51ÁÔÆæ

photo of Ann Hanlon

Ann Hanlon

  • Head of Digital Collections and Initiatives, Digital Collections and Initiatives

Education

  • Master of Arts, History - University of Maryland
  • Master of Science in Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Bachelor of Fine Arts - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Professional Activities

Select Presentations

  • Transforming Digital Collections: Use and Reuse, Midwest Archives Conference, Madison, Wisconsin, May 2022
  • (with Marcy Bidney, Thomas Padilla, Kim Pham, and Amanda Henley) Collections as Data as an Organizational Model, Association of College and Research Libraries, April 2021
  • (with Scott Prater and Melissa Olson) Know What You Have, Use What You Know: You May Already Have a Digital Preservation Program in the Making, Digital Library Federation Forum: NDSA Digital Preservation 2019, Tampa, Florida, October 17, 2019

Select Writings

  • (with Kate Ganski) "Listen First, Collaborate Later: Possibilities for Meaningful IL+DH Collaboration," Exploring Literacies Through Digital Humanities: A dh+lib Special Issue, August 2020.
  • (with Iris Xie, Rakesh Babu, Tae Hee Lee, Melissa Davey Castillo, Sukjiin You) "Enhancing usability of digital libraries: Designing help features to support blind and visually impaired users." Information Processing & Management, Volume 57, Issue 3, May 2020.
  • Review of Abstract Machine: Humanities GIS, by Charles B. Travis, Cartographic Perspectives, Number 85, July 2017.
  • (with Marisa Ramirez, Gail McMillan, Joan Dalton, Heather Smith and Chelsea Kern) “Do Open Access Electronic Theses and Dissertations Diminish Publishing Opportunities in the Sciences?â€Â College and Research Libraries,  January 2015
  • (with Marisa Ramirez) “Asking for Permission: A Survey of Copyright Workflows for Institutional Repositories.â€Â portal: Libraries and the Academy, Volume 11, Number 2, April 2011
  • (with Susan Schreibman) “Determining Value for Digital Humanities Tools: Report on a Survey of Tool Developers.â€Â Digital Humanities Quarterly, Volume 4, Number 2, Fall 2010