Data management and the curation continuum: how the Monash experience is informing repository relationships Andrew Treloar Cathrine Harboe-Ree 10.4225/03/5a16485de1981 https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/conference_contribution/Data_management_and_the_curation_continuum_how_the_Monash_experience_is_informing_repository_relationships/5627773 Repositories are evolving in response to a growing understanding of institutional and research community data and object management needs. This paper (building on work already published in DLib, September, 2007) explores how one institution has responded to the need to provide management solutions that accommodate different object types, uses and users. It introduces three key concepts. The first is the curation continuum, which identifies a number of characteristics of data objects and the repositories that contain them. The second divides the overall repository environment based on these characteristics into three domains (research, collaboration and public), each with associated repository/data store environments. The third is the curation boundary, which separates each of the three domain types. Contributors: Victorian Association for Library Automation, Conference and Exhibition [14th : 2008 : Melbourne, Australia] ; Coverage: Rights: 2017-11-23 04:02:35 Data management Electronic repository Monash University 2008 conference paper 1959.1/43940 monash:7533 Library and Information Studies