DRAFT--Dublin Core Usage Board Process
Changes made during DC UB meeting in Dublin, OH, May
21-22, 2001
Changes (and fixes to errors) from WORD draft circulated 5/29 noted in green.
Changes after DC-UB meetings in Tokyo in purple.
Reorganized per comments, 11/30/01. Changes in wording resulting from those
changes reflected in blue.
Additional proposed reorganization, 12/08/01 in red.
Usage Board: Overview, Meetings, Documentation
1. Usage Board Membership
- 1.1. The UB will consist of at least seven and no more than eleven people
(nine is ideal) appointed by the DCMI Directorate
- 1.2. Usage Board member terms shall be for two years, renewable once.
Initial appointments will be made so as to stagger terms
- 1.3. Members should be selected based on the following criteria:
- 1.3.1. Knowledgeable concerning the development
history and purpose of the DC element set and its relationship to the
metadata world at large
- 1.3.2. Related to a metadata community relevant to DCMI
- 1.3.3. Willing and able to commit time and energy to the functions of
the UB
- 1.3.4. Able to communicate verbally and in writing in English well enough to prepare documents and discuss complex
issues in a group setting
- 1.3.5. Geographic and domain distribution of members is relevant but
will not override other criteria
- 1.4. The UB Chair will be appointed from one of the membership by the DCMI
Directorate. The term of the chair shall be for two years, renewable once.
- 1.5. For internal communication the UB uses the closed
mailing list dc-usage@jiscmail.ac.uk. The messages are archived and publicly
available at http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/dc-usage.html
2. Meetings
- 2.1. Scheduling
- 2.1.1. Meetings should be at least twice a year
- 2.1.1.1. One meeting should be scheduled during the annual DC general
workshop/conference
- 2.1.1.2. The second should be scheduled at a different time of the
year, preferably close to other conferences, so
as to make attendance convenient for as many members as possible
- 2.1.1.3. Scheduling should be done far enough in advance so that as
many members as possible may be present
- 2.2. Funding for meetings
- 2.2.1. Funding for meetings should be supported as much as possible by
DCMI
- 2.2.2. [Removed at Tom's suggestion]
- 2.3. Attendance by members
- 2.3.1. Members must attend at least one meeting in a given year to
maintain membership in good standing
- 2.3.2. Members who miss two meetings in succession may be replaced by the DC Directorate
- 2.4. Attendance by others
- 2.4.1. Attendance at UB meetings by other than the UB is by invitation
- 2.4.1.1. Interested attendees should request an invitation via the UB
Chair or the Managing Director
- 2.4.2. Participation in discussion of proposals
by any interested parties is encouraged
- 2.5. Agenda preparation and distribution
- 2.5.1. The UB chair is responsible for preparing the meeting agendas and
assigning shepherds to proposals
- 2.5.2. Agenda items shall include the name and email address of the UB
member responsible for shepherding the proposal through the UB process
- 2.5.3. Agendas shall be available on the UB page of
the DCMI website
- 2.6. Minutes
- 2.6.1. Minutes of discussion points and decisions shall be drafted based
on notes taken by relevant shepherds and the chair
- 2.6.2. Minutes shall be available on the DC UB website
3. Categories of Usage Board
Decisions
- 3.1. Recommended
- 3.1.1. CROSS-DOMAIN. Terms of general use and broad
interest across domains.
- 3.1.2. DOMAIN-SPECIFIC. Terms of interest to a limited
domain or set of domains.
- 3.1.3. OBSOLETE. For terms that have been superseded, deprecated, or
rendered obsolete. Such terms will remain in the registry for use in
interpreting legacy metadata.
- 3.2. REGISTERED. Used for schemes, application
profiles, and translations for which the DCMI provides information but not
necessarily specific recommendation.
4. Communication and Documentation
- 4.1. Communication Responsibility Table
| What |
Where |
Who |
Comment |
| Proposal draft posted |
WG list, DC-General |
WG Chair |
|
| Proposal added to DC-UB agenda |
DC-UB Website, DC-UB list |
DC-UB Chair |
Should this also be announced to WG? |
| Proposal announced for public comment |
DC-General |
DCMI Managing Director |
|
| Usage Board Outcome |
DC-General |
DCMI Managing Director |
|
| Scheme submission |
DC-UB List |
[Web Team Submission Tool] |
|
| Scheme registration |
DC-UB List |
[Web Team Submission Tool] |
Shepherd may announce to WG list |
| Digest of scheme registrations |
DC-General |
DC-UB chair |
Possibly instead by Makx? |
- 4.2. Documentation
- 4.2.1 Important documents like UB membership, meeting agendas, meeting
minutes, proposals to the UB, voting or decision documents and results (if
not part of minutes) and similar are archived as separate documents in an
area of the DCMI web site devoted to the UB.
- 4.2.2. Structure of the UB website is similar to a working group page
with an issues, forums and resources section. If necessary, an UB internal
section can be password protected.
- 4.2.2 Historic documents relevant to the UB work, like voting proposals
and results from the first DC Qualifier voting will
be archived at the same page.
- 4.2.3 Results of the UB work which take the form of official DCMI
documents (working drafts, proposed recommendations and recommendations) are
made available and archived at: http://dublincore.org/documents/
as all the other similar documents.
- 4.2.4 The UB page maintains links to all XML/RDF
schemas of UB-maintained namespaces held on the DCMI Web site.
Proposals for Recommendations and Registrations: Form and Process
5. Proposals for Recommendations
- 5.1. Sources of proposals
- 5.1.1. DCMI working groups
- 5.1.1.1. Existing working groups
- 5.1.1.2. Working groups established for the purpose of developing
proposals
- 5.1.2. Metadata implementors
- 5.1.3. UB itself
- 5.2. Proposals should include:
- 5.2.1. A "name" for use in encodings
- 5.2.2. A "label" and "definition" in clear English
- 5.2.3. An example or two if appropriate, making clear what type of
literal values are expected
- 5.2.4. Best practice recommendations
- 5.2.5. Whether the proposed term is an Element, Controlled Vocabulary
of general application, or Element Refinement
(typology to be taken from the reference grammar)
- 5.2.6. For qualifiers: the element being qualified
- 5.2.7. A pointer to a description, in standard form (to be specified) of
the working group or organization putting forward the proposal: its scope,
aims, a brief history, current status, and a pointer to archives
- 5.2.8. A discussion of possible overlap with existing terms
- 5.2.9. A summary history of the post-proposal discussion, written by the
shepherd, shall be included (if there was one)
- 3.2.10. An analysis of the impact on existing Dublin Core applications
- 5.2.11. An analysis of interoperability with other metadata schemes
- 5.2.12. A justification of the need for the proposed element or
qualifier in a cross-domain application
- 5.2.13. Links to further information on the web
Proposal Requirements Tables
New DCMI Namespace Element
| Element Namespace |
Designation of the DCMI namespace for the proposed element |
| Element Name |
The unique token assigned to the proposed element |
| Element Label |
The human-readable label assigned to the proposed element |
| Element Status |
Designation of whether the status of the proposed element is
Domain-Specific or Cross-Domain |
| Element Definition |
The definition of the element |
| Element Comment |
A remark concerning the application of the proposed element |
| Element Encoding Scheme(s)* |
Value qualifiers that aid in the interpretation of the proposed
element values (formats) or that control the range of legitimate element
values (controlled vocabularies) |
| Element Examples |
Example "use statements" with assigned
literals |
New DCMI Namespace Element Qualifier
| Qualified Element Namespace |
Designation of the DCMI namespace for the element being
qualified |
| Qualified Element Name |
The unique token assigned to the element being qualified |
| Element Qualifier Namespace |
Designation of the DCMI namespace for the proposed element
qualifier |
| Element Qualifier Name |
The unique token assigned to the element qualifier |
| Element Qualifier Label |
The human-readable label assigned to the element qualifier |
| Element Qualifier Status |
Designation of whether the status of the proposed element qualifier
is Domain-Specific or Cross-Domain |
| Element Qualifier Definition |
The definition of the element qualifier |
| Element Qualifier Comment |
A remark concerning the application of the element qualifier |
| Element Qualifier Encoding Scheme(s)* |
Value qualifiers that aid in the interpretation of the proposed
element qualifier values (formats) or that control the range of
legitimate element qualifier values (controlled vocabularies) |
| Element Qualifier Examples |
Example "use statements" with accompanying
literals |
- 5.3. Supporting Materials and Processes for New Element and Element
Qualifier Proposals:
- 5.3.1. For each proposed element and element qualifier, include
supporting information required under Part 3.2 of the Usage Board
Administrative Processes. Clearly label the discussion of each Sub-Part.
- 5.3.2. Review Part 5.4. "Criteria
for Evaluation of Proposals" of the Usage Board Administrative Processes
and provide additional supporting materials where appropriate (e.g., if
there are "alternative ways of implementing the term" 3.3.3.3), include
information regarding the alternatives).
- 5.3.3. Encoding schemes should be registered with DCMI through its
online registration system.
- 5.4. Criteria for Evaluation of Proposals
- 5.4.1. Clarity
- 5.4.1.1. Can the term be clearly defined?
- 5.4.1.2. Can the semantics of the proposed element or element
qualifier be expressed precisely, unambiguously, and briefly?
- 5.4.2. Practicality
- 5.4.2.1. Is the term practical?
- 5.4.2.2. How difficult would it be for people creating metadata to
comprehend the semantics of the proposed element or element qualifier and
to apply it reasonably in the description of resources?
- 5.4.3. Placement
- 5.4.3.1. Does the term refine an existing element?
- 5.4.3.2. If the proposed term is an element, can it reasonably be
handled as effectively as an element or value qualifier for an existing
element?
- 5.4.3.3. Are there alternative ways of implementing the term? Within
the conceptual framework of the Dublin Core Element Set (i.e.,
element/element qualifiers and value/value qualifiers), are there
alternative ways to achieve the ends sought?
- 5.4.4. Needs
- 5.4.4.1. Is there a clear requirement in existing implementations for
the term in support of resource discovery?
- 5.4.4.2. Is there a demonstrated need for the proposed element,
element qualifier, or value qualifier?
- 5.4.4.3. Are there existing implementations or controlled
vocabularies, etc., supporting the term?
- 5.4.5. Fit with other elements/qualifiers
- 5.4.5.1. Follows existing principles of qualification
- 5.4.5.2. Is well-formed
- 5.4.5.3. Does not conflict with or create ambiguity with regard to
existing elements, or qualifiers
- 5.4.5.4. Does not create problems for existing legacy implementations
if those implementations have followed recommended practice
- 5.5. Action Chart
| Condition 1: |
Can the community of practice's need be solved with a value
qualifier (i.e., through a domain-specific vocabulary) for an existing
DCMI element or element qualifier? |
If so, do that; else … |
| Condition 2: |
Can the community of practice's need be solved through an
application profile that references an element or element qualifier from
an existing and recognized non-DCMI namespace? |
If so, do that; else … |
| Condition 3: |
Can the community of practice's need be solved with a new
domain-specific qualifier for an existing DCMI element? |
If so, do that; else … |
| Condition 4: |
Create a new domain-specific DCMI element (and, if necessary,
element and value qualifiers) to meet community of practice's need. |
|
- 5.6. Process for moving proposals
- 5.6.1. Pre-announcement process
- 5.6.1.1. Proposal is received by DCMI Managing Director or UB Chair
- 5.6.1.2. Proposal is given preliminary review for
completeness by DCMI Managing Director and UB Chair
- 5.6.1.3. If complete and no revisions needed, proposal is circulated to UB
members and announced for public comment by the Managing Director
- 5.6.1.4. If incomplete or revisions needed, proposal is returned to
originator, with request for revision or additional information
- 5.6.2. Announcements
- 5.6.2.1. Announcements of comment period for proposals to
be discussed by the UB shall be made on the DC-general list and other
relevant lists
- 5.6.2.2. Announcements of proposals shall be made by the DCMI Managing
Director
- 5.6.2.3. Announcements will include:
- 5.6.2.3.1. Links to relevant information to be considered with the
proposal
- 5.6.2.3.2. Relevant deadlines for comments
- 5.6.2.3.3. Addresses for comment submission
- 5.6.2.3.4. Information about UB meeting at which the proposal will be
discussed, including how to request an invitation to participate
- 5.6.2.3.5. Name and contact information for the assigned shepherd
- 5.6.3. Shepherds
- 5.6.3.1. Each proposal shall be assigned a shepherd by the UB chair from among the UB membership
- 5.6.3.2. Shepherds should have knowledge of the proposal issues or be
connected to the WG originating the proposal
- 5.6.3.3. Responsibilities
- 5.6.3.3.1. Monitor discussion on relevant lists (shepherds should be
members of the relevant DC WG list during the time of consideration of a
proposal)
- 5.6.3.3.2. Summarize the comment period discussion and points of
contention of the proposal for the UB, either verbally at the meeting or
in writing prior to the meeting (preferred)
- 5.6.3.3.3. Serve as liaison to the relevant WG or community during the
time the proposal is under discussion and after a decision has been made
- 5.6.3.3.4. Recommend to the UB any further action after a decision has
been made on the proposal
- 4.3.3.5. Prepare registration information for the
DCMI Web Team.
- 5.6.4. Comment period
- 5.6.4.1. Comment period on proposals should be managed on the DC-General
list
- 5.6.4.2. Comment periods should be at least one month
- 4.4.3. Public discussions of UB related issues during
public comment periods should take place on DC-GENERAL or other working
group mailing lists as specified in the announcement
- 5.6.5. Voting
- 5.6.5.1. Voting shall be limited to scheduled meetings and conference
calls
- 5.6.5.2. Voting shall be limited to UB members present at the meeting or
conference call and able to participate in the discussion
- 5.6.5.3. UB members who cannot be present may present their arguments for
or against a proposal in writing prior to a meeting (this shall not
constitute a vote)
- 5.6.5.4. UB members who cannot be present may explore other options with
the chair, if they cannot be present for an important vote. In all cases, a
vote may not be cast by a member who is not present, either actually or
virtually, for the relevant discussion
- 5.6.5.5. Consensus is achieved if fewer than two UB members object to a
proposal
- 5.7. Registration of UB Decisions on Proposals
- 5.7.1. Recommended terms will be registered by the shepherd who was
responsible for moving the proposal through the UB process
- 5.7.1.1. The shepherd will complete a web form transferring the
relevant information to the DCMI Web Team for inclusion into the Registry
- 5.7.1.2. The DCMI Web Team will report to the UB list when
registration has been completed
6. Proposals for Registration of Encoding Schemes and Vocabularies
- 6.1 Submissions of new encoding schemes and vocabularies will be
received on the DC-UsageBoard list via a web form
- 6.2. DC UB members will "claim" responsibility to shepherd submissions
based on:
- 6.2.1. Their knowledge of a particular scheme or vocabulary
- 6.2.2. Their knowledge of the language used in the scheme or
vocabulary
- 6.2.3. Their interest or knowledge of a particular subject or
topical area covered by the scheme or vocabulary
- 6.2.4. The time they have available for such tasks
- 6.3. Submissions unclaimed after one week will be assigned to a DC-UB
member by the chair
- 6.4. The DC-UB chair will not shepherd individual submissions, but
will keep track of submissions and ensure that all are resolved in some
manner
- 6.5. The shepherd will be responsible for verifying the submitted
information:
- 6.5.1. Name of the scheme or vocabulary
- 6.5.2. Availability and maintenance status
- 6.5.3. Appropriateness of the maintenance agency
- 6.5.4. Uniqueness and appropriateness of the proposed token
- 6.5.5. Possible use with elements not specified in the proposal
- 6.6. If necessary, the shepherd will initiate contact with the
maintenance agency in the case of questions or concerns about the status of
the scheme, the proposed token, or to clarify the submission.
- 6.7. The shepherd will edit the submission and complete the
registration process by submitting the information to the DCMI Web Team
- 6.8. The DCMI Web Team will report to the UB list when registration
has been completed
- 6.9. The DC-UB chair will prepare a monthly report of all new
7. Proposals for Registration of Application Profiles
[Application profiles are not mention anywhere except in 3.2--perhaps a placeholder here until we have criteria developed?]
rev. sas 12/08/01