Does your Journal use DOIs, since DOI is the only way to preserve a stable point of access?
(Submitted by email)
Digital content is stored on servers and accessed through URLs—addresses that often change when files are renamed, relocated, or when websites go offline. Because the digital environment is inherently fragile and rapidly changing, millions of online documents move or disappear every year. This instability is one of the reasons the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) system was created.
A DOI provides a unique, permanent identifier for a digital object. The identifier itself never changes, even if the hosting platform or URL does. However, a DOI is not an archive; it is only a pointer. Its long-term reliability depends on continuous maintenance by the publisher or registration agency. If the responsible organization ceases to update the DOI’s target URL, the DOI may resolve to a dead link despite remaining technically “persistent.” For this reason, DOIs—while valuable—are not the sole nor necessarily sufficient means of ensuring long-term preservation.
Achieving meaningful permanence requires a combination of strategies. DOIs can be supplemented by archiving services such as Perma.cc and the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, which create stable snapshots of web content. Additional tools—including Persistent Identifiers (PIDs), Handles, Archival Resource Keys (ARKs), and Persistent URLs (PURLs)—also contribute to a more robust preservation framework. Emerging technologies such as blockchain may offer future solutions, though they remain resource-intensive and environmentally costly.
At Islam Today Journal, we adopt a hybrid approach that balances modern digital preservation techniques with time-tested archival practices. Digitally, the Journal employs PURLs and other persistent identifier systems that store and retrieve content through servers maintained by educational and research institutions worldwide. To enhance long-term stability without additional environmental burden, ITJ also preserves all original scholarly content in print volumes, which are made available—through established distribution entities—to public and private libraries, as well as to bookstores for general readership. This combined strategy strengthens accessibility, durability, and environmental responsibility in safeguarding the Journal’s scholarly record.