Below is a number of IPv6 related documents that are targeted to various groups:
IPv6 for Beginners
A new informational RFC has been released by the IETF which provides a framework for incremental IPv4 to IPv6 transition. Although the RFC is intended for wireline providers (cable, DSL, fibre etc.), many of the issues and transition technologies discussed will be applicable to campus networks. It discusses a phased approach similar to that recommended in the Janet IPv6 Technical Guide.
This IPv6 technical guide is intended to assist site and network administrators in the UK academic
community to deploy IPv6 services, ranging from a small experimental testbed through to
a fuller production campus deployment. This version of the document updates the original
version released in 2006.
Networkshop 2011 presentation by Rob Evans on IPv4 Address Exhaustion and IPv6 Deployment.
Benefits of IPv6
The most prominent reason for deploying IPv6 is its vastly increased address space, offering 128-bit addresses in place of IPv4's 32-bit addresses. While most UK Universities have sufficient address space, increased use of wireless PDAs, laptops and embedded systems will cause an increase in demand. Already some UK colleges, and some departments in universities, are running Network Address Translation (NAT) to serve a large number of networked hosts behind a small pool of public IP addresses.