Book Chapters
Meyer, E.T., Madsen, C., Fry, J. “Digital Resources and the Future of Libraries” in, Dutton, W. H., and Jeffreys, P. W. (2010 forthcoming) (eds), World Wide Research: Reshaping the Sciences and Humanities. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Other Edited Works
Managing Editor: Women Working, 1800-1930 (completed in 2004) http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/ww
Managing Editor: Immigration to the United States, 1789-1930 (completed in 2006) http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/immigration
Published Articles and Papers
Madsen, Christine. “The Importance of Marketing Digital Collections.” ALISS Quarterly. Autumn 2009.
Meyer, E.T., Eccles, K. and Madsen, C. (2009) Digitisation as e-Research infrastructure: Access to materials and research capabilities in the Humanities. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on e-Social Science, Cologne, Germany, 24-26 June 2009.
Meyer, E.T., Schroeder, R., Madsen, C. (2008). “The World Wide Web of Humanities: Archives for Researching the Web.” Paper presented at Web_site Histories – Theories, Methods, Analysis 2008, October 14, Aarhus, Denmark.
Madsen, Christine and Bill Comstock. “Streamlining a Book Digitization Workflow.” Microform and Imaging Review, Spring 2006.
Madsen, Christine, and Megan Hurst. “The Role of the Library in Open Education.” September, 2005. The Center for Open and Sustainable Learning Conference Proceedings, 2005.
Madsen, Christine, Thomas J. Michalak, and Megan Hurst. “Harvard University Library Open Collections Program, Women Working, 1870-1930: Final Report.” March 2005. Available online at http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/report/final/
Madsen, Christine, and Thomas J. Michalak. “Harvard University Library Open Collections Program, Women Working, 1870-1930: Progress Report.” July 16, 2004. Available online at http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/report/progress/
Michalak, Thomas J. and Christine Madsen. “Selecting Resources for the Women Working Digital Collection: Books, Documents, and Pamphlets.” May 25, 2004.
Available online at http://hul.harvard.edu/ocp/internal/progress/developing_the_collection.pdf
“A Review of the Literature Regarding the Digitization of Visual Resource Collections.” VRA Bulletin. Vol. 30, No. 1, 2003.
Invited Presentations
Slides from selected presentations can also be found in my SlideShare account
“Make Lab and the Emergence of Knowledge Environments.” AT&T Internet Research Group, New Jersey USA | 29 June 2010. Co-presenters: Matthew Steven Carlos and Indy Johar.
“Interoperability and Impact of the Philosource Federation,” Toward a Semantic Web of Philosophy. Paris, France | 3 December 2009.
“On Formats, Function, and Faith: What We Can Learn from Tibetan Digitisation Projects.” AT&T Internet Research Group, New Jersey USA | 1 December 2009
“The Importance of Marketing digital collections,” ALISS 2009. Coventry UK | 29 July 2009
“On Formats, Function, and Faith: What We Can Learn from Tibetan Digitisation Projects,” Pitt Rivers Museum | 9 May 2009
“Selecting and Analysing the WWI and WWII Collections,” Humanities on the Web: Is it working? Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford | 19 March 2009. Co-Presenter: Eric Meyer
“TIDSR Survey Data,” Humanities on the Web: Is it working? Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford | 19 March 2009. Co-Presenter: Eric Meyer
“Scholarsource: a New Paradigm for Digital Humanities,” Building a Virtual Humanities Collaboratory. Cambridge, UK | 7 January 2009 . (Presenting for Paolo D’Iorio)
“Digitizing rare and unique resources: the “long tail” role of libraries in digital scholarship,” The Dilemmas of Digitization: Thinking about the Past, Planning the Future. How to Digitize the Humanities? University of Oxford, UK | May 24, 2008
“The Significance of Marketing Digital Collections,” COST A32, Working Group 3. Oxford, UK | April 21, 2008
“New Frontiers in Access to Historical Primary Sources,” New England Library Association Annual Conference. Burlington, VT | October 22, 2006
Council of Independent Colleges Transformation of the College Library: “New Frontiers in Access to Historical Primary Sources.” Cambridge, MA | April 21, 2006 . Co-Presenters: Barbara Graham, Open Collections Program; Alison Scott, Harvard College Library
“When a Digital Library Comes Knocking at Your Door,” Museum Computer Network Annual Conference. Boston, MA | November 2-5, 2005. Co-Panelists: Megan Hurst, Open Collections Program; Deborah Kao, Fogg Art Museum.
“The Role of the Library in Open Education,” Advancing the Effectiveness and Sustainability of Open Education. Utah State University, Logan, Utah | September 28, 2005. Co-Presenter: Megan Hurst
“New Frontiers in Access to Historical Primary Sources,” Gilder Lehrman Institute and Council on Independent Colleges Summer Seminar for College Professors. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA | June 22, 2005. Co-Presenters: Thomas J. Michalak and Megan Hurst
“Women Working, 1800-1930: Building the First Open Collection,” Berkshire Conference on the History of Women: Claremont, CA | June 3, 2005
“Building the First Open Collection: A Case Study,” NELINET Annual Meeting: Worcester, MA | May 6, 2005 . Co-Presenters: Thomas J. Michalak and Megan Hurst
