Constitutional revision research project
Librarians
Kazuko Sakaguchi
Librarian, Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan
Harvard College Library, Harvard University
http://hcl.harvard.edu/libraries/#fung
Kazuko Sakaguchi is the Librarian of the Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan (DCJ). The DCJ, located in the Fung Library in the CGIS Knafel Building, offers important resources on contemporary Japan that complement the Japan-related holdings of other libraries on campus. The DCJ collects materials on postwar Japan and is the home library of the Constitutional Revision Project.
Kuniko Yamada McVey
Librarian, Japanese Collection, Harvard-Yenching Library
Harvard College Library, Harvard University
http://hcl.harvard.edu/libraries/#hyl
Kuniko Yamada McVey has participated in creating the bibliography for the Constitutional Revision Research Project. She has been a librarian at the Harvard-Yenching Library since 1999 after 10 years in the Documentation Center on Contemporary Japan. At these two Harvard libraries she has developed Japanese studies resources in Harvard comprehensively, and has served numerous researchers on Japan.
Sophia Huang
Harvard University Asia Center
Information Technology Specialist
Sophia Huang is the Technical Project Coordinator, she communicates and coordinates tasks among project member groups to ensure that the archives are successfully collected by the Waxi system. She also provides technical oversight of the project data management functions prior to the Waxi phase. Sophia is an IT specialist at Harvard University Asia Center who assists Asia Studies related faculty in using or developing databases, digital resources, and web applications for their research and teaching. Sophia has worked in the IT field for 12 years and has both B.A and M.A. in Management Information Systems.
Kyoko Mori
Visiting Librarian, Harvard-Yenching Library 2006-07
Librarian, Kashiwa Library, University of Tokyo
Kyoko Mori is involved in compiling the bibliography for Constitutional Revision Research Project. Since 1996 she has been a librarian at the University of Tokyo Library, and from April 2006 to March 2007, she was a visiting librarian in the Japanese Acquisitions and Reference Department of the Harvard Yenching Library.
Deb Morley
Director, Information Technology Services
Harvard College Library
Harvard University
Deb Morley is the Director of Information Technology Services at the Harvard College Library. Her department is responsible for end-user support, systems and network administration, data storage, and software development services within the 12 libraries of the Harvard College Library (HCL) system. Ms. Morley serves on various steering committees and advisory groups including the University Technical Architecture Group, the FAS IT Advisory Group, the HCL Web Steering Committee, and the Aleph (integrated library system) Steering Committee of which she is co-chair. She has also served as the co-chair of Harvard’s Technology in Education (TIE) working group. She holds undergraduate and master's degrees in industrial and systems engineering from Ohio University and an M.S. in library science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is also a Frye Fellow, completing the Frye Leadership Institute in 2003.
Wendy Marcus Gogel
Librarian, Digital Projects Program
Harvard University Library
http://hul.harvard.edu/ldi
http://hul.harvard.edu/ois/projects/webarchive/index.html
http://gslisce.simmons.edu/instructors/ce-gogel.html
Wendy Gogel is a librarian and program manager for Harvard's Library Digital Initiative (LDI). The LDI Executive Committee selected the Constitutional Revision Collaborative Research Group as one of three partners to participate in the Harvard University Library web archiving project. On the project, she serves as the liaison between the Office for Information Systems which is overseeing the project and the partners involved. She coordinates the work of the project related to functional requirements for systems by consulting with the projects' technical developers, the Office of the General Counsel, the project partners and the LDI staff. She is interested in the issues confronting librarians and curators who want to manage and preserve "born-digital' material, such as websites, and how this material can be integrated with the technical infrastructure that supports other library materials at Harvard.