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RDF Terms
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rico:identifier
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https://www.ica.org/standards/RiC/ontology#identifier
Recommended prefix
Copy 'PREFIX rico: <https://www.ica.org/standards/RiC/ontology#>'
lang:fr
identifiant
lang:es
identificador
lang:en
identifier
lang:en
A word, number, letter, symbol, or any combination of these used
to uniquely identify or reference an individual instance of an entity within a specific
information domain. Can include Global Persistent Identifiers (globally unique and
persistently resolvable identifier for the entity) and/or Local Identifiers. Both the
domain within which the identifier is unique, and the rules used in forming the
identifier value should be provided with the identifier value.
lang:en
Corresponds to RiC-A22 (Identifier
attribute)
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B-000091 (example of a unique identifier for an instantiation
assigned by a repository)
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BUD-01-F002 (example of a classification number from a corporate
file plan)
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F 1204 (example of a local identifier for a record set assigned
by a repository)
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NAS1/A/1.1 (example of a local identifier for a
record)
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http://isni.org/0000000073572182 (example of a persistent
International Standard Name Identifier for a person)
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http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tz44ht (example of an Archival
Resource Key for a person)
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http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6v1266v (example of an Archival
Resource Key for a record)
lang:en
Use only if you don't use Identifier class for handling
identifiers. Within a given domain (a closed system), identifiers are used to uniquely
reference instances of an entity. Identifiers are instruments of control that facilitate
management of the entities within the domain. The formulation of identifiers commonly is
based on rules. In addition to an identifier needing to be unique within a domain, it is
also highly desirable that it be persistent, that is, that the identifier uniquely
identifies the entity over time. A variety of organizations provide rules for the
formation of identifiers, and services designed to facilitate the persistence of
identifiers. Such identifiers are commonly referred to as Persistent Identifiers (or
PIDs). PIDs conform to RFC 3986, but impose additional rules. Common examples are
Archival Resource Keys (ARKs) and Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs). Within the global
environment of the Internet, there are special rules for the formation of identifiers to
ensure that they are unique within the domain of the Internet. Such identifiers must
conform to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Uniform Resource Identifier rules
(RFC 3986).