The Preservation of African Websites as Historical Sources

Marion Frank-Wilson
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Abstract

The advent of the World Wide Web has changed traditional ways of communicating research and has increased opportunities for authors from the global South to disseminate knowledge, thus bypassing the “gate-keeping” system in the traditional peer-reviewed journal literature of the global North. Increasingly, content from and about Africa is produced and disseminated on the web. Content is all-encompassing and ranges from cultural and artistic creations to political as well as economic information and government publications and statistics. The web makes it possible not only to produce knowledge but also to provide public access to and increase interaction with information and historical sources. While the potential of the web to democratize knowledge production was recognized by librarians, archivists, and researchers on Africa early on, there is also an awareness that the web as medium for historical research may in fact deepen the digital divide and perpetuate longstanding inequalities, linking it to debates about the politics of archiving and related questions of cultural imperialism. With the average age of a website estimated at seventy-five days, there is agreement among researchers and archivists that important web content is disappearing every day, and that future historical research depends on efforts to preserve and archive websites now. Nevertheless, while analyses and discussions about the importance of preserving African web content have emerged in the literature since the early 2000s, actual efforts to preserve and archive African web contents as historical resources have been relatively few and sporadic. Rather than relying on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, which automatically preserves websites through a web crawler but that cannot be depended on to archive every hyperlink or even every subpage or new version of existing pages, libraries and archives use the Internet Archive’s subscription-based tool Archive-It as a way to capture web content at a selective, deep, subpage level. Creating such curated, archived digital collections, however, connects web archiving with concerns and issues raised in the scholarly literature about the politics of archiving and who ultimately has the right to decide which websites will be preserved as part of a country’s digital history. Moreover, specific characteristics of the web as a medium pose additional, more practical challenges for its use in historical research. Issues related to funding, scalability, availability of metadata, and archival documentation, which would include information about functionality, website versions, dead links, provenance, as well as contextual information, are all factors that have yet to be addressed when creating web archives. The need to develop practices, policies, and documentation to guide web archiving has therefore been stressed by both archivists and historians. Ultimately, the preservation of African websites for historical research can best be accomplished collaboratively, with the involvement of both archivists and historians as well as library and professional associations and, most importantly, strong partnerships with stakeholders from the African continent.
非洲网站作为历史资源的保护
万维网的出现改变了传统的研究交流方式,并增加了来自发展中国家的作者传播知识的机会,从而绕过了发展中国家传统的同行评议期刊文献中的“守门”系统。越来越多来自非洲和关于非洲的内容被制作并在网络上传播。内容包罗万象,从文化和艺术创作到政治和经济信息以及政府出版物和统计数据。网络不仅使知识的产生成为可能,而且还为公众提供了获取信息和历史资源的途径,并增加了与信息和历史资源的互动。虽然图书馆员、档案管理员和非洲研究人员早就认识到网络使知识生产民主化的潜力,但他们也意识到,网络作为历史研究的媒介,实际上可能会加深数字鸿沟,使长期存在的不平等永久化,将其与关于存档政治和文化帝国主义相关问题的辩论联系起来。据估计,网站的平均年龄为75天,研究人员和档案保持者一致认为,重要的网络内容每天都在消失,未来的历史研究取决于现在对网站的保存和存档工作。然而,尽管自21世纪初以来,文献中出现了关于保存非洲网络内容重要性的分析和讨论,但将非洲网络内容作为历史资源保存和存档的实际努力相对较少,而且是零星的。图书馆和档案馆使用互联网档案馆的订阅工具Archive- it,而不是依靠互联网档案馆的Wayback机器,它通过网络爬虫自动保存网站,但不能依赖于存档每个超链接,甚至每个子页面或现有页面的新版本,作为一种在有选择的、深入的、子页面级别捕获网络内容的方式。然而,创建这样的精心策划、存档的数字馆藏,将网络存档与学术文献中提出的关于存档政治的关注和问题联系起来,以及谁最终有权决定哪些网站将作为一个国家数字历史的一部分被保存下来。此外,网络作为一种媒介的特定特征,为其在历史研究中的应用带来了额外的、更实际的挑战。与资金、可扩展性、元数据的可用性和档案文档相关的问题,包括有关功能、网站版本、死链接、来源以及上下文信息的信息,都是创建web档案时尚未解决的因素。因此,档案工作者和历史学家都强调了开发实践、政策和文档来指导网络存档的必要性。最终,保存非洲网站用于历史研究的最佳方式是合作,档案工作者和历史学家以及图书馆和专业协会的参与,最重要的是,与非洲大陆的利益相关者建立强有力的伙伴关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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