This 1998 email announcement details a panel session on Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) organized by Lloyd Davidson for the American Library Association (ALA) annual meeting. Titled “Digital Object Identifiers: Impacts, Costs and Concerns,” the session brought together early stakeholders in the DOI system—including representatives from Sun Microsystems, the International DOI Foundation, R.R. Bowker, and several U.S. academic libraries—to discuss the technical architecture, governance, and commercial potential of the DOI. The announcement also includes a curated bibliography of foundational articles and publisher case studies on DOI development and implementation.
This document serves as a key artifact within my data essay ("Who Owns Our Knowledge Infrastructure: Demystifying the Politics of the DOI"). I am using this artifact as a snapshot of the early institutional discourse around the DOI. It reveals how the infrastructure was framed from the outset in terms of market logic, digital rights management, and publisher-driven governance, with limited input from librarians or knowledge producers outside dominant institutions. The session agenda and participant list highlight the early exclusion of local, public, or non-Western perspectives from DOI governance.
Anonymous, "Digital Object Identifiers session at American Library Association. 1998.", contributed by Angela Okune, Research Data Share, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 7 July 2025, accessed 1 April 2026. https://www.researchdatashare.org/content/digital-object-identifiers-session-american-library-association-1998
Critical Commentary
This 1998 email announcement details a panel session on Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) organized by Lloyd Davidson for the American Library Association (ALA) annual meeting. Titled “Digital Object Identifiers: Impacts, Costs and Concerns,” the session brought together early stakeholders in the DOI system—including representatives from Sun Microsystems, the International DOI Foundation, R.R. Bowker, and several U.S. academic libraries—to discuss the technical architecture, governance, and commercial potential of the DOI. The announcement also includes a curated bibliography of foundational articles and publisher case studies on DOI development and implementation.
This document serves as a key artifact within my data essay ("Who Owns Our Knowledge Infrastructure: Demystifying the Politics of the DOI"). I am using this artifact as a snapshot of the early institutional discourse around the DOI. It reveals how the infrastructure was framed from the outset in terms of market logic, digital rights management, and publisher-driven governance, with limited input from librarians or knowledge producers outside dominant institutions. The session agenda and participant list highlight the early exclusion of local, public, or non-Western perspectives from DOI governance.