Background
Auckland University of Technology (AUT) (external link)has the highest proportion of Rainbow students in universities across Aotearoa, New Zealand. Additionally, it has a wealth of Rainbow and LGBTQIA+ research spanning decades. While AUT as a university places strategic importance on having open access, that alone does not make research easy to find and share. That’s why AUT wanted a portal to spotlight Rainbow research excellence(external link) and to invite people from inside and outside the AUT community to engage. The portal would provide an academic frame around pride, showcasing research about Rainbow people and by Rainbow people.
The Rainbow portal would be a world-first.(external link)
Opportunity
AUT and Rōpū kohinga at Catalyst had an existing partnership working on open source solutions, primarily with the Koha library management system. AUT approached Rōpū kohinga in 2023 with their requirements to build the Rainbow portal.
- There was already a shared understanding that the project would be collaborative and open source software would be part of the solution.
- The solution needed an online platform, providing access to a curated selection of AUT staff and student research (approved by the owner) by and about Rainbow communities.
- The portal needed to be a proud repository of research that lifted up Rainbow research and academic excellence.
Solution
To fully understand the requirements, the project began with workshops and an open mind to the choice of open source technology. Rōpū kohinga and AUT considered the people who could benefit from access to the research, such as:
- Older people who may have more time for reading and the confidence to explore their identity in their later years.
- Young people completing a school project.
- People looking for ways Rainbow communities and research might reflect or support who they are becoming as a person.
- International students who may want to engage anonymously due to the laws for Rainbow communities in their country of origin.
- Researchers.
The future platform requirements
Once they understood who may need to access the information, AUT and Rōpū kohinga agreed the platform should be:
- mobile responsive
- accessible without login
- accessible for all levels of vision and of a style that is appealing to engage with
- bringing focus to the research and the researchers.
The requirement for research to be available without login aligns with AUT’s Open Scholarship policy (2020)(external link) to make AUT research, specifically journal articles and published conference papers, open-by-default.
From a technical perspective, the platform needed to:
- present a searchable collection of research that could take several forms like essays, art, and theses
- and display information about each item and its creator.
The content would surface from the AUT research repository, DSpace(external link) and through an automated feed of information between the two systems via API. The platform would also include editable web pages where AUT could present supporting information about the initiative and the researchers.
After considering a few options, the chosen solution for this platform was to make the research available in an installation of VuFind(external link)®, an open source search platform, also called a discovery layer. Discovery layers such as VuFind specialise in harvesting metadata from multiple outside systems and displaying the linked resources accessibly in a central hub. Plus, the Library Digital Development Team was already familiar with VuFind, so they didn't need to learn a new platform.
Community-wide support and knowledge
Before beginning the VuFind implementation, Rōpū kohinga contacted Equinox Open Library Initiative for advice as they had recently developed a custom VuFind theme. Equinox shared helpful insights and recommendations that would ensure the solution is future-proofed and resilient through upstream changes.
The initial implementation would search for information from the AUT DSpace research repository (AUT staff and student research). To enable use of the platform for future collaborations beyond AUT research, it needed to be able to access information from various locations. Rōpū kohinga built this functionality using OAI-PMH - the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting.