Press Releases

Duke University Selects TIND RDM as its New Research Data Repository

Released June 16, 2025

Durham, NC, and Oslo, Norway - June 16, 2025. Duke University has selected TIND RDM as its new repository platform for the Duke Research Data Repository and is migrating from Hyrax, an open-source repository engine from Samvera. The Duke Research Data Repository (RDR) is a service of the Duke University Libraries, with the mission to curate, publish, and archive Duke digital research data from any discipline. Using TIND RDM, the Duke RDR will continue to provide long-term public access to support research transparency, reproducibility, and to foster new discoveries.

Adobe Express - file (10)-1Photo: Duke University

TIND RDM will be used to help researchers ethically share and publish datasets and supplemental files, including spreadsheets, protocols, field sheets, analysis scripts, and images. Supporting FAIR principles, integrating with DataCite to ensure data is sharable, and offering a data curation workflow, TIND RDM supplies Duke University with a strong foundation for sharing and publishing research data for long-term access and future use.

Duke University is ranked among the top ten research universities in the United States, with more than $1B in annual research expenditures. The Duke University Libraries established the Research Data Management program in 2017 to train, enable, and empower researchers to use open scholarship methods for responsible conduct of research and to curate, manage, enhance, and preserve the institution’s research outputs for long-term access.  As best practices and federal directives for research evolve, the Duke University Libraries have chosen to migrate from its existing repository to TIND RDM to sustain its nationally recognized research repository program.

“Our team thoroughly examined and researched many opportunities for the future of the research data repository. Our goal was to find a platform that could match and be responsive to our research community’s needs and expectations. TIND RDM has demonstrated through its team and the RDM hosted solution a shared commitment to our goals,” said Tim McGeary, Associate University Librarian for Digital Strategies & Technology.

“We look forward to welcoming Duke into the TIND community of forefront research institutions and are thrilled to work in partnership with them to deliver a scalable and flexible RDM solution to support research data management at Duke,” said Alexander Nietzold, CEO of TIND.

About Duke University Libraries
The Duke University Libraries advance the research, teaching, and public service mission of Duke University by providing outstanding collections, trusted expertise, and exceptional service in a welcoming and inclusive environment. We are the intellectual crossroads of the university, empowering scholarship and creativity across all fields of inquiry. The William R. Perkins Library, Bostock Library, David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, and von der Heyden Pavilion comprise the university’s main library complex, which is joined on East Campus by the Lilly and Music Libraries. Together with the separately administered libraries serving the schools of Business, Divinity, Law, and Medicine, they comprise one of the nation’s top 10 private research library systems. Collections include more than 8 million volumes, 20 million manuscripts, tens of thousands of films and videos, and hundreds of thousands of digitized materials. Find out more at library.duke.edu.

About TIND
TIND is an official CERN spin-off providing commercial library management systems, digital preservation, and research data management solutions based on CERN open-source software. Serving academic, public, and special research libraries around the globe, TIND is headquartered in Oslo, Norway. More info at www.tind.io 

Want to know more about our products?

 

Product(s): TIND RDM - Research Data Management