Digital Archiving Policy

Digital Archiving Policy

JUKANTI (Jurnal Pendidikan Teknologi Informasi) is committed to ensuring the long-term preservation, accessibility, and availability of all published scholarly content.

All published articles are made available online through the JUKANTI website and are assigned Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) to support persistent identification and long-term discoverability.

Website Archiving and Internal Backup

JUKANTI maintains digital copies of published articles, metadata, and journal files through regular internal backup procedures. These backups are intended to ensure that published content can be restored and remain accessible in the event of technical problems, server migration, or website maintenance.

OAI-PMH Metadata Harvesting

JUKANTI supports metadata harvesting through the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH). This allows external indexing services, discovery platforms, and metadata aggregators to harvest and preserve bibliographic metadata of published articles.

OAI-PMH Base URL:
https://ojs.cbn.ac.id/index.php/jukanti/oai

DOI and Metadata Preservation

JUKANTI assigns DOIs to published articles through Crossref. DOI registration supports persistent access, citation linking, and metadata discoverability for published articles.

Self-Archiving

Authors are permitted to deposit and share the published version of their articles in institutional repositories, subject repositories, personal websites, and academic networks, provided that the original publication in JUKANTI is properly cited and linked.

Long-Term Access

If JUKANTI ceases publication or changes its website platform in the future, the journal will make reasonable efforts to ensure that all previously published articles remain accessible through the journal website, institutional backup, DOI records, metadata services, and other appropriate preservation channels.

Preservation Development

JUKANTI is continuously improving its digital preservation practices, including the use of recognized preservation networks and metadata harvesting systems to support long-term access to published scholarly content.