In a narrow sense, excellence is about the best and is typically
associated with special recognition: e.g. a Nobel prize in some
fields; a gold medal in Olympic sports or an Oscar in the realm
of cinema. In a larger sense excellence is about the best achievements,
products, activities and best practices. Inevitably this entails
a range. The upper part of the range is obvious and so it is easy
to say what excellence includes. Those who have the first prize,
the Nobel, the gold medal or the Oscar are inevitably excellent.
In the world of universities there is little doubt that Bologna,
the Sorbonne, Oxford or Harvard are excellent.
As in all domains, the lower part of the range is potentially problematic
and so it is difficult to say what excellence excludes. There are
always borderline cases. Anyone can call themselves excellent but
that does not mean that everyone else recognizes them as excellent.
The network of centres of excellence for research and education
in digital culture is not concerned with excellence in the narrowest
sense: i.e. it is not concerned with trying to say who receives
the first prize in their field, with their idea, their method or
their product. Nor is it concerned with determining the precise
limits of the range of excellence: i.e. it is not concerned with
defining in absolute terms who should be included or excluded. In
a continent as large and complex as Europe, trying to make an exhaustive
list of every excellent research institution, cultural organisation,
industry, individual, practice or product is almost certainly futile.
There will always be excellent persons who will inevitably choose
not to join because they do not like the idea of sharing, for lack
of time, or for some other reason. The aim, rather, is to identify
those who are generally recognized as excellent in various domains
of digital culture and to focus on those who wish to share their
methods, their resources in achieving a whole that is greater than
the sum of its parts.
Decisions for inclusion are typically at the level of membership.
Core members need the approval of all the core members. National
members are typically accepted by a national committee. Becoming
a member typically entails three stages:
1) Researcher at institution signs a letter of
intent to acknowledge that they have read the goals of the network
and wishes to support them. They identify the number of researchers
and other resources they wish to make available to the network,
and specify in which activities of the network they will be active.
This is sent to the country representative.
2) The country representative considers the proposal,
is free to accept the applicant directly or may choose to discuss
the applicant with their national committee. If a positive result
follows, the applicant’s details are forwarded as a candidate
member to the central secretariat.
3) The central secretariat forwards the offer
to the appropriate group, which then decides how best to integrate
these new resources. Once accepted by this group the candidate becomes
a regular member. Thus the network of excellence is implicitly an
open institution.
Sharing
One of the basic tenets of the E-Culture NoE is that members wish
to share their research, resources and methods in order to develop
critical methods together. Potential members will choose to contribute
to one of the three objectives.
Objective 1:
Potential members must identify to which of the 12 modules of
the DEED they wish to contribute and explain how their technology/solution/
offers something complementary to the existing module.
Objective 2:
Potential members must identify which research they wish to share,
completing a form which indicates the size of the resource, transmission
speeds required etc. They must develop a plan to show how and in
what time frame the researchers from their institution will make
their resource compatible with the DEED modules.
Objective 3:
Potential members will identify whether they will contribute to
the research matrices at the macro-level, in terms of disciplines
or at the micro-level in terms of processes/activities. They must
show that their researchers have something to offer in addition
to what the NoE offers thus far.