Why we need to find time for digital humanities : presenting a new partnership model at the University of Sussex

with researchers in digital humanities, the authors believe it is strategically important to invest time and resources exploring ideas and partnering with academic colleagues on projects. This approach can provide many unforeseen benefits to both the Library service and to the workforce. The article is based on our experience as Core Associates of the Sussex Humanities Lab at the University of Sussex. It outlines the impact this collaboration has had, including influencing working practices and culture within the Library, involvement in research bids, informing the development of new services, and addressing library questions using digital humanities methods. Most importantly, it exemplifies a new model of the librarian as equal partner in the research process. Why we need to find time for digital humanities: presenting a new partnership model at the University of Sussex

and expertise.This article presents the model of engagement that we have fostered at Sussex, and the impact on the Library and its staff.

The Sussex Humanities Lab and the Lab model
The RLUK report suggests that there is no single model for digital humanities within institutions.The SHL has been established as a Lab model described by Varner and Hsew 2 as having 'a specific focus, tied either to the mission of the campus or to the aims of their founders, which necessarily means that many do not take on responsibility for digital projects that fall outside of the scope'.The Lab is dedicated to developing and expanding research into how digital technologies are shaping our culture and society, and draws on expertise from a number of different disciplines to answer questions within arts and humanities.

Library staff as Core Associates
The Directors of the SHL have a long-standing relationship with a number of Library colleagues, and it felt very natural for us to be included within the funding bid to the University to establish the Sussex Humanities Lab in 2015.Several Library staff are named as Core Associates and the Lab finances a research fellow based in the Library who reports to our Head of Special Collections.Additionally, the Trustees of the Mass Observation Archive (MOA) 3 , one of our major Special Collections, support a research fellow based in the Lab who uses digital humanities techniques to work on the MOA.Embedding research activity within Special Collections is very different from the Library's more traditional support for research activity.As Core Associates we are equal partners in the development of the Lab, participating in awaydays and regular Lab meetings, and encouraged to attend and organize seminars.Involvement at this level brings us closer to our academic colleagues and so increases our confidence to input to research where we feel we can contribute.An example is the Digital Preservation for Social Sciences and Humanities Conference, 4 a joint SHL/Digital Repository of Ireland event, where the organizing committee included a member of Library staff.This brought the conference to the attention of a new audience, academic librarians, a number of whom attended an academic conference for the first time.
Securing firm and enthusiastic support from senior Library management has been crucial to success, as it is vital to identify and advocate for the benefits of such a relationship across the University -this is key to the work and aims of the Lab.In addition to traditional areas of engagement (for example, metadata creation), our association with digital humanities here at Sussex has resulted in creative collaborations that require new ways of working (and thinking) not normally associated with libraries and their staff and more akin to the habits and behaviours of researchers.In libraries we design and deliver tightly managed projects and are accountable for their success.In contrast, within academia experimentation and failure are integral to the research process, and offer constructive ways of formulating questions and problem solving.Our involvement with this different approach brings us closer to researchers' working methods and provides the opportunity to transfer some of these practices into our Library work.
'there is no single model for digital humanities within institutions' 'we are equal partners in the development of the Lab' 'firm and enthusiastic support from senior Library management has been crucial to success'

Library staff as collaborators
Library staff are also collaborators in research.Their skills and expertise are revealed and recognized through the close relationship with the SHL and they are now being named on research bids.Our Head of Special Collections, Fiona Courage (interviewed), has been included in a number of successful large bids to offer advice on appropriate archiving policy and practice and also in her capacity as curator of the MOA.We anticipate future opportunities for the Library to be included in research bids around digital preservation, research data management (RDM), metadata, data ethics and other areas where we have expertise and experience.

Working on solutions to institutional problems
Working with digital humanities presents opportunities for new perspectives on longstanding Library problems.The University of Sussex, along with many other similar higher education institutions, is going through a period of intense growth, and this has put pressure on services and spaces across the campus, in particular the Library building.The information we have traditionally gathered on building usage has been based on a demographic breakdown in gate entries or rough headcounts.Recently, user experience (UX) approaches have begun to bring us better insights into how the building is being used.Working with the Lab we have piloted a project to use a digital humanities technique of big data analysis to our WiFi access points to track the devices of our users as they move around the building.This provides management information that can be used for the development of new services as well as to aid decision-making about building design.
We have also benefited from SHL collaboration and expertise in the development of other services, such as RDM and digital preservation.The Library had previously struggled to engage humanities researchers with discussions on RDM, but input from the SHL has enabled us to design a service that addresses the needs of humanities as well as sciences.Research data and digital preservation are issues which are shared but where the Lab and the Library each lack some elements of understanding, expertise or practical application, and so there is potential in combining efforts.

The Library as a research subject
Libraries have traditionally focused on opening up digital collections to their researchers, and more recently have been exploring how they can support researchers in applying text and data mining techniques to these collections.But libraries, and not just their collections, have the opportunity to be research subjects.There is potential to open up the mass of 'input from the SHL has enabled us to design a service that addresses the needs of humanities as well as sciences' 'Library staff are also collaborators in research' data that libraries capture and create as management information to make it available for use by the research community for student projects and in hackathons.At Sussex we are exploring how we can provide data sets with open licences through our web pages.These types of service have the potential to be extended to other disciplines, and we are now being approached by colleagues within anthropology about a research project to use UX methodologies to understand the use of our spaces.

Changing culture
Our collaboration has had an impact on the wider Library culture, as more of our staff participate in the research life of the Lab, for example, by attending and contributing to the SHL's This and THATCamp. 5This is an opportunity not only for senior managers or subject librarians but for all Library colleagues to get involved.In addition, we have recently established a Library innovation group, comprised of staff at all levels and from all sections of the Library and including representation from the SHL.This is an example of our relationship with the Lab increasing our confidence in the entire research life cycle: supporting research is no longer limited to our Research Support team and we have an opportunity to expose more of our staff to the academic research life cycle.We have always provided training and advice to researchers, both as consumers of information, and, increasingly, as generators of information.However, our relationship with SHL has enabled us to make this a two-way process, giving us an opportunity to enhance the digital skills of our Library staff.We recently collaborated on a Library Carpentry 6 programme for our own staff and the wider community, giving attendees the skills to clean and manipulate their own data.

Open scholarship
As librarians, we are advocates of open access (OA) and have taken on responsibility for managing the University's OA funds and monitoring compliance with funder policies.However, our engagement with the Lab has enabled us to develop a broader understanding of the requirements for open scholarship.We are currently working with one of the Lab co-directors to develop a business case for a university press initiative for the creation of new types of open research outputs.This press would create capacity within the Library to collaborate on innovative digital projects across campus.Through our partnership with the SHL we are able to support the University's strategic ambitions to be an exemplar for open research.

Conclusion and new ways of working
Literature on libraries and the digital humanities has tended to focus on how libraries can support the digital humanities -an extended form of research support.We think that this is missing the point.Professor Caroline Bassett, Co-Director of the Sussex Humanities Lab (interviewed), proposes that what is exciting about our collaboration with the SHL is that it is a new model of partnership, embedding the work of the Lab within the Library and vice versa.
'we are able to support the University's strategic ambitions to be an exemplar for open research'