News
Landscape

Preserving news (newspapers, news broadcast and wire service content) in the 20th century posed significant challenges for libraries and archives. Issues of publication frequency, physical size and poor paper quality, multiple editions, and title changes all conspired to hamper library efforts to make newspapers and related news resources available to any comprehensive degree. Collaborative programs like the Foreign Newspaper Microfilm Project, the United States Newspaper Program, and the International Coalition on Newspapers (ICON) were formed to confront these challenges. Focusing on long-term accessibility, these programs promote cataloging and preservation of newspapers and related primary sources on microfilm.
In the past two decades, the production and consumption of news has changed dramatically. The “lifecycle” of news (from its sourcing to distribution) is no longer a linear process culminating in a “final" collectible edition. It is now a continuous loop of gathering, processing, versioning, output, response, and update. Printed newspapers are fast becoming secondary to Web channels for distribution of news content. Therefore preserving news in the electronic environment requires a different set of strategies.
National libraries, research institutions, and historical societies still grapple with issues such as digital ingest and legal deposit of electronic news. Several pilot programs have emerged to test models of collecting the electronic equivalent of the “paper of record.” However, these efforts only scratch the surface of the entire news production of established organizations (and almost none of the output created by “citizen journalists,” bloggers, and the like).
Meanwhile, generational habits continue to influence the industry in transition. The “news experience” has become atomized as companies, search engines, digital readers, and advertisers track user habits and deliver ever more personalized content.
Legacy content is not immune to change either, as digitization efforts bring increasing accessibility to historic news collections. Mirroring the collection of print news of the 20th century, however, there is an extreme diversity of approaches from a wide range of commercial and other players. Inconsistent metadata applications, “silos” of content that prevent cross-searchability, restrictive licensing terms, and a lack of transparency in digital efforts all undermine library efforts to provide affordable, comprehensive access to news content to researchers.
Libraries will need to bring their collective leverage to bear on this complex issue through concerted action on several fronts:
- "Collectivize" the library market for news back files, databases, and tools. Their newspaper holdings and collective purchasing power provide libraries potential leverage in persuading aggregators and publishers to make digital collections (such as America's Historical Newspapers, Factiva, LexisNexis Academic) and tools (such as Factiva Insight) available to libraries on a persistent, affordable basis.This will require the cooperation of independent and academic research libraries whose collections serve as sources of content for the aggregators.
- Work with publishers, aggregators, and other repositories to ensure adequate archiving of digitized legacy content. Establish realistic requirements for print and digital archiving of newspapers digitized by publishers and aggregators, and achieve compliance with those requirements. Such requirements will include the creation and disclosure of standardized, page-level metadata.
- Increase the amount and granularity of information available on newspapers held and digitized by libraries, aggregators, and publishers. CRL is expanding the ICON website and database to provide more information on the scope and completeness of world newspaper titles held by libraries in print and microform; and on newspapers digitized by libraries, publishers, and aggregators.
- Urge the major national libraries to implement uniform, electronic copyright deposit to acquire and archive current newspapers in digital format. This will require community agreement on a standard document type definition (DTD) for electronic copyright deposit.
- Push for uniform, persistent archiving by the producers of electronic news. Work with the Associated Press and other news reporting organizations to ensure that their systems for archiving digital news content serve not only their own immediate business needs but the needs of future scholars and researchers as well.
CRL Collections
CRL has vast holdings of newspapers from all regions of the world; and collections of scripts, transcripts, and translations of news reports, produced or compiled by the British Broadcasting Corporation, CBS, the Foreign Broadcast Information Service, and the Voice of America.
Newspaper holdings include over 12,000 titles, more than 10,000 of which are published outside the U.S. CRL endeavors to collect extensive and, whenever possible, complete runs of newspaper titles, and its holdings of some titles are the most complete in existence. All newspapers can be searched in CRL’s catalog. The catalog's newspapers "scope" also allows users to browse by country or state of publication.
Within CRL's U.S. newspaper holdings, some major strengths are:
- African American newspapers
- Civilian Conservation Corp. Camp papers
- Underground and alternative press
- U.S. ethnic newspapers
CRL collecting in this domain continues. CRL has current subscriptions to news titles, purchases and produces microfilm of selected international publications, licenses and digitizes collections, and obtains additional acquisitions through CRL’s purchase programs.
The references below feature strengths of CRL’s holdings. Links point to more detailed descriptions in our catalog, as well as digital versions of the content or digitized finding aids for microfilm where available.
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