A vivid botanical illustration of orchids with large, glossy green leaves marked by dark spots. At the center is a striped pink and green slipper orchid with a bulbous shape and yellow interior, flanked by smaller purple and white speckled flowers on slender stems. The composition is set against a plain white background, emphasizing the intricate textures and bright, contrasting colors of the plants.
Ed Aulerich-Sugai Untitled. In Flowers. n.d. Colored pencil. Daniel R. Ostrow, Executor of the Estate and Custodian of the Ed Aulerich-Sugai Collection and Archive. HIV, AIDS & the Arts. Reveal Digital.

The JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services community is expanding—uniting libraries, archives, and cultural heritage organizations working together to strengthen responsible, mission-aligned digital collections practices. Through AI‑assisted collections processing, integrated digital asset management, long‑term preservation, and sharing their unique materials on JSTOR, Stewardship participants are advancing discovery and broadening access in ways that reflect their values and aspirations.

This month’s Stewardship update features new members of our community, notable collections made available by our participants, and updates from the broader community. If you’re looking to scale your digital collections program—or simply curious to see what peers are doing—we hope these stories provide inspiration.

New to the Stewardship community

We’re excited to welcome new institutions to JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services—each contributing distinctive collections, innovative projects, and unique insights to our growing community. Explore the full participant list.

Stony Brook University – Stony Brook, NY

Illuminated manuscript page with Latin text and a large decorative initial featuring floral and geometric patterns in red, blue, and gold.
Leaf 47 (recto) from the Book of Hours: Horæ Beatae Mariæ Virginis. Stony Brook University.

Stony Brook, a flagship of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, is the tenth Association of Research Libraries (ARL) institution to join the Tier 3 charter cohort. They’ll use JSTOR Seeklight to accelerate description and transcription at scale as part of an AI-first library strategy that keeps experts firmly in charge.

Read the full Stony Brook announcement

Mount Holyoke College – South Hadley, MA

Mount Holyoke is moving its digital collections from a locally managed Islandora instance to JSTOR Stewardship to scale care of nearly two centuries of materials documenting women’s education, campus life, faculty and alumnae, and the history of South Hadley and the region.

Read the full Mount Holyoke announcement

Wayne State University – Detroit, MI

Wayne State, Michigan’s only public urban research university, is moving its art and art history collections from LUNA to JSTOR Stewardship to give students and faculty a more intuitive experience, and lay the foundation for a longer-term strategy for digital collections management, access, and preservation.

Read the full Wayne State announcement 

Collection spotlight

As stewards of unique materials, our participants make a diverse array of collections available on the JSTOR platform, discoverable alongside scholarly materials by researchers on-campus and worldwide.

Browse thousands of open access collections on JSTOR.

JSTOR Seeklight-generated, human-reviewed description: The Richard L. Walker Papers (Drew University)

A typed letter on White House letterhead dated November 7, 1983, addressed to “Dear Dixie,” discussing U.S. human rights policy and diplomatic efforts. The letter praises the recipient’s work in advancing human rights and strengthening U.S.–Republic of Korea relations. It is signed “Ronald Reagan” and addressed at the bottom to Richard L. Walker, American Ambassador in Seoul.
Richard L. Walker Employee Evaluation Report & Presidential Correspondence, p. 4. Drew University.

Richard L. “Dixie” Walker (1922–2003), Drew University graduate and longtime authority on East Asian politics, served as U.S. Ambassador to South Korea from 1981 to 1986, appointed by Ronald Reagan. Spanning correspondence, manuscripts, government documents, photographs, and more, this collection traces Walker’s scholarly career, ambassadorial years, and decades of writing on Korea, China, Japan, and U.S. relations in East Asia. Each item features AI-assisted, human-reviewed metadata with transparency notes, so readers understand how the descriptions were created.

View the Richard L. Walker Collection on JSTOR 

Explore JSTOR Seeklight

Reveal Digital: Ed Aulerich-Sugai Collection and Archive

A black-and-white photograph of a man painting on a large canvas, holding a brush mid-stroke. He stands in profile, focused on bold, abstract black forms against a blue-tinted background wall, suggesting an artist at work in a studio.
Via JSTOR Daily. A colorized photograph of Ed Aulerich-Sugai by Alain McLaughlin, 1991 via Wikimedia Commons.

Encounter the work of artist Ed Aulerich-Sugai through the collection now openly available on JSTOR via Reveal Digital. Paintings, drawings, journals, and sketchbooks—created largely in the years between his 1987 HIV diagnosis and his death in 1994—trace a body of work shaped by illness, Japanese iconography, and intimate observation, and held for three decades by his partner Daniel Ostrow as part of an ongoing life of care.

Browse the Ed Aulerich-Sugai Collection and Archive on JSTOR 

Read the JSTOR Daily feature: “Preserving the Art of Ed Aulerich-Sugai”

Eastern Michigan University: Ladies Literary Club 

A black-and-white group photograph of eight women in mid-20th-century attire, some seated and some standing, gathered closely together in a casual, social moment. One woman examines a small object in her hand while others smile, chat, or lean in toward each other. The background is tinted blue, highlighting the figures.
Via JSTOR Daily. A colorized photograph of the Ladies Literary Club in 1951. Amongst those featured in the image are Marie Drauyer Comstock, Helen Cooper, Grace Kelly, and Eleanor Meston. From the Ypsilanti Historical Society Photo Archives. Courtesy University of Michigan Library Digital Collections.

Step into a century of women’s friendships through Eastern Michigan University’s collection of memorials from Ypsilanti’s Ladies Literary Club on JSTOR. Roughly 150 typewritten tributes—written by club members for departed friends from 1915 onward—offer an intimate view of American womanhood, capturing changing educational opportunities, civic ambitions, gendered expectations, and bonds that crossed generations.

Browse the Ladies Literary Club collection on JSTOR

Read the JSTOR Daily feature: “The Intimate Memorials of a Ladies Literary Club”

Contributions and conversations

Through presentations, written pieces, conference panels, and more, the Stewardship community is committed to sharing back what they do and learn. Visit our events page to catch up on past recorded events, register for new ones, and find opportunities to meet up at an upcoming conference. 

Funding Stewardship, Not Just Scanning: How Hofstra University Secured a Grant to Build Long-Term Access with JSTOR

Close-up of a handwritten document dated August 29, 1776, from Queens County. The text reads in part “Head Quarters Queens County August 29, 1776” and begins “To the Inhabitants of the County,” written in cursive ink on aged paper.
Detail from Proclamation to the Inhabitants of the County of Suffolk. Hofstra University Special Collections, Battle of Long Island, 1776-08-29.

Many digitization grants end the same way: files without metadata, platforms that aren’t maintained, and collections that briefly become visible before slipping back into obscurity. In a new case study, Hofstra’s Lorrie McAllister shares how a $459,000 federal grant became an infrastructure inflection point instead—embedding JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services and JSTOR Seeklight into the proposal from the start, and collaborative, cross-functional workflows to sustain the work beyond the grant period.

Read the case study

How collaboration with Eastern Michigan and the archival community shaped AI for archival workflows

Description—not digitization—is where archival workflows slow down, and where backlogs grow. In a new post on the JSTOR Blog, Senior User Researcher Jennifer Saville traces how conversations with archivists at more than 60 institutions, and a close beta partnership with Eastern Michigan University, shaped what is now JSTOR Seeklight. The piece makes the case that useful AI for archives comes from iterating with the people doing the work, with human judgment at the center.

Read the blog post

Chronicle Virtual Forum: The Library of the Future

AI, digital access, and shifting user expectations are reshaping what academic libraries do—and what they’re for. In a recent Chronicle of Higher Education webinar on “The Library of the Future,” Roger Schonfeld, Managing Director of JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services, joined sector leaders to discuss how libraries can adopt new tools while staying grounded in core values of stewardship, access, and trust. The conversation framed libraries not just as repositories, but as active partners in discovery, teaching, and knowledge creation in an AI-driven era.

Watch the webinar

Want to learn more about becoming a part of JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services? Get in touch with our team!

Written by:

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Alex Houston

Alex Houston is a Senior Marketing Manager at ITHAKA with over 15 years of experience supporting the academic community. With a background in the scholarly publishing ecosystem, graduate coursework in philosophy, and freelance archival experience, she leads communication strategy for initiatives like JSTOR Digital Stewardship Services and is proud to help advance ITHAKA’s mission to expand access to knowledge and education.