The Committee of Principals for RDA has issued the following statement dated 29 
May 2015 (also being posted on the JSC website):

RDA is a package of data elements, guidelines, and instructions for creating 
library and cultural heritage resource metadata that are well-formed according 
to international models for user-focused linked data applications.

RDA has always been a continually evolving standard that aims to reflect the 
requirements of the cataloguing, metadata and description community.

As we continue to develop the standard it is essential that we broaden the 
range of perspectives applied to the development of the standard to ensure that 
it reflects a wide range of different cultural perspectives. The benefit of 
doing this was envisioned as RDA was developed. As more organisations develop 
rich and compatible data sets about their holdings, these can be actively 
shared across the globe to open up and increase the discoverability of 
collections for the benefit of the users we serve.

RDA has now reached a critical point in this development and the key to its 
continued success is a firm commitment to further internationalisation and 
exploration of wider cultural heritage description communities. The Committee 
of Principals have agreed on a new governance model to which it will begin to 
move over the next 3-4 years that emphasises this need for wider representation.

In the first instance, stakeholders will see a rebranding of the infrastructure 
and changes to wording used to describe supporting structures. The Committee of 
Principals will become the RDA Board, the JSC will become the RDA Steering 
Committee and rather than constituencies, we will talk about communities.

The Committee of Principals assures current representatives that the new model 
continues to offer them multiple ways to remain influential in the development 
of RDA at Board, Steering Committee and working group levels. It is absolutely 
critical that current representatives continue to remain involved; their 
expertise in the development of RDA is essential for its continued success. 
Whilst there will be elements of structural and supporting infrastructure 
change ahead, current representatives will be a part of this development. Their 
active involvement will be vital in working with the new Board and Steering 
Committee to identify how they will be represented in the future.

The Committee of Principals will share a detailed transition plan with 
stakeholders prior to IFLA’s World Library and Information Congress in 2015. 
The plan will identify how the Committee and Joint Steering Committee will 
engage communities and the key steps which will be taken to incrementally 
evolve towards the new structure.

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