WASHINGTON, D.C.-The Board of Trustees of the Digital Library Federation (DLF) 
today announced that Oxford University has joined DLF as its fortieth member, 
and its fourth from outside the United States.

"I am delighted that Oxford University has accepted our invitation to join 
DLF," said Carol A. Mandel, dean of libraries at New York University and 
president of the DLF's Board of Trustees. "Oxford shares with DLF member 
libraries extraordinary research collections, a strong digital library program, 
and a commitment to give scholars the benefits of federated digital 
collections. We are pleased to welcome Oxford to our joint endeavor," she said.
David Seaman, executive director of DLF, added, "We are a fast-moving 
consortium of very active academic digital libraries and the addition of this 
remarkable university library will enrich our collaborative work and inform our 
view of large-scale digital library endeavors." 
Ronald Milne, acting director of Oxford University Library Services, said, 
"Oxford is delighted to be joining an organization whose members share our 
vision of the future of library and information landscapes and who are 
addressing the challenges that face us all in the digital age. We look forward 
to contributing to the work of DLF and to working together with like-minded 
colleagues."
The Digital Library Federation, founded in 1995, is a partnership organization 
of academic libraries and related organizations that are pioneering the use of 
electronic-information technologies to extend their collections and services. 
Through its strategic and allied members, DLF provides leadership for libraries 
by identifying standards and "best practices" for digital collections and 
network access; coordinating research and development in the libraries' use of 
technology; and incubating projects and services that libraries need but cannot 
develop individually. More information about DLF is available at 
http://www.diglib.org/ <http://www.diglib.org/> . 

DLF is housed at the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), an 
independent, nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the management of 
information for research, teaching, and learning. More information about CLIR 
is available at http://www.clir.org <http://www.clir.org/> /.

The University of Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world 
and lays claim to nine centuries of continuous
existence. As an internationally renowned center for teaching and research, 
Oxford attracts students and scholars from across the globe, with almost a 
quarter of its 18,000 students from overseas. Oxford is a collegiate 
university, with 39 self-governing colleges related to the university in a type 
of federal system. The University of Oxford's Web site is at 
http://www.ox.ac.uk <http://www.ox.ac.uk/> /.

Oxford University has an extremely rich and diverse library service provided by 
more than one hundred libraries, including the college libraries, making it the 
largest university library system in the United Kingdom. The libraries share a 
common catalog, OLIS. More information is available at http://library.ox.ac.uk 
<http://library.ox.ac.uk/> /.

Most of the University's library facilities are managed under the umbrella of 
the integrated Oxford University Library Services (OULS). There are major 
research libraries-including the Bodleian Library, which has been a library of 
legal deposit for almost 400 years-as well as libraries attached to faculties, 
departments, and other institutions of the university. The combined collections 
of the OULS number more than 11 million printed items, in addition to vast 
quantities of materials in many other formats. More information on OULS is 
available at http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/.
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