The table of Fedora Leadership Group Nominees below will be used for the upcoming election. To make a nomination/s please complete the form at http://bit.ly/LGnomination. Self-nominations are welcome! After nominations are verified with the nominee they will be added to this page along with the nominee's personal statement. For a list of eligible Member organizations, visit http://bit.ly/fedora_members

Bronze Members

NameOrganizationTitle/RolePersonal Statement
Julie AllinsonUniversity of YorkDigital Library ManagerJulie has been a long time advocate for Fedora and an active member of the Fedora UK&I user group. She has also ran the SWORD project looking at repository interoperability and has been recently working on a Linked data project so I think can make a valuable contribution to the future of the Fedora project. The University of York has been committed to Fedora since 2008 and has a production repository with many thousands of objects. We are hoping to shortly announce a move to the Hydra solution layer in the near future.
Stefano CossuThe Art Institute of ChicagoDirector of Application Services, Collections

The Art Institute of Chicago adopted Fedora 4 since its alpha 1 release as the central component of their institutional Digital Asset Management project. The AIC has taken part in the F4 Beta Pilot by testing functionality, proposing and providing improvements to the Fedora 4 codebase, and providing use cases from a Museum perspective.

Stefano is leading the AIC DAMS project and has actively contributed to long-term strategy discussions in meetings, seminars, conferences and discussion boards. He has also been advertising Fedora in the Museum Technology community, so far dominated by commercial DAM solutions.

 Stefano's long-term vision for Fedora is to maintain a set of solid, standard-compliant features while being easily expandable to satisfy the needs of any type of Cultural Heritage institutions.

    

Silver Members

NameOrganizationTitle/RolePersonal Statement
Chris AwreUniversity of HullHead of Information ManagementChris has worked with Fedora for over 10 years, and has experienced its evolution over this time, working with colleagues at Hull to inform its development and engaging with the community through Fedora Commons and subsequently DuraSpace to promote Fedora, particularly within the UK.  Chris co-chairs the Fedora UK & Ireland user group (in existence since 2006) with Richard Green, linking up with wider European Fedora users wherever possible.  As a long-standing Hydra adopter, Chris is keen to support the long-term sustainability of Fedora and its ability to serve different frameworks' needs such as Hydra's. The development of Fedora 4 has given all Fedora usage a new lease of life and promises much in the coming years. It will be important in the near-term to ensure that moves to Fedora 4 are managed in a way that brings current users on board as well as attract new ones.
 Terry ReeseThe Ohio State University Head of Digital Initiatives 

Terry Reese is the Head of Digital Initiatives at The Ohio State University Libraries with responsibility for the planning and development of digital libraries architecture and infrastructure.  He has extensive experience with a variety of repository systems, with research interests grounded in metadata and linked data issues.  The Ohio State University Libraries has begun utilizing Fedora 4 as part of its core management and preservation system for digital content as a key piece of our new digital infrastructure, and back end to our new image management system in the libraries.

 
Tim Shearer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Head, Software DevelopmentUNC Libraries have been using Fedora as the core technology in the Carolina Digital Library.  We have been an engaged community member and contributed significant developer time to Fedora 4, offering leadership around access controls among other contributions.  Tim Shearer manages the repository team, three developers and the repository librarian
Zheng (John) WangUniversity of Notre DameAssociate University Librarian, Digital Access, Resources and Information TechnologyFedora is a core infrastructure to support digital scholarship and the Notre Dame’s institutional repository, CurateND. Hesburgh Libraries is also an active member of the Hydra community. John brought a programmatic methodology that is rooted in solving problems and addressing long-term sustainability. His leadership resulted in wider campus adoption of digital library solutions based on Hydra and Fedora and transformed the Libraries software development processes. His past experience with both public and private research institutions (UCLA and Emory) prepared him with knowledge in directing technology activities in research libraries and a keen sense of aligning technology development with the mission of the academy. If elected, he will help focus on community collaboration, ease user adoption, and support innovation and sustainability.
    
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