to the development of the content of the Register and
                    the technology in which it is captured, managed and made available to as wide an
                    audience as possible via the Web. The National Foundation for Australian
                        Women,<note>Information about the aims of the National Foundation for
                        Australian Women can be found at <ref target="http://nfaw.org/"
                            type="external">http://www.nfaw.org/</ref>.</note> the community
                    organisation behind the AWAP, plays a significant role in securing project
                    funding, along with driving innovation in its coverage and content. </p>
                <p>The latest of these grants, an Australian Research Council Linkage Infrastructure
                    Equipment and Facilities Grant (ARC LIEF) awarded in 2008, allowed the
                    exploration of the Register as part of a federated information architecture to
                    support historical scholarship in digital and networked environments. It
                    involved the investigation of community based methods for populating the
                    Register, as well as enabling the harvesting of its content into emerging
                    national discovery services. With the National Library of Australia (NLA) as a
                    key industry partner, a mechanism for harvesting Encoded Archival Context
                        (EAC)<note>Encoded Archival Context – Corporate bodies, Persons, and
                        Families (EAC-CPF) is a metadata standard for the description of
                        individuals, families and corporate bodies which create, preserve, use, are
                        responsible for, or are otherwise associated with records. Its purpose is to
                        standardize the encoding of descriptions of agents and their relationships
                        to resources and to one another, to enable the sharing, discovery and
                        display of this information. See <ref
                            target="http://eac.staatsbibliothek-berlin.de/" type="external"
                            >http://eac.staatsbibliothek-berlin.de/</ref>
                    </note> records from the Register was established for incorporation into their
                    exciting new <hi rend="italic">Trove</hi> discovery service,<note><hi
                            rend="italic">Trove</hi> is the National Library of Australia’s new
                        discovery service, providing a single point of access to resources held in
                        Australia’s memory institutions and incorporating rich contextual metadata
                        from a variety of sources. See <ref target="http://trove.nla.gov.au/"
                            type="external">http://trove.nla.gov.au/</ref>.</note> using the Open
                    Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH).<note>OAI
                        Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH) is a lightweight harvesting
                        protocol for sharing metadata between services developed by the Open
                        Archives Initiative. It defines a mechanism for harvesting metadata records
                        from repositories based on the open standards HTTP (Hypertext Transport
                        Protocol) and XML (Extensible Markup Language) in support of new patterns
                        for scholarly communication. See <ref type="external"
                            target="http://www.openarchives.org/pmh/"
                            >http://www.openarchives.org/pmh/</ref>.</note></p>
                <p>The federated information architecture which such harvesting services make
                    possible is aimed at increasing the productivity of all those associated with
                    the creation, management and use of source material for historical research. As
                    well as fostering the development of complicit systems, it is also about
                    allowing a rich multiplicity and variety of voices to contribute their knowledge
                    to resource discovery systems. It involves scholars' direct participation in
                    resource description frameworks allowing their extensive, intimate and fine
                    grained knowledge of sources and their relationships to areas of study to become
                    part of networked information infrastructure. It also aims to provide a
                    mechanism by which the flow of information about resources in and out of
                    cultural institutions is improved, allowing researchers to discover, explore and
                    make connections between materials held in disparate locations efficiently and
                    effectively, and in turn to feed that knowledge back into the network. </p>
                <p> As a pioneering e-Research initiative, the story of AWAP and the <hi
                        rend="italic">Australian Women’s Register (AWR)</hi> offers much insight
                    into the establishment, evolution and sustainability of advanced scholarly
                    information infrastructure to facilitate information intensive collaborative
                    research in the humanities.<note>Christine Borgman, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure and the
                            Internet</hi>, MIT Press, Cambridge Massachusetts, 2007.</note> It is
                    illustrative of how digital and networking technologies change the roles and
                    relationships of scholars, information professionals, universities and the wider
                    community in order to build greater capabilities, connectedness, robustness and
                    resilience into historical/archival/humanities information systems. Above all it
                    asserts the value of scholarly principles, re-visioned, re-imagined and
                    re-distributed for the digital and networked age, and it places women’s history
                    firmly in the mainstream rather than being consigned to the margins. What began
                    ten years ago as a small, community initiative aimed at securing the uncertain
                    future of women’s archival records has developed into a project of national
                    significance. The fact that it is a feminist project is entirely relevant to the
                    story as well, given the distributed and partial nature of women’s archival
                    collections and the historical circumstances of their production. </p>
                <p> This paper will outline and review the development of the <hi rend="italic"
                        >Australian Women’s Register</hi>, by discussing the problem of female
                    under-representation in the archival record, explaining the implications of this
                    for historical researchers and describing how the AWR works to harness
                    information about existing records while it creates a new ‘community’ archive in
                    cyberspace. There will be an emphasis on how it has and has not been able to
                    address emerging requirements for e-Humanities infrastructure as articulated in
                    reports such as <hi rend="italic">Our Cultural Commonwealth</hi>; however, the
                    focus will be on explaining how the successful development of any e-Humanities
                    infrastructure is shaped by the strength of the collaboration between users and
                        developers.<note>American Council of Learned Societies, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Our Cultural Commonwealth: The Final Report of the American Council of
                            Learned Societies Commission on Cyberinfrastructure for the Humanities
                            &amp; Social Sciences</hi>, 13 December 2006, 43 pp, <ref
                            target="http://www.acls.org/cyberinfrastructure/OurCulturalCommonwealth.pdf"
                            type="external"
                            >http://www.acls.org/cyberinfrastructure/OurCulturalCommonwealth.pdf</ref>.</note>
                    It will discuss the content and technological developments undertaken as part of
                    the ARC LIEF project, and reflect on the readiness of various stakeholders of
                    the Register to take advantage of these capabilities and participate in the
                    design and development of future ones.</p>
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