The Digital Archive of Japan's 2011 Disasters

The Digital Archive of Japan's 2011 Disasters project is an initiative of the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies at Harvard University in collaboration with several partners. We aim to collect, preserve, and make accessible as much of the digital record of the disasters as possible, to enable scholarly research and analysis of the events and their effect.

The Digital Archive of Japan's 2011 Disasters' core missions
1 to index, preserve and make widely accessible the digital records of the events of March 2011 and their aftermath
2 to provide a public space of information sharing, collaboration and conversation for citizens, researchers and policy makers
3 to serve as a site of shared memory for those most affected by these events and most concerned about their consequences

The archive aims to foster new connections, both between items and among users. As users move from item to item and collection to collection they encounter an ever-expanding network of fellow archivists, from the major organization that submits thousands of location- and direction-tagged photographs to the fellow citizen who submits her family’s contribute to the historian who seeks to understand the interaction of public and private actors in the relief effort.

Collaboration

Kinds of collaborators
Faculty
Graduate students
Undergraduate students
Librarians
IT staff
Help description
We are interested in developers who wish to contribute to the archive interface design, with interested parties who want to help collect internet websites for archiving, and volunteers who can help solicit testimonials for the testimonial archive.
Contact person
Help needed
Yes

Tools used

WorldMap

WorldMap is a web-based map collaboration platform hosted at Harvard, which allows anyone to store, organize, visualize, edit, collaborate, and publish geospatial information. Upload your own map layers or use maps others have contributed. The system attempts to fill the growing gap between powerful desktop-bound mapping applications, and lightweight web map solutions with limited storage capacity.

WorldMap on DiRT

Twitter

Twitter allows users to send 140-character messages. There is a thriving digital humanities community of Twitter users. This tool is great for communicating and sharing ideas, micro-blogging, real-time communication. You can follow tweets about digital humanities https://twitter.com/hashtag/digitalhumanities.

Twitter on DiRT

Archive-It

Archive-It is a subscription web archiving service from the Internet Archive that helps organizations to harvest, build, and preserve collections of digital content. Through our user friendly web application Archive-It partners can collect, catalog, and manage their collections of archived content with 24/7 access and full text search available for their use as well as their patrons. Content is hosted and stored at the Internet Archive data centers.

Archive-It on DiRT