Martin R. Kalfatovic

Overview


Twenty years of progressively complex work in the management of digital libraries and information technology with a focus on the areas of information management, data access, and digitization. Work experience located in a major museum complex. Significant experience in cultivation of donors, corporate and institutional giving, building national and international partnerships in both the private and public sectors, and the development of online and social media development projects. Research interests include transformational elements of new media technologies on traditional research, publishing and learning models, and associated metrics for scholarly communication. As Managing Director of the International Image Interoperability Framework Consortium (IIIF-C), his remit is to expand use of the IIIF standard and APIs, grow participation in the IIIF Consortium, and enhance the global user experience of digital objects across all formats, including images, audio-visual, and 3D. As Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives Division, managed all aspects of the Smithsonian Libraries digital library program and work across boundaries in strategic planning activities. Major duties included supervision of Web Services Department, Information Services Department, Scholarly communication and evaluation metrics, Product Development and Licensing, and Digital Imaging. Served as the key unit contact point both within the Institution and at a national and international level for all digital library activities. Served as Program Director, Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) which functions as the executive director and manager of the international consortium of natural history, botanical garden, government, and university libraries engaged in the mass digitization of taxonomic literature. Coordinates developments of global nodes at the national and regional level. The position also served as a key contact for government, NGO, and academic leaders at the national and international level.

And just what is UDC? 

UDC represents the Universal Decimal Classification, a classification scheme for information:

The Universal Decimal Classification is a system of library classification developed by the Belgian bibliographers Paul Otlet and Henri la Fontaine at the end of the 19th century. It is based on the Dewey Decimal Classification, but is much more powerful. It uses auxiliary signs to indicate various special aspects of a subject and relationships between subjects. It thus contains a significant faceted or analytico-synthetic element, and is used especially in specialist libraries. UDC has been modified and extended over many years to cope with the increasing output in all disciplines of human knowledge, and is still under continuous review to take account of new developments.

Presentations & Posters for 2019-2025

Presentations & Posters for 2015-2025

2026
  • Kalfatovic, M. (2026, February 23). Technology, Community & Consortium: Narodna in univerzitetna knjižnica. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18753889
  • Kalfatovic, M. (2026, February 19). Technology, Community & Consortium: Nacionalna i sveučilišna knjižnica u Zagrebu. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18698222
  • Kalfatovic, M. (2026). IIIF as an Enabling Tool in Data Curation. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18669252
2025

2024
  • Forthcoming

2023
  • Safeguarding Access to 500 Years of Biodiversity Data: Sustainability planning for the Biodiversity Heritage Library.  2023 TDWG Conference. Hobert. October 2023 [virtual]
  • International Cooperation on Strategic Projects and Initiatives During a Time of Global Instability.  IFLA World Library and Information Congress. North American Meeting. 22 August 2023 [virtual]
  • "Tools without Data are Useless” or Data Born in Literature: 2023 BHL Program Director's Report. BHL Annual Meeting: Paris. 18 April 2023

2022
  • How to Apply for a Government Position in the Humanities: Insights from a Hiring Manage. Dumbarton Oaks. Professional Development Series. 17 November 2022
  • Building Resiliency in Digital Library Networks: The Biodiversity Heritage Library. 11th Shanghai International Library Forum. Paper Only. September 2022.
  • Program Director’s Report. BHL Annual Meeting: Edinburgh. 6 June 2022 
  • So, You Want to be a Librarian (or an Archivist) at the Smithsonian...: Insights from Smithsonian Libraries and Archives. With Tamar Evangelestia-Dougherty. 1 June 2022.  [virtual]
  • Analyzing Biodiversity Literature at Scale. Libraries as Laboratories. Internet Archive. 27 April 2022 [virtual]
  • Biodiversity Literature in Support of Citizen Science. WeDigBio. The Role of Libraries in Understanding the Earth’s Biota. 8 April 2022  [virtual]
  • How to Apply for a Government Position in the Humanities: Insights from a Hiring Manage. Dumbarton Oaks. Professional Development Series. 28 January 2022 [virtual]
2021
  • The Vast Library of Life: An Overview of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. SLA Staff Meeting. Virtual. 13 July 2021.
  • The Vast Library of Life: An Overview of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. SLA Advisory Board Meeting. Virtual. 16 June 2021.
  • SLA Get a Job
  • Biheli quīndecim : BHL@15: An Update for CBHL. CBHL 2021 Meeting. Virtual. 6 May 2021.
  • Biheli quīndecim : BHL@15: 2021 BHL Program Director's Report. BHL Annual Meeting. Virtual. 13 April 2021.
  • Information about Libraries. With Barbara Ferry and Polly Khater. SLA Staff Meeting. Virtual. 3 February 2021.
2020
  • The Biodiversity Heritage Library Response to the Global COVID-19 Pandemic. With Constance Rinaldo, Jane Smith, David Iggulden, and Colleen Funkhouser. TDWG 2020. Virtual. 20 October 2020.
  • Building a Library Organization for Innovation: Challenges and Opportunities During Times of Transformation and Disruption. 10th Shanghai International Library Forum. 
  • Paper Only. October 2020.
  • A Global Open Access Resource: An Introduction to the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Martin R. Kalfatovic. Dumbarton Oaks Plant Humanities Seminar. Virtual. 30 June 2020.
  • Telework Opportunities Discussion. All SLA Staff Meeting. 19 May 2020.
  • Eyes on the Prize, Reboot the Mission. All DPI Staff Meeting. Virtual. 12 May 2020.
  • 2019 BHL: The Year of the Old Normal. 2020 BHL Annual Meeting. Virtual 1 May 2020.

2019

2018

2017
2016

2015

LinkedIn Profile

You can find my LinkedIn profile here.

Presentations: 2014

Presentations 2014

Presentations: 2013

Presentations 2013

Presentations: 2012

2012 Presentations

Publications: Book Chapters

Book Chapters
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R., "Data Born in Literature: The Biodiversity Heritage Library – A Global Digital Library Serving the Planet," in Yang, L., & Salaz, A. (Eds.). (2025). Digital Libraries Across Continents (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003473589.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R., Costantino, Grace, and Rinaldo, Constance A. 2019. "The Biodiversity Heritage Library: Unveiling a World of Knowledge About Life on Earth." In Digital Libraries for Open Knowledge. Doucet, Antoine, Isaac, Antoine, Golub, Koraljka, Aalberg, Trond, and Jatowt, Adam, editors. 352–355. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. 11799 in Lecture Notes in Computer Science. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30760-8_32.
  • “Nile Notes of a Howadji: American Travellers in Egypt, 1837-1903,” pp. 239-59 in Unfolding the Orient: Travellers in Egypt and the Near East. Edited by Paul and Janet Starkey. Reading, UK: Ithaca Press, 2001.
  • “Web-based Markup Languages: HTML, DHTML, and XML,” pp.68-76 in The Cybrarian’s Manual 2. Edited by Pat Ensor. Chicago: American Library Association, 2000.
  • Re-Defining the Library Meme: Memory and Imagination,” pp.155-65 in Information Imagineering: Meeting at the Interface. Edited by Milton T. Wolf, Pat Ensor, and Mary Augusta Thomas. Chicago: American Library Association, 1998.
  • Planning Basics for a Library FTP Site: The 'Increase and Diffusion of Knowledge' at Smithsonian Institution Libraries,” pp. 37-44, in The Internet Library: Case Studies of Library Internet Management and Use. Edited by Julie Still. Westport, Conn.: Mecklermedia, 1994.

Presentations: 2011

2011

2011 Meetings


2011
  • CNI Fall 2011 Membership Meeting, Arlington, VA, 12-13 December 2011
  • Digital Public Library of America  Technical Aspects Planning, Cambridge, MA, 8-9 December 2011
  • 2nd International Conference on African Digital Libraries,  Johannesburg, South Africa, 14-18 November 2011 [Steering Committee, not attending]
  • Life and Literature Conference,  Chicago, IL, 14-15 November 2011
  • Taiga 7, Baltimore, MD, 2 November 2011
  • Digital Library Federation Forum, Baltimore, MD, 31 October - 2 November 2011
  • Anchoring Biodiversity Information: From Sherborn to the 21st Century and Beyond. Society of the History of Natural History, London, United Kingdom, 28 October 2011 [Presentation, not attending]
  • Smithsonian Libraries Advisory Board Meeting, Washington, DC, 27-28 October 2011
  • Digital Public Library of America Technical Workstream Meeting and Plenary Session, Washington, DC, 20-21 October 2011
  • TDWG 2011 Annual Conference, New Orleans, LA, 16-19 October 2011
  • BHL Brainstorming, St. Louis, MO, 20-22 September 2011
  • Annual Meeting, American Library Association, New Orleans, LA, 24-28 June 2011
  • Digital Public Library of America Technical Meeting, Library of Congress, Washington, DC, 14 June 2011
  • Special Libraries Association, Philadelphia, Pa, 13 June 2011
  • Biodiversity Heritage Library-Europe. Annual Review Meeting, Tervuren, Belgium, 7-10 June 2011
  • Linked Open Data-Libraries, Archives, Museums Summit, San Francisco, California, 2-3 June 2011
  • Workshop on Global Interoperability and Linked Data, Amsterdam, 16-17 May 2011
  • BioOne: An Annual Seminar to Promote Scholarly Communication, Washington, DC, 22 April 2011
  • Ignite Smithsonian, Washington, DC, 11 April 2011
  • WebWise 2011, Baltimore, Maryland, 10-11 March 2011
  • Biodiversity Heritage Library Institutional Council Meeting, Washington, DC, 8-9 March 2011
  • Midwinter Meeting, American Library Association, San Diego, California, 7-11 January 2011

2010 Meetings

  • 2010/12 Washington: CNI Fall (December 13-14, 2010)
  • 2010/11 Beijing: BHL China (12-20 November 2010). 
  • 2010/10 Austin: MCN (October 27-30, 2010). 
  • 2010/10 San Francisco: Tech Meetings (October 18-21) & "Books in Browsers," Internet Archive Meeting (October 21-22, 2010)
  • 2010/09 Washington: SIL Advisory Board Meeting (September 30-October 1, 2010)
  • 2010/09 Woods Hole: BHL Global Meeting (September 22-24, 2010)
  • 2010/09 Washington: Yours, Mine, Ours: RLG Programs Meeting (September 20-21, 2010)
  • 2010/06 Washington: SI Digital Fair (September 15-16, 2010)
  • 2010/06 Washington: ALA Annual (June 24-29, 2010)
  • 2010/05 Australia: BHL-ALA (May 29-June 7, 2010)
  • 2010/05 Vienna: BHL-Europe (May 25-28, 2010)
  • 2010/04 Rochester, MN: Medical Heritage Library Meeting (April 27-29, 2010)
  • 2010/04 Baltimore: CNI Spring Meeting (April 12-13, 2010)
  • 2010/03 New York City : BHL IC Spring Meeting (March 21-22. 2010)
  • 2010/03 Washington: SIL Town Meeting (March 17, 2010)
  • 2010/03 Washington, DC: SIL Board meeting/Dibner Rededication (March 3-5, 2010)
  • 2010/02 Brazil: BHL (February 1-15, 2010)
  • 2010/01 Boston ALA Midwinter (January 15-19, 2010)

Presentations: 2010

2010

2009 Meetings

2009

  • 2009/12 Washington: CNI Fall Meeting (December 14-15, 2009)
  • 2009/11 Vancouver: ASIS&T (November 8-12, 2009)
  • 2009/11 Arlington: OCLC Digital Forum East (November 5, 2009)
  • 2009/10 New York: SIL Board meeting (October 29-30, 2009)
  • 2009/10 San Francisco: OCA and IMLS (October 18-22, 2009)
  • 2009/08 St. Louis: BHL/BHL-E meeting (August 17-19, 2009)
  • 2009/07 Snowbird: Botany & Mycology 2009 (July 25-August 1, 2009)
  • 2009/07 Chicago: ALA Annual (July 9-15, 2009)
  • 2009/06 San Francisco: Internet Archive/Bay Area (June 28-July 3, 2009)
  • 2009/05 St. Louis: CBHL Meeting (May 11-12-13, 2009)
  • 2009/04 Philadelphia: IMLS Scanning Meeting (April 20-21, 2009)
  • 2009/04 Washington: BioOne Meeting (April 17, 2009)
  • 2008/04 CNI: Minneapolis (April 6-7, 2009)
  • 2009/03 Washington: Computers in Libraries (March 30, 2009)
  • 2009/03 Woods Hole: BHL Architecture Meeting (March 8-11, 2009)
  • 2009/02 Taipei: TELDAP (February 23-27, 2009)
  • 2009/01 Denver: ALA Midwinter (January 24-28, 2009)
  • 2009/01 Washington: Smithsonian 2.0 (January 23-24, 2009)

Publications: Book and Media Reviews

2007

2006
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. "The Unyielding Clamor of the Night by Neil Bissoondath”. Library Journal 131.13 (August 2006): 67.

2004
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. “Review. “The Gothic Enterprise: A Guide to Understanding the Medieval Cathedral by Robert A. Scott.” Library Journal 128.17 (October 15, 2003): 66.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R., “Review. “The Life of Henry Moore by Roger Berthoud.” Library Journal 128.20 (December 2003): 104.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R., "Review. A Brief History of the Smile" by Angus Trumble." Library Journal 129.1 (January 2004): 106.

2003
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. “The Emblem by John Manning”. Library Journal 128.1 (January 2003): 102, 104.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. “Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling by Ross King”. Library Journal 128.3 (February 15, 2003): 134.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. “Renaissance Rivals: Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael, Titian” by Rona Goffen. Library Journal 128.6 (April 1, 2003): 94.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. “Cézanne and Provence: The Painter in His Culture” by Nina Maria Athanassoglou-Kallmyer. Library Journal 128.9 (May 15, 2003): 84.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. "Il Gigante: Michelangelo, Florence, and the David, 1492-1504 by Anton Gill.” Library Journal 128.12 (July 2003): 75-76.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. "The Burlington Magazine: A Centenary Anthology edited by Michael Levey." Library Journal 128.14 (September 1, 2003): 161.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. “The Gothic Enterprise: A Guide to Understanding the Medieval Cathedral by Robert A. Scott.” Library Journal 128.17 (October 15, 2003): 66.
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R., Review. “The Life of Henry Moore by Roger Berthoud.” Library Journal 128.20 (December 2003): 104.

2000
  • Review. "Wyndham Lewis: Painter and Writer" by Paul Edwards. Library Journal 125.15 (September 15, 2000): 66.
  • Review. "The Art of Arts: Rediscovering Painting" by Anita Albus. Library Journal 124.4 (September 1, 2000): 200.
  • Review. "Encyclopedia of Archaeology: The Great Archaeologists" by Tim Murray, et. Reference & User Services Quarterly 39.4 (Summer 2000): 408.
  • Review. "The Madonna of the Future: Essays in a Pluralistic Art World" by Arthur C. Danto. Library Journal 125.12 (July 2000): 83.
  • Review. ATales from the Art Crypt: The Painters, the Museums, the Curators, the Collectors, the Auctions, the Art" by Richard Feigen. Library Journal 125.12 (July 2000): 83.
  • Review. "African‑American Culture and History on CD‑ROM" by Macmillan Library Reference. Reference and User Services Quarterly 39.3 (Spring 2000): 286 .
  • Review. "The Faustian Bargain: The Art World in Nazi Germany" by Jonathan Petropoulos (2000). Library Journal 125.7 (April 15, 2000): 82.
  • Review. "Eyewitness: Reports from an Art World in Crisis" by Jed Perl (2000). Library Journal 125.5 (March 15, 2000): 80.
  • Review. "Heaven" by Doreet Levitte Harten (1999). Library Journal 125.4 (March 1, 2000): 84.
  • Review. "High Art Lite: British Art in the 1990s" by Julian Stallabrass (2000). Library Journal 125.2 (February 1, 2000): 83.
  • Review. "Fairfield Porter: A Life in Art" by Justin Spring (2000). Library Journal 125.1 (January 2000): 99.

1999
  • Review. "Compass and Clock: Defining Moments in American Culture: 1800, 1850, 1900" by John Wilmerding (1999). Library Journal 124.20 (December 1999): 128.
  • Review. "The Informed Eye: Understanding Masterpieces of Western Art" by Bruce Cole (1999) and "Art: The Critics= Choice: 150 Masterpieces of Western Art" by Marina Vaizey (1999). Library Journal 124.18 (November 1, 1999): 76
  • Review. "William and Henry Walters, the Reticent Collectors" by William R. Johnston (1999). Library Journal 124.16 (October 1, 1999): 86.

1993
  • Kalfatovic, Martin R. Review. "An Artful Life: a Biography of D.H. Kahnweiler, 1884-1979 by Pierre Assouline". Biography 16.2 (Spring 1993): 173-75.

Speaker/Author Biographies

2024

2024 Association of Research Libraries Spring Meeting
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communications at Smithsonian Libraries and Archives (SLA). He also serves as Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL). At SLA he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, and research analytics and metadata. As the Program Director for the BHL, a global consortium of forty-two natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries (including five ARL members), he participates in the national and global coordination around issues of collection aggregation, technical development, and research applications of the digital library. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications. He can be found on select social platforms as @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

2024 Elizabeth Stone Lecture. The Catholic University of America
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director for Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communications and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) at Smithsonian Libraries and Archives (SLA).  At SLA, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, and research analytics and metadata.  As the Program Director for the BHL, a global consortium of forty-two natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the national and global coordination around issues of collection aggregation, technical development, and research applications of the digital library.  A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, Mr. Kalfatovic holds both a BA and MSLS from The Catholic University of America and received the Raymond Von Dran Memorial Award for innovation, collaboration, and leadership in 2013.  He can be found on select social platforms as @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

2020

2020 Plant Humanities Summer Program
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Talk: A Global Open Access Resource: An Introduction to the Biodiversity Heritage Library

Abstract: This presentation will cover a bit of the history and governance of the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL). The BHL is an open access digital library for biodiversity literature. Operating as a consortium of natural history and botanical institutions and headquartered at the Smithsonian Libraries, the BHL collections contain nearly 58 million pages from over 260,000 volumes.

2019

2018

Global Summit of Research Museums
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Talk: Discoverable, Accessible, Reusable, and Transparent (DART): Scholarly Communications and the Research Museum

Abstract: Just as research museums in all disciplines are increasingly opening up collections for new uses, the scholarly communication ecosystem and research publication channels are now a core component for increasing the visibility and value of collections-based museums. It is generally accepted that the concept of "open" (access, science, etc.) provides valuable benefits and measuring the research output of an institution is somewhat ameliorated by open and digital access to scholarly output. Using the DART Framework developed at the Open Scholarship Initiative (2016) meeting as a touchstone, questions about discoverability, accessibility, reuseability, transparency of research museum scholarly communications will be addressed. Research Information Management, and the increasing variety of research output venues, are opportunities to show value to a global audience.

9th Shanghai International Library Forum 
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Botany 2018
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

I Annotate 2018
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, and education and outreach. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the BHL, a global consortium of natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he directs the aggregation of content, global partnerships within the larger biodiversity world, and fosters collaboration and community among partners.

He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Ohio Natural History Conference
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a global consortium of more than 60 natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he directs the aggregation of content, global partnerships within the larger biodiversity world, and fosters collaboration and community among partners.

He can be found on Twitter at @BHLProgDirector & @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Expanding Access for the Local and Global: Increasing Access & Empowering Global Biodiversity Research through the Biodiversity Heritage Library

The Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) has grown into a global consortium of 19 Members, 19 Affiliates and over 60 global partners. With the vision of "Inspiring discovery through free access to biodiversity knowledge," the BHL improves research methodology by collaboratively making biodiversity literature openly available to the world as part of a global biodiversity community. The free and open access to over 53 million pages of biodiversity literature spanning the 15th century to the present, is an invaluable resource to researchers around the world. How BHL grew to a global consortium, the value of citizen science to BHL, and its value to researchers working in Ohio as well as worldwide will be the focus of the keynote talk.

2017

Library Leaders Forum 2017 (San Francisco) & Smithsonian Digitization Fair
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholarly communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a global consortium of more than 60 natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he directs the aggregation of content, global partnerships within the larger biodiversity world, and fosters collaboration and community among partners.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

BHL Open Day Symposium (Singapore) 
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and Associate Director for Smithsonian Libraries. As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. He earned his Master of Science in Library of Science from the School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America. He can be found on Twitter @BHLProgDirector and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

2016

8th Shanghai International Library Forum (SILF)
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

The Summer Educational Institute for Visual Resources and Image Management (SEI)
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of sixteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

2015

2015 IMLS Focus
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Programs and Initiatives at Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL partners in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licensing. His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data.A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.


2015 CHIM Symposium, CUA
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, Mexico, and Africa.

At Smithsonian Libraries, he is involved with scholar communications, mass digitization, education and outreach, and product development and licencing. A regular contributor to popular and scholarly publications, he also writes on a variety of topics on his blog at UDC793.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990 and is the 2013 recipient of the Raymond Von Dran Memorial Award Information from the Alumni Association. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

2014

2014 CONABIO Meetings
Martin R. Kalfatovic es el Director del Programa de la Biblioteca del Legado en Biodiversidad (BHL) y el Director Asociado de la División de Servicios Digitales de las Bibliotecas del Instituto Smithsoniano.  Como Director del Programa de BHL, un consorcio de dieciséis bibliotecas de museos de historia natural, centros de investigación y jardines botánicos, participa en la coordinación global del proyecto BHL trabajando con nodos de BHL en China, Brasil, Australia, la Unión Europea, Egipto, Singapur, y África.

Su investigación actual se enfoca en BHL en términos de asociar textos usando inteligencia taxonómica y otras herramientas de análisis, curación de datos de publicaciones académicas y e-books y asuntos de la Web Semántica acerca de datos abiertos ligados (Linked Open Data, LOD).

Obtuvo su MSLS de la Escuela de Bibliotecología y Ciencias de la Información en la Universidad Católica de América en 1990.  Puede encontrársele en Twitter @udcmrk y mantiene un blog en http://www.udc793.org.  Muestra un profundo afecto por los dodos.

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Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen natural history, research, and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, Singapore, and Africa.

His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://www.udc793.org.  He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Catholic University Alumni Report
Martin R. Kalfatovic
Associate Director, Smithsonian Libraries and Program Director, The Biodiversity Heritage Library

At Smithsonian Libraries, he manages mass digitization, scholarly communications, and data analysis. Additionally, internship programs and education outreach as well as social media and product development are under his management.

As the program director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of twenty natural history, botanical garden, and research libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, Sub-Saharan Africa, the European Union, Singapore, and Egypt.

He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books, “Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums”, “The Fine Arts Projects of the New Deal: An Annotated Bibliography”, “Nile Notes of a Howadji: A Bibliography of Travelers' Tales from Egypt, from the Earliest time to 1918”. At CUA, a solid background in information systems and the human-computer interaction behind library automation prepared him for the ongoing and rapid changes in the in information ecosystem.  He earned his MSLS from SLIS at the Catholic University of America in 1990.

2013

International Conference on African Digital Libraries and Archives, May 2013
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the program director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen US and UK natural history and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, Egypt, and most recently, Africa.

His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://www.udc793.org.  He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.


2012

Internet Archive Leaders' Forum, October 2012
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues.

As Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the program director for the biodiversity heritage library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen US and UK natural history and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, and Egypt.

Current research interests include linked data, taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. is from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He can be found on twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://www.udc793.org.  He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.


NAGARA - CoSA Joint Annual Meeting, July 2012
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues.

Current research interests include linked data, taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. is from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He can be found on twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://www.udc793.org.  He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Smithsonian and the Internet, Washington, DC, July 2012
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos. Libem071@SIVM.BITNET (that was then); @UDCMRK (this is now).

Presentation for the Mae Jemison Science Reading Room, Pretoria, South Africa, June 2012
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the program director for the biodiversity heritage library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen US and UK natural history and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, and Egypt.

His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data. In collaboration with the Smithsonian institution scholarly press, he manages the electronic publication of the Smithsonian contributions and studies series.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://www.udc793.org.  He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Education Grants
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues.

Current research interests include linked data, taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. is from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

BHL Focus
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Program Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library and the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Libraries.  As the program director for the biodiversity heritage library (BHL), a consortium of fourteen US and UK natural history and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, and Egypt.

His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data. In collaboration with the Smithsonian institution scholarly press, he manages the electronic publication of the Smithsonian contributions and studies series.

He earned his MSLS from School of Library and Information Science at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://udc793.blogspot.com.


2011

CUA School of Library and Information Science Centennial Booklet 2011
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Associate Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries.  The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries’ digitization efforts, which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, and intellectual property issues.  As the Deputy Program Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), a consortium of twelve US and UK natural history and botanical garden libraries, he participates in the global coordination of the BHL project working with BHL nodes in China, Brazil, Australia, the European Union, and Egypt.

His current research focuses on the BHL in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools, data curation for scholarly publications and ebooks, and semantic web issues around linked open data. In collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, he manages the electronic publication of the Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series.

He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books, “Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums”, “The Fine Arts Projects of the New Deal: An Annotated Bibliography”, “Nile Notes of a Howadji: A Bibliography of Travelers' Tales from Egypt, from the Earliest time to 1918”.  He earned his MSLS from SLIS at the Catholic University of America in 1990. He can be found on Twitter @udcmrk and maintains a blog at http://UDC793.blogspot.com

SLA, June 2011
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues. As the Smithsonian's coordinator for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), he oversees the Smithsonian's contributions and serves on the BHL Technical Committee.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. is from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Linked Open Data Summit, June 2011
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues. As the Smithsonian's coordinator and Deputy Director for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), he oversees the Smithsonian's contributions and serves on the BHL Technical Committee and international relations envoy.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. is from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.

Ignite Smithsonian, 11 April 2011
Martin is a featherless bipedal librarian attempting to avoid extinction. Habitat: Smithsonian Institution Libraries. Follow @udcmrk on Twitter.

2010

Designing Storage Architectures for Digital Preservation, September 27-28 2010, Library of Congress
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. He is also a member of the Smithsonian's Digital Projects Advisory Committee, a pan-Institutional group that will implement the recently released Smithsonian digitization plan, "Creating a Digital Smithsonian."

BHL Australia (June 2010)
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries and the Deputy Project Director of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Interests include open source content and data, net neutrality, and comprehensive broadband access. Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series (www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions) in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.


2009


OCLC Digital Forum East (November 2009)
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues. As the Smithsonian's coordinator for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), he oversees the Smithsonian's contributions and serves on the BHL Technical Committee.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation and related issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series (www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions) in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews and the author of three books; his M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990. He has an inordinate fondness for dodos.


Flickr Paper (July 2009)
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues. He was the Smithsonian Institution Libraries lead on the Smithsonian Flickr Commons project. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews to various publications and the author of Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums (2002). He received is M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990.

CBHL (May 2009)

Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues. As the Smithsonian's coordinator for the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), he oversees the Smithsonian's contributions and serves on the BHL Technical Committee.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series (www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions) in an electronic format. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews to various publications and the author of Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums (2002). He received is M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990.

Computers in Libraries (March 2009)

Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Assistant Director, Digital Services Division at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The Digital Services Division oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues, and access to the corpus of taxonomic literature as part of the Biodiversity Heritage Library, an international consortium of Natural History and botanical garden libraries. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews to various publications and the author of Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums (2002). He received is M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series (www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions) in an electronic format.

2008

ALA Annual
Martin R. Kalfatovic is the Head of the New Media Office at Smithsonian Institution Libraries. The New Media Office oversees the Libraries digitization efforts which include digital editions and collections, online exhibitions, and other website content. Current projects include work on metadata, standards, intellectual property issues, and access to the corpus of taxonomic literature as part of the Biodiversity Heritage Library, an international consortium of Natural History and botanical garden libraries. He is a frequent contributor of articles and reviews to various publications and the author of Creating a Winning Online Exhibition: A Guide for Libraries, Archives, and Museums (2002). He received is M.S.L.S. from The School of Library and Information Science, The Catholic University of America, in 1990.

Current research focuses on the Biodiversity Heritage Library project (www.biodiversitylibrary.org) in terms of linking texts with taxonomic intelligence and other analysis tools; and the data curation issues that surround the publication of Smithsonian Contributions and Studies series (www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions <http://www.sil.si.edu/smithsoniancontributions>) in an electronic format.