Attend a live informational webinar and demo
to learn more about the service
Contact Us to sign up for an upcoming session:
- Sep 10 2013, 11:30 AM PDT
- Sep 24 2013, 11:30 AM PDT
The North Carolina State Government Web Site Archives allows free and open access to North Carolina state agency web sites dating back to 1996. Access this collection using the link above or by visiting http://webarchives.ncdcr.gov.
The Arizona State Agencies collection contains content from the websites of Arizona state government agencies, boards, and commissions.
The University of Iowa Archives regularly captures the web site of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, the nation’s premier creative writing program. It is one of over 250 UI-related sites preserved by Archive-It.
Stanford University's Social Science Resource Group's collection on Intergovernmental and Non-governmental Organizations that focus on the environmental policy of climate change and global warming.
This collection is dedicated to preserving web-based information of importance to the global community of human rights researchers, students, policymakers and advocates.
Curated by the Alaska State Library is this rich collection of state and regional government agency websites.
The Flood of 2008 Collection documents events following the largest natural disaster in the history of The University of Iowa.
This collection of websites chronicles the August 2008 conflict between Georgia and Russia over the disputed South Ossetia region. Websites were contributed by Internet Archive and the greater Archive-It partner community.
Highest ranked research university and second largest research and development organization in Australia, this web collection of 41 affiliated Centres range from statistical consulting to plant cell biology.
The University of Texas Libraries’ Human Rights Documentation Initiative Collection features fragile websites containing human rights documentation and related content from human rights organizations and advocates across the globe.
A collection of Web sites that document Virginia's 2010 Congressional elections (primary and general). All 11 members of Virginia’s Congressional Delegation were up for election in 2010, and their campaign sites and related web presence are archived here.
A collection of websites chosen by subject specialists from the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University.
This collection is currently documenting the events of the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti and the aftermath, including the rescue efforts from around the world and the stories and circumstances of the Haitian people. Archive-It partners Library of Congress, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Virginia Tech and CTRnet, and University of Texas Libraries have all contributed websites for this collection.
This collection contains material created by the State of Maryland related to state planning.
The IT History Society has created this comprehensive archive of IT websites which is a valuable resource for historians, archivists and the general public.
The purpose of this collection is to provide documented information about whistleblowers and the act of whistleblowing in the United States and internationally, over time.
This collection highlights Public.Resource.Org, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with a mission of making government information more accessible, with a particular emphasis on video and the law.
This collection from the University of Texas, San Antonio contains sites related to the wide range of issues related to immigration, including the labor, educational, social, and political aspects.
University of Texas, San Antonio has put together an enticing collection of food blogs featuring Mexican cuisine.
This collection from University of Texas, San Antonio contains websites and blogs addressing water issues in Texas and throughout the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Watershed.
A collection of websites, news coverage, and commentary surrounding the Wikileaks releases starting in 2010. Iincludes documents released from the Afghan war diaries, Iraq war logs, and the US State diplomatic cables.
The Clinical Translational Science Award Collection document and preserve the progress of the Clinical Translational Science Award websites.
This collection, from fifth graders at New York City PS 56 in Queens is their student's guide to the wonderful arts and varieties of cultures.
A collection of websites, news coverage, and commentary surrounding the 2011 Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia. Our partners at Library of Congress and Bibliothèque Nationale de France have contributed websites for this collection.
A collection of websites, news coverage, and commentary. Includes the most recent events in Libya, Egypt and Sudan. Our partners at Library of Congress, Bibliothèque nationale de France, the British Library, and Stanford University have contributed websites for this collection.
The Fulbright Academy of Science and Technology promotes the work of 300,000+ alumni of the Fulbright Exchange Program. The collection also has materials from agencies and organizations responsible for administering the grants, e.g. application information, newsletters and alumni profiles.
This collection depicts the events after the Earthquake and Tsunami in Japan in March 2011. Our partners at Virginia Tech: Crisis, Tragedy, and Recovery Network, Japan's National Diet Library, Library of Congress, and Harvard's Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies have contributed websites for this collection.
A collection of 'born online’ literary magazines in German language. It is conducted by the Innsbruck Newspaper Archive, University of Innsbruck.
This collection collects the historical content from individual's shoeboxes as well as the oral history around them as digital stories. The photos, videos, audio recordings, stories and documents document a rich social history at the individual level.
A collection of homepages by German speaking authors conducted by the Innsbruck Newspaper Archive, University of Innsbruck.
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives (AJA), located on the historic Cincinnati campus of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, was established in 1947 by renowned historian, Dr. Jacob Rader Marcus to collect, preserve, and make available for research, materials on the history of Jews and Jewish communities in the Western Hemisphere, including data of a political, economic, social, cultural, and religious nature. Today the AJA houses over ten million pages of documentation. It contains nearly 8,000 linear feet of archives, manuscripts, nearprint materials, photographs, audio and video tape, microfilm, and genealogical materials. The AJA exists to preserve the continuity of Jewish life and learning for future generations and aspires to serve scholars, educators, students, and researchers of all backgrounds and beliefs.
The Minnesota Historical Society is a non-profit educational and cultural institution established in 1849. The Minnesota Historical Society uses Archive-It to capture and preserve Minnesota news and journalism on the web for future generations. This project was funded in FY10, FY11, and FY12 by a grant from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage fund.
The mission of the Library-Archives Division of the Wisconsin Historical Society is to acquire, preserve, and present records and information documenting the history of Wisconsin comprehensively and aspects of North American history. As the State Archives it holds the records and publications of Wisconsin state and local governments. The Library-Archives Division is also a major manuscript repository and serves as the American history library for the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
The American University in Cairo Web Archive collects, preserves, and provides access to the web content published by students, faculty, departments, and offices at AUC. Maintained by the Rare Books and Special Collections Library, the archive also collects Web documents that have long-term research or historical value. Topics covered include the Coptic Religion and Culture, Egyptian Arts, Culture and Society, Egyptian Business and Economy, Egyptian and Middle Eastern Architecture, January 25th Revolution, and Migration and Refugee Studies. Contact Digital Collections Archivist, Carolyn Runyon, at cfrunyon@aucegypt.edu if you have a suggestion for the American University in Cairo Web Archive.
The National Library of Medicine (NLM), the world's largest medical library and a component of the National Institutes of Health, collects, preserves, and makes available to the public information about health, medicine, and the biomedical sciences. To continue fulfilling this mission, NLM is collecting and archiving related Web content, which also serves to document the histories of health and medicine.
With more than 120 academic programs and nearly 12,500 students, Columbia College Chicago is the largest and most diverse private arts and media college in the nation. Because of our size, we can offer an unparalleled array of courses with exceptional technological resources in the heart of one of America's greatest cities.
The city is our laboratory. We live in 22 buildings that sit in the heart of Chicago's South Loop, home to the Chicago Symphony, the Art Institute, and the Museum Campus.
As the historical agency for Maryland, the State Archives is the depository for records of permanent value. Today, the Internet is the face of government. Through this partnership we hope to capture and make accessible important state and local government laws, publications and information.
The NIH Library is a biomedical research library whose collections and services are developed to support the programs of the National Institutes of Health and selected U.S. Department of Health and Human Services agencies.
The L. Tom Perry Special Collections Web Archive at Brigham Young University seeks to enhance scholarship and learning by documenting, providing access to, and preserving the state of Mormonism in all of its variations, as they exist online. The Mormon experience made manifest through culture, expression, history, philosophy, ideology, society, and theology is the main emphasis of this collection. Secondary focus is given to areas of interest such as business, education, politics, activism, and philanthropy. The content of this archive has been captured by the L. Tom Perry Special Collections Web Archive and is intended for research purposes only. By viewing the content of the archive you are agreeing to the term of use. Any deviation in usage will jeopardize potential access to this material in the future. Please direct any concerns or complaints to BYU’s Copyright Licensing Office by contacting them through phone: 801-422-9339, email: copyright@byu.edu, or visiting their webpage at: http://lib.byu.edu/sites/copyright/. If you are an owner of content that has been harvested by the Web Archive and wish your material not be included in the Web Archive please use the above information to contact the Copyright Licensing Office with your concerns.
This collection currently includes two distinct sub-collections: The UW-Madison Collection and The Stem Cell Research Archives Project.
The UW-Madison Collection includes University of Wisconsin Web sites that document many aspects of campus life including university administration, colleges, departments, and major campus organizations, student life, research, buildings, and special and ongoing events. We also crawl UW System and Colleges administration and UW Extension Web sites.
The Stem Cell Research Archives Project at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries collects, preserves, and provides access to records of stem cell research at UW-Madison and reactions in Wisconsin to work accomplished or underway at UW-Madison.
For more information about these collections or UW campus history, visit http://archives.library.wisc.edu or contact uwarchiv@library.wisc.edu. On Wisconsin!
The Curtis Institute of Music, located in Philadelphia, educates and trains exceptionally gifted young musicians for careers as performing artists on the highest professional level. It provides full-tuition scholarships to all of its students, ensuring that admissions are based solely on artistic promise. Curtis provides complete and diversified musical training, plus liberal arts courses.
The University of Iowa Libraries is the largest library system in Iowa and 14th in materials expenditures among U.S. public research libraries. The University’s Main Library, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences, 5 branch libraries, and the Law Library contain more than 5 million volumes.
After more than twenty years of uninterrupted growth, Ghent University in Belgium is now one of the most important institutions of higher education and research in the Low Countries. Ghent University yearly attracts over 28,000 students, with a foreign student population of over 2,200 EU and non-EU citizens and offers a broad range of study programmes in all academic and scientific branches. One of the focus points of the university library is long-term digital preservation. One aspect of that task is to preserve the content of various university websites at different points in time.
Based on the number of volumes in its collections, Cornell University Library (CUL) is one of the ten largest academic research libraries in the United States. Within its 20 unit libraries, holdings number more than 7 million volumes and 7 million microforms. CUL subscribes to nearly 65,000 journals and serial publications, and provides access to more than 100,000 networked databases and other electronic resources. CUL collects web sites produced by affiliates of Cornell University, web sites from organizations or individuals whose records or papers are held in Cornell’s archives, and web sites in subject areas corresponding to existing collection strengths.
Founded in 1977, the New Museum is a leading destination for new art and new ideas. It is Manhattan's only dedicated contemporary art museum and is respected internationally for the adventurousness and global scope of its curatorial program.
http://archive.newmuseum.org
Stony Brook University was established in 1957 as a college for the preparation of secondary school teachers of mathematics and science; our first campus was located at Oyster Bay, Long Island, on the grounds of a former Gold Coast estate. In 1962, a new campus was built in Stony Brook, on land donated by local philanthropist Ward Melville. Part of the State University of New York system, Stony Brook now encompasses 123 buildings on 1,100 acres. In the nearly fifty years since its founding, the University has grown tremendously, and is now recognized as one of the nation's important centers of learning and scholarship—carrying out the mandate given by the State Board of Regents in 1960 to become a university that would stand with the finest in the country.
Stony Brook University Libraries' Archive-It partnership account provides a gateway to intellectual discovery in support of Stony Brook University’s missions of education, research and service by documenting the evolution of the university's development, and ensuring lasting access to the intellectual output of the university's campus community and partners.
The University of Libraries has an active digital initiatives and collections program, which includes the following service areas: web archiving, digitization, research data curation, digital repository development, spatial data, metadata and digital preservation.
Founded in 1853, the University of Melbourne is widely renowned for its teaching, research achievements and its social and economic contributions to the city of Melbourne and to the state of Victoria. It is consistently ranked among the leading universities in the world.
Founded in 1851, the University of Minnesota is both the state land-grant university, with a strong tradition of education and public service, and the state's primary research university, with faculty of national and international reputation. It is one of the most comprehensive public universities in the United States and ranks among the most prestigious. University publications, faculty papers, and records of academic and administrative offices are held centrally by the University Archives and their digital counterparts are accessible through the University Digital Conservancy, both units of the University Libraries.
The Idaho Commission for Libraries assists libraries to build the capacity to better serve their clientele and is the State Library of Idaho. The Commission has been charged with the responsibility of establishing and maintaining a digital repository of state publications in a publicly accessible database in revised Idaho Code 33-2505. State publications are preserved and made available online at http://idahodocs.cdmhost.com.
Founded in 1697, Trinity Church is a vibrant Episcopal parish, where daily worship services form the heart of our Christian identity.
Trinity is a grant-making organization, streaming funds throughout the city and the world, as well as a resource for Lower Manhattan's commuters and tourists, who find inspirational music within its walls.
Through its congregational staff and maintenance teams, it is a sacred oasis amid the busy downtown streets.
It is an important player in the world of New York City commercial realty, and home to an award-winning preschool. It is the home to the committees, guilds, and task-forces of a congregation committed to bringing God's Kingdom to this world.
Trinity also sponsors an annual national theological conference that gathers top thinkers to the church nave, and a series of related small group gatherings, meetings, and classes for Christian formation. Also part of the Trinity family is this award-winning website.
Trinity is a home for the elderly and disabled. It is also the home of St. Paul's Chapel, the little chapel that stood
after September 11, which now serves as a congregation for peace and reconciliation.
The Columbia University Libraries (CUL) web resources collection program archives selected websites in thematic areas corresponding to existing CUL collection strengths, websites produced by affiliates of Columbia University, and websites from organizations or individuals whose papers or records are held in CUL's physical archives.
The University Archives at The Texas Collection serves as the secure repository for Baylor University records. Its principal function is to collect, preserve, and provide appropriate access to records of enduring value related to the history of Baylor University.
The University of Hawai'i at Mānoa is a land, sea and space grant institution and rated as a Carnegie Research Universities institution. The library serves the Mānoa campus as well as the other nine UH system campuses. It is a member of five Asia-centered American academic consortia and the Hawaiian Collection is unequaled in the world -- collecting and preserving materials related to native Hawaiian language, culture, and history. The Archives and Manuscripts collection includes the Hawaii War Records Depository and Hawaii Congressional papers as well as the Plantation Archives formerly held by the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association and the Japanese American Veterans Collection. The Pacific Collection is internationally recognized for the excellence of its holdings, which include materials relating to the island regions of Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia.
The Archives of Michigan seeks to permanently preserve Michigan government information for reference and research purposes. Annual snapshots of the Michigan.gov web portal (as well as legislative and judicial branch web pages) will be captured in December of each year.
The David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Duke University collects and preserves materials spanning a broad range of subjects areas in support of research and teaching at the university. The World Wide Web is home to many personal and organizational records related to those collecting efforts. The Rubenstein's Archive-It collections insure that these important digital resources are preserved and continue to be available to the public.
The University of Utah, located in Salt Lake City in the foothills of the Wasatch Mountains, is the flagship institution of higher learning in Utah. Founded in 1850, it serves over 31,000 students from across the U.S. and the world. With over 72 major subjects at the undergraduate level and more than 90 major fields of study at the graduate level, including law and medicine, the university prepares students to live and compete in the global workplace. Known for its proximity to seven world-class ski resorts within 40 minutes of campus, the U encourages an active, holistic lifestyle, innovation and collaborative thinking to engage students, faculty and business leaders.
The South Dakota State Archives and the South Dakota State Library uses Archive-It to preserve the websites of South Dakota State Government departments and agencies, including state-funded academic institutions. These websites host annual reports, rules and regulations, legislative documents, and other born-digital state documents.
The Region of Waterloo Archives is the official home of records created by the: County of Waterloo (1829-1972); Region of Waterloo (1973-present); Township of Woolwich (1851-present); Town of Elmira (1886-1972).
The Archives exists to acquire and preserve records of archival value, provide access to the records, and support the development of the archival community in the Region.
Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919), the coke and steel industrialist, philanthropist, and art collector, left his New York residence and his remarkable collection of Western paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts to the public “for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a gallery of art, [and] of encouraging and developing the study of fine arts and of advancing the general knowledge of kindred subjects.” Designed and built for Mr. Frick in 1913 and 1914 by Thomas Hastings of Carrère and Hastings, the mansion provides a grand domestic setting reminiscent of the noble houses of Europe for the masterworks from the Renaissance through the nineteenth century that it contains. Renowned for its small, focused exhibitions and for its highly regarded concert series and lectures, The Frick Collection also operates the Frick Art Reference Library, founded by Henry Clay Frick’s daughter, Helen Clay Frick, located in an adjoining building at 10 East 71st Street. Both a research library and a photo archive, the Frick Art Reference Library is one of the world’s great repositories of documents for the study of Western art. It has served the international art world for more than seventy-five years.
The Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives (KDLA) mission is to support and promote access to library services and to ensure that documentation of government activities is created, preserved, and made available for public use. The KDLA Electronic Records Archives (e-Archives) manages and provides access to digital records from Kentucky State Government. The e-Archives Website Archives is an expansion of KDLA’s digital archives. It contains snapshots of websites from all three branches of government of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The Website Archive focuses on Executive Branch constitutional officers, the Legislative Research Commission (Legislative Branch) and the Kentucky Court of Justice (Judicial Branch).
The Arab American National Museum's mission is to document, preserve, celebrate, and educate the public on the history, life, culture and contributions of Arab Americans.
The Alaska State Library promotes and coordinates library services to the community of Alaskan libraries, serves as the primary research library for state government, and collects, preserves, and makes accessible Alaska-related materials, including State of Alaska publications.
The Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) fosters an understanding of chemistry’s impact on society.
An independent, nonprofit organization, CHF maintains major collections of instruments, fine art, photographs, papers, and books. We host conferences and lectures, support research, offer fellowships, and produce educational materials. Our museum and public programs explore subjects ranging from alchemy to nanotechnology.
Established in 1962, the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute Library is one of the major art history reference libraries in the country. Focusing on post-medieval art, the Clark Library’s collection is outstanding in Italian and Northern Renaissance, Baroque, and French nineteenth-century, history of photography, and contemporary art fields and is well balanced in other areas as well. The Library’s resources include approximately 250,000 books, bound periodicals, auction sales catalogues, as well as a growing collection of digital assets. The Library holds a collection of over 2,000 contemporary artists’ books, the Julius S. Held Collection of Rare Books, the Mary Ann Beinecke Collection of Decorative Arts, and the David A. Hanson Collection on the History of Photomechanical Reproduction. Of note is the Library’s Institutional Archives and the Sterling and Francine Clark Papers which include diaries, correspondence, inventories of artwork, and personal papers of the Institute’s founders.
Founded in 1886, Winthrop University is a public, coeducational, comprehensive teaching university that teaches students to live, learn, and lead for a lifetime. The university enrolls an achievement-oriented, culturally diverse, and socially responsible student body of approximately 6,000 students. The students pursue one of 42 undergraduate or 26 graduate degree programs with more than 100 options and concentrations in arts and sciences, business administration, education, and visual and performing arts. All eligible academic degrees are nationally accredited - part of the university’s commitment to be among the very best institutions of its kind in the nation. Approximately half of all students live on the beautiful, historic campus, only a short walk away from classrooms, the cafeteria, art galleries, library, and the DiGiorgio Campus Center. Winthrop is located in Rock Hill, S.C., and within the major metropolitan area of Charlotte, N.C.
The purposes of the National Gallery of Canada are to develop, maintain and make known, throughout Canada and internationally, a collection of works of art, both historic and contemporary, with special but not exclusive reference to Canada, and to further knowledge, understanding and enjoyment of art in general among all Canadians.
Hagley Museum and Library collects, preserves, and interprets the unfolding history of American enterprise. Hagley’s collections document the interaction between business and the cultural, social, and political dimensions of our society from the late 18th century to the present.
Z. Smith Reynolds Library is part of Wake Forest University, a private, liberal arts university located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The school was founded in 1834 in the town of Wake Forest, NC and then moved to Winston-Salem in 1956. ZSR library serves the 6700 students enrolled at Wake Forest University, along with the faculty, staff and community at large. University library holdings number 2.1 million volumes. As part of a concerted effort to help preserve the history of the school, the University Archives/Special Collections department will use Archive-It to capture the websites that are integral in telling the story of Wake Forest University.
The Bodleian Libraries is the integrated library service of the University of Oxford. Established in 2000, it comprises nearly 40 libraries. Among these are major research libraries - including the Bodleian Library, which has been a library of legal deposit for almost 400 years - as well as libraries attached to faculties, departments and other institutions of the University. The combined collections of the Bodleian Libraries number more than 11 million printed items, and include extensive special collections and manuscripts.
Texas A\&M University - Commerce is a public four year teaching and research institution located in Northeast Texas. Founded in 1889 by William Mayo as East Texas Normal College, the university has over 11,000 students and is the second largest in the A\&M system. The James G. Gee Library at Texas A\&M University - Commerce provides access to more than 1 million cataloged items to support the teaching and research needs of its students and faculty. The Special Collections Department is dedicated to preserving documents relating to the history of the university and the Northeast Texas region.
The Seamen’s Church Institute cares for the personal, professional, and spiritual needs of mariners around the world. Founded in 1834, it is the largest, most comprehensive mariners’ service agency in North America.
Montana State Library meets the information needs of state agency employees, provides permanent public access to state publications, supports Montana libraries in delivering quality library content and services, works to strengthen Montana public libraries, and provides visually or physically handicapped Montanans access to library resources.
University of Washington Libraries Special Collections is the major resource for rare and archival materials covering a broad range of topics, formats, and periods.
The mission of the North Carolina Office of Archives and History is to collect, preserve, and utilize the state's historic resources so that present and future residents may better understand their history. To this purpose the office safeguards the documentary and material evidence of past generations for the education of all citizens and the protection of their democratic rights.
MSU is one of the top research universities in the world—on one of the biggest, greenest campuses in the nation. Home to nationally ranked and recognized academic, residential college, and service-learning programs, we're a diverse community of dedicated students and scholars, athletes and artists, scientists and leaders.
University Archives & Historical Collections of Michigan State University is a place of discovery. More than 150 years of MSU history can be explored, including original letters and diaries, photographs, and oral histories. Our collections span the entirety of MSU’s history and also contain historical materials not related to MSU. Some of our collection highlights include materials that document the physical campus and grounds, early student life, the lumber industry, environmentalism in Michigan, and the Civil War.
Supporting the University of Texas at San Antonio's ascent to premier research university status, UTSA Libraries Special Collections sustains the university's teaching, research and outreach mission by acquiring, preserving and digitizing primary resources for use by students and scholars at UTSA and from around the world.
Starting in 2008, UTSA Libraries Special Collectons began harvesting in partnership with Archive-It. Our collecting focus includes university and university-affiliated sites, and sites relevant to Texas and the Southwest (Border Studies, Gender Studies, South Texas and San Antonio History), including food culture and renewable energy.
For more information, see our collection development policy at: http://lib.utsa.edu/SpecialCollections/webcollectiondevelopment.html
The Alabama Department of Archives and History tells the story of the people of Alabama by preserving records and artifacts of historical value and promoting a better understanding of Alabama history.
The University of Waterloo, located at the heart of Canada’s Technology Triangle, is one of Canada’s leading comprehensive universities. We’re home to 30,000 full- and part-time undergraduate and graduate students who are dedicated to making the future better and brighter. As we plan for the future, the University of Waterloo Library is focusing its efforts in three strategic areas: student experience, space, and e-initiatives. The uWaterloo Web Archive is one of these new initiatives, preserving a record of Waterloo's web presence as part of our University Archives collections.
The National Library of Australia is the nation's primary collection of documentary resources relating to Australia. It also has world-class collections on the Asia Pacific region. The Library provides national networked services supporting resource discovery and delivery through the Libraries Australia service and participates in international library initiatives.
Princeton Theological Seminary was founded in 1812 as the first seminary established by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. It is the largest Presbyterian seminary in the United States, with more than 500 students in six graduate degree programs.
The University of Scranton Weinberg Memorial Library serves the University's students, administration, alumni and community by collecting, preserving, and providing access to records of permanent value. Increasingly, these records are born digital and dynamic. Web archiving not only preserves the University's web presence but also leverages the University's website and social media accounts as aggregators of digital information about the University - including reports, strategic plans, press releases, viewbooks, and media - that are otherwise vulnerable to digital degradation or loss. We are currently seeking sustainable funding for web archiving in order to preserve and provide long-term access to University-related web content. Contact the Weinberg Memorial Library at digitalcollections@scranton.edu if you have questions or suggestions for the University of Scranton web archiving initiative.
Iranian Blogs Web Archive is the initiative originated at Stanford University Libraries and currently managed by New York University Libraries. The goal is to preserve and ensure access to freely available selected social networking sites created by individuals, non-governmental and cultural organizations, political parties, etc. In Persian, English and other languages.
Stanford Library's Social Sciences Resource Group supports research, instruction and collection development within the social sciences, including subject areas like political science, economics, sociology, anthropology, psychology, communication, environmental and public policy. The SSRC also includes CA state, local, US Federal and International government information, data and statistics. SSRC's Archive-it collections will focus on San Francisco bay area governments, IGO/NGO working papers, and other areas of interest to Stanford social scientists.
The University of Texas Libraries is the third largest publicly supported academic library in the United States. The LAGDA collection is an initiative of the Libraries' Latin American Digital Initiative, in conjunction with the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies.
Bucknell University is a highly selective, private and nonsectarian liberal arts institution located in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1846, Bucknell University is co-educational and residential with an enrollment of 3,500 undergraduates and 150 graduates. The Special Collections/University Archives partnership with Archive-It will focus on capturing university and university-affiliated websites that are integral to the preservation of Bucknell University’s historical record.
The National Museum of Women in the Arts brings recognition to the achievements of women artists of all periods and nationalities by exhibiting, preserving, acquiring, and researching art by women and by teaching the public about their accomplishments.
iBrattleboro.com is a citizen-written news and information site serving Brattleboro, Vermont. Community perceptions of town, regional, state, and national issues have been documented in stories, comments, polls, photos, and events since February of 2003. iBrattleboro also includes the Brain Trust, a wiki of Brattleboro historical documents and photos.
The Library of Virginia serves as the Commonwealth's archival agency, the reference library at the seat of government, and as one of the nation's premier research institutions for Virginia history, politics and culture. The library holdings attract researchers from across the country and worldwide to their Richmond location and to their digital resources available on the web.
These collections of global events have been created by the Archive-It team in conjunction with curators and subject matter experts from institutions around the world.
The Oklahoma Department of Libraries (ODL) is leading the way in providing Oklahoma's citizens comprehensive online access to the state's publications, websites, social media and other digitally preserved content.
Visit ODL's other Oklahoma Digital Prairie Collections for additional resources.