Wendy Watkins The Data Centre Carleton University Ottawa, Ontario
May 1995
The past year has seen Canadian institutions continuing and expanding their co-operative ventures and partnerships. The following report is based on specific institutions per se, but
rather reflects on-going and new initiatives of a national and regional nature.
National Ventures
CAPDU at the Learneds
CAPDU was held in conjunction with the Learneds in Calgary last June. This was the second year that
meetings were held with the Learned Societies of Canada. It was decided that this would continue in the
future,except in those years where IASSIST was held in Canada. In this case, CAPDU will meet with IASSIST.
The Data Liberation Initiative
Championed by the Social Science Federation of Canada,
the Data Liberation Initiative would see Canadian
universities entering into a partnership with Statistics
Canada, the Depository Services Programme and government
funders to supply publicly-available datasets to the
academic community. To date, all parties are
enthusiastic. What remains to be found are firm
commitments to funding.
The ARL/GIS Literacy Project
Twenty-one Canadian universities will be participating in
Phase III of the ARL/GIS Literacy Project. This is a
partnership between industry and Canadian research
libraries to provide training in GIS for information
professionals. Two sessions to train the trainers will
be held in Montreal in June and Edmonton in September.
All that remains to be negotiated is access to the data.
(See above.)
Data Consortia
The 1991 Canadian Census of Population and the 1986 and
1991 Census of Agriculture have been received and
processed by the University of Toronto. The agriculture
files have been disseminated and the light is visible at
the end of the population tunnel.
Round 2 of the General Social Survey has been
disseminated. In addition, the Solicitor General of
Canada underwrote the cost of providing the Violence
against Women Survey to all Census/GSS consortium
participants.
Other Nationally-available Datasets
Negotiations with the Health Canada Monitor and Price
Waterhouse will likely see the Canadian Health Monitors
made available for non-commercial use by Canadian
universities. Other datasets that are soon to be
nationally released at no cost include:
--The Canadian National Survey on Health and Ageing
--Polls from Insight Canada Research (Omnibus
Quarterlies from 1992 to 1994 and special polls
from 1990 to 1994)
--datasets from the Canadian Labour Market
Productivity Centre
DSP Review
All Canadian government programs, including the DSP,
were under review during the past year. A group
representing various types of libraries and
including the Social Science Federation
participated in a series of meetings that was to
decide the future direction of the program. Thus
far, no final report has been issued and no final
decision has been made, although it does appear
that the program has survived.
Regional Activities
ICPSR
West
ACCOLEDS (A COPPUL Consortium of Library Electronic Data
Services) entered year two of their federation. They
held their annual meeting and workshop at UBC in August.
The workshop focused on (1) Unix tools for verifying data
orders and (2) mainstreaming data in the library.
East
The consortium of universities in Ontario and Quebec is
planned to formally join ICPSR July 1, 1995. This will
bring the number of Canadian institutions subscribing to
ICPSR to an all-time high.
CANSIM (East and West)
Network access to CANSIM (Statistics Canada's Socio-
economic Database) has been advanced on two fronts:
UofT's EPAS client/server and Web access and UBC/SFU's
client/server and recent Web access. ACCOLEDS proposed
to COPPUL directors a project to provide access to
members through UBC/SFU's CANSIM network server in
November. A more detailed proposal was presented in
April, and will hopefully be implemented in the next
month or two. EPAS is now providing service to about 10
Canadian institutions.
CREPUQ (Quebec)
The second annual meeting of la Groupe de travail sur les
fichiers de donnees numeriques was held at McGill with
about twenty universities represented. The Universite de
Montreal and Laval are developing a joint gopher to
assist data users.
Data Rescue (Alberta)
The UofA Data Library participated in the data rescue of
governmental research data emanating from 20 years of the
Alberta Hail Study. These are valuable data that would
have disappeared as a result on a provincial government
program being eliminated had not efforts been taken to
preserve the data.
Representation on National Committees
CAPDU (and by association, IASSIST) are formally represented on the following committees:
Statistics Canada's Library Consultative Group
Canadian Global Change Program of the Royal Society of
Canada (Data and Information Systems Panel)
Bureau of Canadian Archivists Planning Committee on
Descriptive Standards and Rules for Archival Description
Project
Campaign for Open Government
Electronic Democracy Advisory Board
Task Force on the Use of Statistics Canada Products in
Libraries (report available from Statistics Canada on
request)