Paul Evan Peters
Encyclopedia
Paul Evan Peters
Paul Evan Peters (1947 - 1996) was named one of the American Library Association
American Library Association
The American Library Association is a non-profit organization based in the United States that promotes libraries and library education internationally. It is the oldest and largest library association in the world, with more than 62,000 members....

's 100 most important leaders in the 20th century for his leadership of the Coalition for Networked Information
Coalition for Networked Information
The Coalition for Networked Information is an organization whose mission is to promote networked information technology as a way to further the advancement of intellectual collaboration and productivity. It is a joint initiative of the Association of Research Libraries as well as EDUCAUSE...

 (CNI). His work was interdisciplinary, often blurring the lines between library science and technology. Peters was widely respected amongst his colleagues for his contributions, being called an "imagineer," "Mr. Internet himself," and even a "prophet". However, he is likely most well known as the founding executive director of CNI.

Education

Peters graduated in 1969 from the University of Dayton, receiving undergraduate degrees in computer science and philosophy. During the 1970s he received a masters of library and information science from the University of Pittsburgh. And in 1986, while working at Columbia University, he earned his masters in Sociology.

Career: Pre-CNI

After earning his undergraduate degrees, Peters worked at the National Cash Register Corporation as a retail systems engineer. He spent most of the 1970s working on "research and development projects." Peters went on to work at Columbia University. There, he served as Assistant University Librarian for Systems, and worked on development of early automated circulation and cataloging systems. Peters then worked at the New York Public Library as a Systems Coordinator from 1987 - 1989. This was his last position before he began his post as the founding executive director at CNI.

Career: CNI

In 1990, the Coalition for Networked Information was founded by three organizations: the Association of Research Libraries
Association of Research Libraries
The Association of Research Libraries is an organization of the leading research libraries in North America. As of October 2006, it comprises 123 libraries at comprehensive, research-intensive institutions in the US and Canada that share similar missions, aspirations, and achievements...

(ARL), CAUSE, and EDUCOM. (CAUSE and EDUCOM merged in 1998 to become EDUCAUSE.) CNI was initially conceived as a temporary affiliation whose purpose was to "enhance scholarship and intellectual productivity." ARL's Executive Director, Duane Webster, suggested Peters for the role of executive director. Peters' skill set was ideal for this position, and CNI quickly began to thrive.

During Peters' management, CNI launched and collaborated on numerous projects. These included, the Rights for Electronic Access and Delivery of Information (READI), the Elsevier TULIP Project, the Access to Public Information Program, and the National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH). CNI's contributions during this time made a lasting impact on all citizens. For example, the Access to Public Information Program impacted decisions made by the Clinton Administration.

Richard P. West, an information technologist involved in the beginnings of CNI, described Peters’ methods for effective leadership, explaining:

He was able to bridge the library and information technology communities, draw in new partners from scholarly publishing, the technology sector, and the international community; and he was able to clearly articulate the potential benefits of the availability of digital information to the research and education community.

Ultimately, it was Peters' leadership that transitioned CNI from its initial establishment as a temporary organization, to one of permanence and longevity.

Although Peter's leadership of CNI was cut short by his death in 1996, the impact of his work at CNI lives on. One example is that Peters was "credited with creating an identity for CNI in the scholarly publishing arena as a frontline player."

Death

Paul Evan Peters died on November 18, 1996 at the age of 48. His wife, Rosemarie Kozdron, his parents, Austin and Mary Peters, and his brother, Philip outlived Peters.

Paul Evan Peters Fellowship

After Peters' death, the Paul Evan Peters Fellowship was created in remembrance of him and his contributions to the information sciences. Beginning in 2002, the Fellowship has been awarded to a qualifying graduate student on a biennial basis.

Ongoing Relevance to Information Science

Colleagues thought highly of Peters, particularly Kopp, who in his obituary wrote that Peters "might be considered a prophet of his time and of his profession." Although a lofty claim, notions in Peters' writings, specifically “General Library Standards” and "The Changing Infrastructure for Information Distribution," despite completion in the late 1980s and 1990s, still feel current today.

Peters had a definitive opinion on updating standards in libraries due to technological progress:
I support and actively participate in the standards efforts of libraries and librarians which are motivated by the sincere desire to progress toward a future information world that is more coherent and comprehensible than the one we now face and will likely be facing for some time to come.

Not only does his stance feel relevant today, it reads like common sense despite being written over twenty years ago.

In 1993, Peters' “The Changing Infrastructure for Information Distribution” touched on the human aspects and implications of networking. Peters wrote "the most important thing being networked is people and not computers," and "in general, I believe that the greatest transformational effects of network infrastructures and networked information environments will be felt, at least initially, in how well and how widely we mobilize people and information to bring to bear on problems."

Therefore, it's clear that Peters recognized the importance of technology as infrastructure. However, he was also cognizant of the far larger importance that technological infrastructure results in bringing people and information together for the benefit of the greater good. Nearly twenty years after Peters wrote this article, people now convene on a daily basis using networks, the Internet, and the World Wide Web, working on problems ranging from the local to the global.

In another example of the prescience that Kopp attributed to Peters, Peters made the following comment in an interview in 1996:

The Web is not the end, because nothing on the Net right now is true to the dynamic, complex character of the way that people learn information, and it won't be until the basic architecture is phrased in human terms.

Selected Professional Associations and Awards

  • President of the ALA's Library and Information Technology Association from 1991 - 1992
  • Chair of the National Information Standards Organization from 1989 - 1991
  • Curator of The Global Library Exhibit at the New York Public Library

Selected Publications

  • Beck, C., McKechnie T., & Peters, P. E. (1979). Political Science Thesaurus II: Revised and Expanded Second Edition. (2nd ed.). Pittsburgh: University Center for International Studies in conjunction with the American Political Science Association.
  • Peters, P. E. (1988). General Library Standards. Publishing Research Quarterly, 4(3), 20-24. doi: 10.1007BF02683719
  • Peters, P. E. (1993). The Changing Infrastructure for Information Distribution. Information Technology and Libraries, 12, 250-253.

Further Reading

  • Flagg, G. (1997). CNI Presses on in Wake of Founder's Death. American Libraries, 28(2), 32.
  • Gaughan, T. (1995). Dedicated Line: Manifest Destiny at Disney World. American Libraries, 26(1), 82, 84.

External links

  • http://www.cni.org/staff/peters_index.html
  • http://www.cni.org/pepfellowship/
  • http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue1/paul/
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