Day One:
The first day began with opening remarks by workshop organizer and NCC Chair Setsuko Noguchi, Japanese Studies Librarian at Princeton University East Asian Library. Moderator Kristina Troost of Duke University introduced the presentations, which were as follows:
Web Archive Projects at Stanford University
Regan Murphy Kao (Head of Special Collections [EAL] and Curator of Japanese Collections at Stanford University)
Lessons from DARIAH beyond Europe
Nick Budak, Digital Humanities Developer at the Center for Digital Humanities at Princeton University
The Birth of an Ivy+ Web Archive: National Statistical Offices and Central Banks
Joann Donatiello, Population Research Librarian at Princeton University’s Stokes Library
Web Archiving Japan: Thinking Outside the IA Box
Katherine Matsuura, Japanese Digital Humanities Librarian at Harvard University
Hands-on session led by Kōko Howell, Digital Content Lead/Web Archive Curator, for the Japan Disasters Archives at the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies
Day Two:
Kiyonori Nagasaki of the International Institute for Digital Humanities and Satoru Nakamura of the Information Technology Center of Tokyo University led a day-long workshop on the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). The hands-on sessions were integrated throughout the presentation.
Professors Nagasaki and Nakamura also demonstrated how IIIF might be applied in specific projects that participants had brought to the workshop. Participants were expected to plan and create their own small-scale projects, and there will be follow-up after the workshop to offer support and assess progress.