Enumerate (project)

ENUMERATE is a collaborative project, led by Collections Trust in the United Kingdom and funded by the European Commission, to create "a reliable baseline of statistical data about digitization, digital preservation and online access to cultural heritage in Europe".[1]

ENUMERATE
Mission statement"To create a reliable baseline of statistical data about digitization, digital preservation and online access to cultural heritage in Europe".
Commercial?No
Type of projectAggregation and analysis of statistical information
LocationEurope
OwnerCollaboration led by Collections Trust
EstablishedFebruary 2011 (2011-02)
Websitewww.enumerate.eu

Cultural institutions increasingly use digital media to disseminate their heritage material. To obtain a useful overview of the current state, a precursor NUMERIC project to gather statistics was carried out between 2007 and 2009.[2]

Three reports have been published under the auspices of ENUMERATE. The first ENUMERATE Core survey report was published in May 2012.[3] In 2013 a report on the ENUMERATE Thematic Surveys on Digital Collections in European Cultural Heritage Institutions was published.[4] The second ENUMERATE Core survey report was published in January 2014.[5]

Formal partners

The partners of the ENUMERATE EC-funded project, collectively known as the ENUMERATE network, are:

  • Collections Trust, UK (project coordinator);
  • Digitaal Erfgoed Nederland (DEN), Netherlands;
  • Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Germany;
  • Digibís, Spain;
  • FARO Vlaams Steunpunt voor Cultureel Erfgoed, Belgium;
  • Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, France;
  • Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Austria;
  • Narodna in univerzitetna knjižnica (National and University Library), Slovenia;
  • Országos Széchényi Könyvtár (OSZK; National Széchényi Library), Hungary;
  • The European Library (hosted by the Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Netherlands).

Footnotes

  1. "Enumerate - About ENUMERATE".
  2. Roswitha Poll. "Digitisation in European Libraries: Results of the NUMERIC Project". Archived from the original on 2014-05-14.
  3. Natasha Stroeker; René Vogels. "Survey Report on Digitisation in European Cultural Heritage Institutions 2012" (PDF).
  4. Natasha Stroeker and René Vogels, Panteia (NL) ; Gerhard Jan Nauta and Marco de Niet (DEN). "Report on the ENUMERATE Thematic Surveys on Digital Collections in European Cultural Heritage Institutions 2013" (PDF).CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. Natasha Stroeker and René Vogels, Panteia (NL). "Survey Report on Digitisation in European Cultural Heritage Institutions 2014" (PDF).
gollark: Ban misrepresentation of your requests/haves? ***NEVER***! Ban offsite links? Sure, why not, let's go further and not *tell* people why they're banned!
gollark: Bred one!
gollark: MOOOO!
gollark: `(10/62)^5` - 10 is the number of numeric digits, 62 the total number of code-able characters, and codes are 5 chars long, so the chance of getting a single digit must be multiplied by itself 5 times for an all-number.
gollark: 0.01091544768% of codes are all-number, I *think*.
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