Federal Register (1990-1994)
Descriptive Information
Project and Contents Description
This project involves digitization of the Federal Register, including the Unified Agenda, from volume 55 (1990) to volume 59 (1994). 1995-present is currently available on GPO Access. 1994 is available on GPO Access without pagination; therefore, it will be digitized to create a digital copy with pagination. Published by the Office of the Federal Register in the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the Federal Register is the official daily publication for rules, proposed rules, and notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as executive orders and other presidential documents. The Unified Agenda (also known as the Semiannual Regulatory Agenda), published twice a year (usually in April and October) in the Federal Register (FR), summarizes the rules and proposed rules that each Federal agency expects to issue during the next six months.
Geographic Coverage
United States
SuDocs Classification
AE 2.106:
Any non-U.S. Government Pubs
No
Other Government Publications
- None
Administrative Information
Owner
Project Contact Name
James Mauldin
Institution Name
U.S. Government Printing Office
Institution Type
Government Agency
Address
732 North Capitol Street NW, 20401, U.S.
Address 2
Mail Stop: IDED
E-mail
Telephone
202-512-2278
Secondary Contact Name
Robin L. Haun-Mohamed
Secondary Contact Email
Secondary Contact Phone
202-512-0052
Project Federally Funded:
Fully
Project Status
Planning
Digitization Conducted In-house
Yes
Searching for Project Partners
No
Visited
817
Technical Information
Meets Criteria for Preservation
Yes
File Formats
TIFF, PDF
Metadata Scheme in Use
METS, MARC
Institution Has a Digitization Policy
Yes
Policy URL, if any
Restrictions on Access
No
Other Information
Additional Information
This project follows the Priorities for Digitization of Legacy Collection (http://www.gpoaccess.gov/legacy/). Digitization of this publication will continue in 10 year increments until all preceding publications have been digitized back to publication inception.