Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data

Historical data pose a variety of problems to those who seek statistically based understandings of the past. Quantitative historical analysis has been limited by researcher’s reliance on rigid statistics collected by individuals or agencies, or else by researcher access to small samples of raw data....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mark Finnane, Andy Kaladelfos, Alana Piper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-07-01
Series:Methodological Innovations
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799118787749
id doaj-7032b100171f46e584f07da3efbadb9f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7032b100171f46e584f07da3efbadb9f2020-11-25T03:53:13ZengSAGE PublishingMethodological Innovations2059-79912018-07-011110.1177/2059799118787749Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical dataMark Finnane0Andy Kaladelfos1Alana Piper2Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, AustraliaGriffith University, Brisbane, QLD, AustraliaFaculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW, AustraliaHistorical data pose a variety of problems to those who seek statistically based understandings of the past. Quantitative historical analysis has been limited by researcher’s reliance on rigid statistics collected by individuals or agencies, or else by researcher access to small samples of raw data. Even digital technologies by themselves have not been enough to overcome the challenges of working with manuscript sources and aligning dis-aggregated data. However, by coupling the facilities enabled by the web with the enthusiasm of the public for explorations of the past, history has started to make the same strides towards big data evident in other fields. While the use of citizens to crowdsource research data was first pioneered within the sciences, a number of projects have similarly begun to draw on the help of citizen historians. This article explores the particular example of the Prosecution Project, which since 2014 has been using crowdsourced volunteers on a research collaboration to build a large-scale relational database of criminal prosecutions throughout Australia from the early 1800s to 1960s. The article outlines the opportunities and challenges faced by projects seeking to use web technologies to access, store and re-use historical data in an environment that increasingly enables creative collaborations between researchers and other users of social and historical data.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799118787749
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Finnane
Andy Kaladelfos
Alana Piper
spellingShingle Mark Finnane
Andy Kaladelfos
Alana Piper
Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
Methodological Innovations
author_facet Mark Finnane
Andy Kaladelfos
Alana Piper
author_sort Mark Finnane
title Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
title_short Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
title_full Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
title_fullStr Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
title_full_unstemmed Sharing the archive: Using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
title_sort sharing the archive: using web technologies for accessing, storing and re-using historical data
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Methodological Innovations
issn 2059-7991
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Historical data pose a variety of problems to those who seek statistically based understandings of the past. Quantitative historical analysis has been limited by researcher’s reliance on rigid statistics collected by individuals or agencies, or else by researcher access to small samples of raw data. Even digital technologies by themselves have not been enough to overcome the challenges of working with manuscript sources and aligning dis-aggregated data. However, by coupling the facilities enabled by the web with the enthusiasm of the public for explorations of the past, history has started to make the same strides towards big data evident in other fields. While the use of citizens to crowdsource research data was first pioneered within the sciences, a number of projects have similarly begun to draw on the help of citizen historians. This article explores the particular example of the Prosecution Project, which since 2014 has been using crowdsourced volunteers on a research collaboration to build a large-scale relational database of criminal prosecutions throughout Australia from the early 1800s to 1960s. The article outlines the opportunities and challenges faced by projects seeking to use web technologies to access, store and re-use historical data in an environment that increasingly enables creative collaborations between researchers and other users of social and historical data.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799118787749
work_keys_str_mv AT markfinnane sharingthearchiveusingwebtechnologiesforaccessingstoringandreusinghistoricaldata
AT andykaladelfos sharingthearchiveusingwebtechnologiesforaccessingstoringandreusinghistoricaldata
AT alanapiper sharingthearchiveusingwebtechnologiesforaccessingstoringandreusinghistoricaldata
_version_ 1724479387751940096