This site has been archived as part of King's Digital Lab (KDL) archiving and sustainability process, following background analysis and consultation with research leads wherever possible.

Project content and data has been stored as a fully backed-up Virtual Machine and can be made available on request (depending on access controls agreed with the Principal Investigator) for a period of at least 2 years from the decommissioning date indicated below.

If you have an interest in this project and would like to support a future phase please contact us by filling in this form.

At its inception, KDL inherited just under 100 digital research projects and websites. Aware of the intellectual and cultural value of many of these projects, with the support of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at King’s College London, KDL took on its responsibility to the community to steward them in a responsible manner. When the options of setting up a Service Level Agreement for further hosting and maintenance with KDL and/or undertaking migration to IT Services at King’s or other institutions were deemed infeasible or inappropriate, the archiving process was initiated.

We would like to thank research leads, the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at King’s College London, and partner institutions, for their support in this process.

For further information on KDL archiving and sustainability process see:

Project name

UK Research Information Shared Service Project

Date of project activity

2012-2013 (funded by JISC); 2014

Project principal investigator(s)

Dr Simon Waddington, Richard Gartner, Dr Allan Sudlow, Dr Karen Walshe, Dr Rosa Scoble, Lorna Mitchell, Richard Jones, Prof. Keith Jeffery, and Dr Stephen Trowell

Decommission Date

August 2018

Archive URL(s)

http://ukriss.cerch.kcl.ac.uk

Additional links

Internet Archive

Overview

UK Research Information Shared Service (UKRISS) Project conducted a feasibility and scoping study for the reporting of research information at a national level based on CERIF, with the objective of increasing efficiency, productivity and quality across the sector. Their aim was to define and prototype solutions which would be compelling, easy to use, have a low entry barrier, and support innovative information sharing and benchmarking.

Screenshot image