Arabic and Middle Eastern  Electronic Library (AMEEL)
Do you suffer from the scarcity and  difficulty of finding historical, cultural and scientific information related  to the Middle East on the Internet? AMEEL will  soon be your reliable resource.
About AMEEL
Initiated by Yale  University Library, the project aims to develop an Arabic and Middle  Eastern Electronic Library (AMEEL) containing a large collection of significant  Middle Eastern resources. The project will bring together a well-chosen family  of partners at the heart of an electronic library of Middle Eastern materials,  embracing digital representations of traditional materials, "born  digital" contemporary materials, and a service structure that will enable  some form of interlibrary loan and document delivery for traditional materials  that have not yet been digitized. This will all be folded into a portal  interface that will offer users unprecedented clarity and structure to guide  them in accessing the best and most reliable of historical, cultural,  scientific, and other materials from and about Middle Eastern cultures.
Areas of collaboration
Having developed an advanced workflow for  digitization of Arabic material, including scanning, processing, OCRing, encoding  and publishing, ISIS will be acting as a key  partner in this initiative. Partners around the world will collaborate as  follows:
  - Developing an       infrastructure for digital content, from diverse sources (freely available       as well as publisher licensed) to be integrated into AMEEL;
- Digitizing key       journals on and about the Middle East,       with particular emphasis on fully searchable Arabic texts;
- Building and       expanding the capacity for Arabic full text scanning into US and other       libraries through workshops developed and led by experts in this area;
- Developing       technologies and protocols to facilitate interlibrary loans between US and       Middle Eastern libraries;
- Developing an       AMEEL Web site.
Agreement with Yale
On 19 October 2006, BA and Yale University Library signed  an agreement related to both AMEEL and the Iraqi  Recollection projects. Both parties agreed on specific issues including:  digitization, integration, training, consulting, and following Open Source  software standards.
ISIS will be responsible for the digitization process through  its Digital  Laboratory. Optical Character Recognition (OCR) will be performed on images  scanned either at the BA or Yale. Moreover, software engineers from BA will be  assigned to work with/at Yale on the AMEEL project, on tasks relevant to  integration, developing a presentation prototype, testing and evaluating all  new systems developed, and/or evaluating vendor software.
The two parties also agreed that ISIS  provide training workshop on digitization techniques  and approaches. The workshop was offered at the end of 2007 to AMEEL partners  at cost, and hosted attendees from libraries of  Princeton, Standford, Yale universities, in addition to other participants from several related fields. ISIS will also perform specific and  defined technical tasks and consulting at cost for both AMEEL and Iraqi  Recollection.
Project AMEEL is the logical next phase following OACIS,  another project done in collaboration with Yale. AMEEL and OACIS tie closely  with BA's strategy for expanding global activities and becoming a widely  recognized digital center of excellence in the Middle East  and beyond.
Partners & participants 
  - Yale University, holding one       of the strongest Middle Eastern Library collections and research studies;
- Universitaets-und       Landesbibliothek of Sachsen-Anhalt (Halle, Germany), with its       advanced development of a Middle East       portal including extensive journal tables of contents;
- JSTOR (New York, USA) and publishers such as:
    - Brill Academic        Publishers (Leiden, the Netherlands);
- Multidata (Beirut, Lebanon); and
- Oxford University Press (UK).
- Bibliotheca       Alexandrina – ISIS
                
                
        
        
             
            
                 Last updated on 05 Oct 2008