IRMT Principles
IRMT Principles
IRMT Principles
S ECTOR R ECORDS
A Training Programme
The Management of
Public Sector Records:
Principles and Context
INTERNATIONAL
INTERNATIONAL RECORDS
COUNCIL ON ARCHIVES
MANAGEMENT TRUST
THE MANAGEMENT OF
PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS:
PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
INTERNATIONAL RECORDS
MANAGEMENT TRUST
INTERNATIONAL
COUNCIL ON ARCHIVES
Educational Advisers
Moi University:
Universiti Teknologi Mara:
University of Botswana:
University of Ghana:
University of New South Wales:
University of West Indies:
Project Managers
Lynn Coleman (1994-6)
Laura Millar (1996-7)
Elizabeth Box (1997-8)
Dawn Routledge (1999)
Production Team
Additional members of the production team include
Jane Cowan
Nicki Hall
Greg Holoboff
Barbara Lange
Jennifer Leijten
Leanne Nash
Justus Wamukoya
Rusnah Johare
Nathan Mnjama
Harry Akussah, Pino Akotia
Ann Pederson
Victoria Lemieux
Donors
The International Records Management Trust would like to acknowledge the support
and assistance of the following:
Association of Records Managers and Administrators (ARMA International)
British Council
British High Commission Ghana
British High Commission Kenya
Caribbean Centre for Development Administration (CARICAD)
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
Commonwealth Secretariat
Department for International Development (East Africa)
Department for International Development (UK)
DHL International (UK) Limited
Foreign and Commonwealth Office Human Rights Fund
Hays Information Management
International Council on Archives
Nuffield Foundation
Organisation of American States
Royal Bank of Scotland
United Nations Development Program
CONTENTS
Introduction
Lesson 1
1
Theories and Principles of Records and
Archives Management
Lesson 2
33
Lesson 3
55
Lesson 4
68
Lesson 5
89
Lesson 6
121
What to Do Next?
131
Lesson 7
FIGURES
1. The Life-cycle Concept of Records
19
20
22
26
35
43
56
62
63
79
84
94
96
98
111
INTRODUCTION
The Management of Public Sector Records: Principles and Context consists of seven
lessons:
Lesson 1:
Lesson 2:
Lesson 3:
Lesson 4:
Lesson 5:
Lesson 6:
Lesson 7:
What to Do Next?.
Outcomes
When you have completed this module, you will be able to
1. explain the purpose of records and archives management
2. understand the theories and principles of records and archives management
3. understand the importance of managing records for government accountability
4. recognise the value of records as a strategic resource
5. understand organisational and administrative issues relating to records and archives
management
6. explain the key activities in records care
7. understand the steps involved with developing an integrated records management
programme
8. know how to find information on records issues.
Throughout each lesson, activities have been included to help you think about the
information provided. Each activity is a self-assessed project; there is no right or
wrong answer. Rather, the activity is designed to encourage you to explore the ideas
presented and relate them to the environment in which you are studying or working. If
you are studying these modules independently and are not part of a records or archives
management organisation, you should try to complete the activities with a
hypothetical situation if possible. If the activity suggests writing something, you
should keep this brief and to the point; this is not a marked or graded exercise and you
should only spend as much time on the activity as you feel necessary to understand the
information being taught. At the end of each lesson are comments on the activities
that will help you assess your work.
Following the summary at the end of each lesson are a number of self-study questions.
Note that these self-study questions are designed to help you review the material in
this module. They are not intended to be graded or marked exercises. You should
complete as many of the questions as you feel will help you to understand the
concepts presented. External assessments, such as assignments or exams, will be
included separately when this module becomes part of a graded educational
programme.
Case Studies
The following case studies may be useful additions to this module:
27:
Terry Cook, Ed Dahl and Ann Pederson, Australia and Canada. Living with
Your Conscience at the End of the Day: Ethical Issues and Archives/Records
Managers.
29:
LESSON 1
What is information?
WHAT IS INFORMATION?
Information is knowledge that human beings perceive through one or more of their
senses. It remains intangible until it is represented in a formal manner as data. When
represented as data in a document, information can then be stored, communicated and
used.
Information: Knowledge that is communicated.
Document: A unit of recorded information.
Activity 1
Think of three types of information you receive every day. Then think of three types
of information that are converted into data. Can any of the information be converted
into documents? Write down your answers so that you can look back on them later if
you wish.
The term records includes all the documents that institutions or individuals create or
receive in the course of administrative and executive transactions. The records
themselves form a part of or provide evidence of such transactions. As evidence, they
are subsequently maintained by or on behalf of those responsible for the transactions,
who keep the records for their own future use or for the use of their successors or
others with a legitimate interest in the records. Although records may ultimately have
significant research value, they are not created in the interests of or for the information
of archivists or future researchers.
Records come in a wide variety of forms. Most are still created on paper, in the form
of correspondence, minutes, reports and memoranda, and they are normally filed
systematically. In addition, information may be recorded on paper in ledgers,
registers, notebooks, appointment diaries and other volumes, or they may be in the
form of maps and plans (cartographic records), architectural and engineering
drawings, pictures (iconographic records) or computer printouts. Such records may be
handwritten (manuscript), hand-drawn, typed (typescript) or printed.
Records may also be created on media other than paper: in roll microfilm, microfiche
or computer output microfiche (COM) formats (microforms); as photographs,
including prints, negatives, transparencies and x-ray films; as sound recordings on
disk or tape; as moving images on film or video (audiovisual records); as electronic
text or images copied on magnetic tape or magnetic or optical disk or held in online
databases (electronic records; formerly known as machine-readable records); as
three-dimensional models, scientific specimens or other objects; or as combinations of
any of the above formats in an electronic form (multimedia).
All of these items are records if they were created by individuals or agencies in the
course of their business or activities.
An electronic version of the minutes can be altered and could replace the original
version without anyone noticing the difference. Similarly, new versions of the
minutes could be made using electronic technologies, just as in the examples earlier,
and as a result no copy can be guaranteed to be authentic.
Consider another example. A government department may be responsible for
buildings and physical plant maintenance; as part of its responsibilities, it might create
architectural plans for a new building. It might also take photographs of that building
as it is built and it might create minutes and reports of various stages of construction.
Each type of material is a record. The architectural drawings, photographs, and
minutes gain meaning as records by being retained as part of the entirety of records
relating to the construction of that particular building. The materials would lose their
meaning if they were removed from the whole body of records relating to the work of
that government department and kept as single items, without information about their
origins or context.
Activity 3
Look at how two types of records reports and correspondence are created, used,
maintained and stored in your organisation. Explain if you believe these types of
records are static in form. Do they have authority and how is that authority provided?
Are they unique? How? Are they authentic? How is that authenticity guaranteed? Be
as descriptive as possible in your explanations.
Archives: Records, usually but not necessarily noncurrent records, of enduring value selected for
permanent preservation. Archives will normally be
preserved in an archival repository.
Archival institution: The agency responsible for
selecting, acquiring, preserving, and making available
archives. Also known as an archival agency, archival
facility or archives; sometimes referred to as an
archival repository.
Archival repository: A building or part of a building in
which archives are preserved and made available for
consultation. Also known as an archives.
Records can be identified as archival at the time of their creation, indeed even before
their creation, but they are usually not transferred to an archival repository for
permanent preservation until they have ceased to be of immediate administrative use
to the creating agency.
In this module, the terms archival repository and archival institution are used
interchangeably to mean the organisation responsible for acquiring, preserving and
making available archival materials. The term National Archives has been used
when referring specifically to a national archival institution. The term archives
refers to the materials themselves.
Activity 4
Imagine you are responsible for determining which records in your organisation have
ongoing value and which do not. In your own words, explain in detail whether each
of the following records should be considered archives and why.
a draft report on procedures for parking at the office
a final report on procedures for parking at the office
extra copies of correspondence
copies of correspondence with handwritten notes in the margin
master copies of correspondence
a draft report on revisions to legislation that defines the departments work
a final report on revisions to legislation that defines the departments work
original signed contracts for provision of janitorial services
original signed contracts for a legislative consultant to assist with revisions to
the legislation that defines the departments work.
While many of those records do not need to be kept permanently, a small but
significant portion have enduring value. It is this portion of a governments records
that are preserved within public archival institutions. Together with a countrys
National Library, National Museum and other national institutions, the National
Archives is one of the countrys essential research resources. Users come to it from
all sectors. Other government archival facilities, such as state or provincial archival
institutions, or private-sector archival facilities in businesses or associations, are
equally important research resources.
Activity 5
Before reading further, write down as many different types of users you can think of
who might want to access information in an archival institution. Think as creatively
as possible and identify as many types of people as possible.
journalists
amateur researchers
genealogists
others wishing to have some contact with the primary sources of their national
culture and tradition
anyone with an urgent problem that can only be solved by referring to records.
environmental issues
resource management
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
13
intergovernmental politics
economic planning.
A significant number of users of any national or other major archival institutions are
researchers from other countries. This use of archival facilities will continue to grow
in importance as international information networks develop and as the international
community increasingly recognises its need to share information about culture and
heritage.
The care of records and archives is governed by four important concepts introduced
here. These are (1) that records must be kept together according to the agency
responsible for their creation or accumulation, in the original order established at the
time of their creation; (2) that records follow a life cycle; (3) that the care of records
should follow a continuum; and (4) that records can be organised according to
hierarchical levels in order to reflect the nature of their creation.
These principles and concepts are known as
The principal of provenance emphasises the conceptual rather than the physical
characteristics of records. As we have seen, it is the evidential nature of records,
rather than their physical format, that distinguishes them from other kinds of
information. Provenance also provides the basis for retrieving information from
records. Knowing who created or used a record, and where, when and why, provides
the key to retrieval rather than format, subject matter or content of the records. This is
true for modern electronic records as well as the more common paper-based records.
Fundamentally, there is no difference between understanding and preserving the
provenance of electronic records that is, the inter-connections between electronic
records and their creators and users and preserving the connections between a large
sequence of nineteenth-century official letters and the registers and indexes that keep
track of them.
These principles require that archivists and records managers observe the following
guidelines.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
15
Activity 6
In your own words, explain the concept of respect des fonds. Do you believe it is an
appropriate way to manage records?
Write down your ideas about the benefits and drawbacks of organising and
maintaining records according to the following methods:
by the date the records were created
by the subject of the records
by the type of record (photograph, map, letter).
The life-cycle concept of the record is an analogy from the life of a biological
organism, which is born, lives and dies. In the same way, a record is created, is used
for so long as it has continuing value and is then disposed of by destruction or by
transfer to an archival institution. Figure 1 illustrates the life-cycle concept of records.
The effective management of records throughout their life cycle is a key issue in civil
service reform. Without it, vast quantities of inactive records clog up expensive office
space, and it is virtually impossible to retrieve important administrative, financial and
legal information. Such a situation undermines the accountability of the state and
endangers the rights of the citizen.
Without a management programme that controls records through the earlier phases of
their life cycle, those of archival value cannot readily be identified and safeguarded so
that they can take their place in due course as part of the nations historical and
cultural heritage.
In the semi-current phase, records are still used, but only infrequently, in the conduct
of current business and are maintained in a records centre.
Semi-current records: Records required only
infrequently in the conduct of current business. Also
known as semi-active records. Semi-current records
will normally be maintained in a records centre or other
offsite intermediate storage pending their ultimate
disposal.
In the non-current phase, records are no longer used for the conduct of current
business and are therefore destroyed unless they have a continuing value for other
purposes, which merits their preservation as archives in an archival institution. (The
definition of archives was provided earlier in this lesson.)
Non-current records: Records no longer needed for the
conduct of current business. Also known as inactive
records.
Some records management systems recognise only two phases: current and noncurrent. Figure 1 outlines the life-cycle concept of records.
Archives
Archival
Repository
Current
Office or File Store
Registrar
Archivist
Appraisal
and Disposal
Appraisal and
Disposal
Secondary
Value
Primary
Value
Semi-current
Records Centre
Records Manager
According to the continuum concept, the distinction between records management and
archives management need not be rigidly maintained. These four actions are outlined
in Figure 2.
Process
Records management
actions
creation of receipt
Archives management
actions
selection or acquisition
identification and
acquisition
intellectual control
access
physical control
disposal by destruction or
transfer as archives
preservation
From this principle a unified model has been developed. The model reflects the
pattern of a continuum. Four actions continue or recur throughout the life of a record
and cut across the traditional boundary between records management and archival
administration. These are
its placement within a logical, documented system that governs its arrangement
and facilitates its retrieval throughout its life
its appraisal for continuing value, recorded in a disposal schedule and given effect
at the due time by appropriate disposal action
its maintenance and use, that is, whether it is maintained in the creating office, a
records office, a records centre or an archival repository, and whether the use is by
its creator or a successor in function or by a third party, such as a researcher or
other member of the public.
Current
Phase
Semi-current
Archives
Operations
Analysis
Creation
Business Systems
Analysis
Creation or Receipt
Receipt into
Accession to
Records Centre
Archival
Repository
Control
Classification Filing
Documentation
Maintain Arrangements
and Documentation
Appraisal
Schedule
Review
[Primary and
[Secondary Value]
Arrangement and
Description
Secondary Values]
Maintenance Office/File
Store
and Use
Official Access
Safekeeping
Records Centre
Official Access
in
Preservation and
Conservation
Public Access/
Outreach
Disposal
Responsibility
Transfer to
Records Centre
Transfer to Archival
Repository or
or Destroy
Destroy
Action Officer
Records Manager
Records Manager
Archivist
Archivist
Archivist
Figure 3: The Continuum Approach to Managing Records through the Life Cycle
This division of activities into records management and archival phases, with the
consequent division of responsibility between the records manager (or registrar) and
the archivist, is seen by some as artificial and restrictive. The several stages are not
really seen as distinct and separate. Consider the following tasks, for example.
Acquisition in the archives phase is the mirror image of disposal in the records
management phase.
Reference and use in the archives phase are essentially the same tasks as
maintenance and use in the records management phase.
The continuum approach means the end of the traditional demarcation between the
functions of the records manager (or registrar) and the archivist. A person responsible
for care of records at a particular phase in their life cycle will certainly need specific
knowledge and expertise. However, input will be needed from others who have been
or will be responsible for records at other phases of the life cycle. The registrar,
records manager, records centre manager and archivist will all still perform their own
duties, but their work will be undertaken within an integrated structure, with no rigid
boundaries to limit professional collaboration and development.
This collaboration between records and archives managers is most successful if the
archival institution can be restructured to serve as a records and archives institution,
responsible for all aspects of records care throughout the life cycle. A records and
archives institution would establish a new records service for the whole of the
government, corporation or organisation that would include staff working in records
offices (registries), records centres and archival repositories. It would also develop an
appropriate scheme of service and job descriptions for all records staff, and it would
develop training schemes to prepare staff at all the necessary levels to provide
efficient records services throughout the life cycle.
Where records management and archival activities are not integrated, records
managers and archivists find that they are often duplicating each others work or,
worse, undoing or redoing tasks that could have been completed more efficiently had
the two phases been considered part of a unified whole.
Throughout these modules, the term life cycle is used when discussing the record;
the term continuum is used when discussing the management of the record
according to the continuum concept.
The concept of integrated records
management is discussed in more detail in
Lesson 4.
Activity 7
Explain in your own words the concept of the life cycle of the records and the concept
of the continuum of care. Next, examine how records are managed in your
organisation. Do you think they are cared for according to a life cycle? Do you think
there is a continuum of care? Explain how records are managed and how you think
the process could be altered to ensure records are cared for throughout their life cycle.
Note that the term file is also used when discussing computerisation, as follows:
File (2): A logical assembly of data stored within a
computer system. Note: In word-processing systems it
is the intellectual representation of a physical
document.
The term institution is used as a level of description to refer to the institution holding
the records being described, such as the National Archives or the Corporate Archives.
Figure 4 illustrates the concept of levels of arrangement. Note that Figure 4 identifies
both the item and the file. The term item is used most often in the archival
environment, when discussing the physical units of arrangement. The term file is
often used in the records office or records centre, as that is the unit of management in
those environments.
Activity 8
Using records in your own institution, try to identify the fonds, series, and item for at
least four or five different bodies of records. Write each one down and then compare
your answers with the information in this section to see if you have defined the
various levels according to the definitions provided here.
Levels
Examples
government
corporate
institution
group or fonds
Ministry of Education
subgroup
series
school assessments
financial records
file
item
SUMMARY
Lesson 1 has provided definitions of the following types of records and information:
information
data
document
records
public records
private records
archives
current records
semi-current records
non-current records.
The difference between public and private records has been discussed, and so has the
question of who uses records and archives.
Lesson 1 has also introduced the following principles and concepts of records and
archives management:
respect des fonds
provenance
original order
the life cycle
the continuum
levels of arrangement and description.
In particular, this lesson has emphasised the importance of the life-cycle of records
and the continuum concept of management, which ensures the management of
recorded information through all stages of its life cycle.
This lesson is intended to introduce important concepts and ideas, and it was noted
that many topics are discussed in more detail in other modules.
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. What is information?
2. What is a document?
3. Define data.
4. Define records and archives.
5. What types of form or medium can records come in?
6. Explain the four important qualities of records.
7. What are public records?
8. What are private records?
9. Name five reasons people might use records.
10. Name three types of users of archives.
11. Explain the principle of respect des fonds.
12. Explain the concept of provenance.
13. Explain the concept of original order.
14. What guidelines must records and archives managers follow to respect the concepts of
provenance and original order.
15. Explain why records and archives managers must be involved with records from their
point of creation in order to respect the concepts of provenance and original order.
16. Explain the life cycle and continuum concepts of records care, and discuss why the
life-cycle and continuum approaches mean the end of a demarcation between the
records manager and the archivist.
17. What are the phases of the life cycle?
18. What four actions of records care take place throughout a records life?
19. Explain the concept of levels of arrangement, giving an example of each level.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activity 1
We receive information all day long. When we share ideas in a meeting, we are
giving and receiving information. If someone tells us that it is time to go to lunch, we
are receiving information.
Information is converted into data when we record it so that it becomes widely
accessible. When the results of the meeting are recorded, they become data; the facts
have made available in a formalised manner; the information can be communicated,
interpreted and processed.
A document is a unit of recorded information. The minutes of our staff meeting
provide us with information about what happened in the meeting; the minutes record
the event and provide evidence that it took place.
Information is everywhere, but not all information is recorded. This point will be
important later as we discuss the difference between records and information.
Activity 2
Read the definition provided in this lesson for an explanation of records. This section
of the lesson also explains why records are different from information. Records can
include such diverse materials as correspondence, photographs, minutes of meetings,
receipts, invoices, reports, drawings, maps and so on.
Activity 3
The important lesson to learn in this activity is to recognise that records gain meaning
from their relationship to other records, and that their value as records relates in large
part to how they are created and maintained. How are reports generated? Who
approves them or authorises their completion? How are they stored and protected?
What about correspondence? Who is responsible for writing letters? Who types
them? Who files them? Does any step in this process place the records at risk of loss
or damage? Do the records still provide authentic and reliable evidence?
Activity 4
This activity is designed to how you (1) that not all records have ongoing value and
(2) that determining which records are worth keeping as archives involves more than
just identifying drafts and final versions and master copies. The process of
appraisal is complicated and is considered one of the most difficult and important
tasks an archivist can do.
For the records identified in this lesson, the following issues will arise during
appraisal; that is, when you are determining which records have ongoing value and
which do not. This activity is not intended to provide you with answers but to show
you some of the issues that must be considered during the appraisal process. Bear this
in mind as you read through the rest of this module and proceed with the rest of this
study programme.
a draft report on
procedures for parking at
the office
The fact that this is a draft report suggests it may not have
long term value. The fact that it is about parking at the office
suggests the subject is not part of the central business of the
organisation but instead is an administrative issue. The draft
report is likely not worth keeping permanently.
a final report on
procedures for parking at
the office
extra copies of
correspondence
copies of correspondence
with handwritten notes in
the margin
master copies of
correspondence
master copies are usually the best evidence; they are the
official records. Again, the decision to retain master copies
of correspondence will depend in large part on the subject or
purpose of the letters.
Activity 5
As noted in the module, typical users include government representatives,
professional or academic researchers, amateur researchers, genealogists and members
of the public. Other users may include journalists researching stories; school children
learning about their history; lawyers conducting legal research; writers gathering
background information for stories, novels or plays; actors studying characters by
reading biographies or listening to oral histories or interviews on tape; and artists
examining visual records for ideas for paintings. There are as many reasons to use
archival material as there are people!
Activity 6
Many people have difficult at first accepting that it is best to keep records according to
the agency that created them, rather than by some order more appealing to users. It
can be difficult to see that, with good finding aids, it is easy to gain access to records
that are managed according to the principle of respect des fonds.
This activity will help you see that the disadvantages of other methods far outweigh
their advantages, and that respect des fonds is the most suitable method, because it
allows the most flexibility for use.
If records were kept only by date, how would anyone make relationships between
different records relating to the same topic? A letter that arrived on 22 September
may be followed by a response written on 10 November and filed on 22 November;
how will people know where to look to find the two halves of that discussion? The
only benefit to filing by date is for those people who remember precisely when an
event took place; the secretary who did the filing might know where to look but fifty
years from now no one will know.
Many people believe records should be kept by subject; after all, researchers arrive
studying subjects not government departments. But what subject should material be
filed under? Imagine a letter that discusses a political rally, a government news
briefing, and the weather on a particular day. Under what subject should that letter be
filed? Politics? Media? Weather? Some people might suggest making copies and
filing in each subject. Even if that were logical, and it is not!, people would still be
confined to the subjects they thought were important.
What if a particular person was mentioned in the letter but it wasnt filed by his or her
name? That person is then effectively lost, because no one thought to file the letter
by that name. Identifying subjects is a very subjective activity and can never be
completely accurate or comprehensive. The best course of action is to organise
records by who created them and then provide a history of the creators that explains
enough about them that people will then begin to make relationships between the
subjects they are interested in and the functions or activities the creator of the
records performed.
Filing by type of record, such as photograph, map or letter, may seem logical as it puts
like materials together. Indeed, when it comes to storage, this method is very useful.
However, storing records is not the same as organising them; organising is as much an
intellectual activity as a physical one and the only way to reflect the meaning of
records is to show who made them and why.
Activity 7
This activity is designed to help you compare the reality of your own environment
with the principles and concepts outlined in this lesson. You may find that records are
cared for in a way that reflects the concepts of the life cycle and the continuum, or you
may find your organisations operations are very different. As you work through the
modules in this study programme, you will be introduced to a variety of methods for
adjusting your institutions operations so that they better reflect the life cycle and
continuum approaches to records care.
Activity 8
This activity will help you practice your understanding of the concepts and
terminology relating to levels of arrangement. However, it is difficult to know if you
have identified the various levels appropriately. If possible, discuss your answers with
someone in your institution familiar with these terms and see if he or she agrees with
your findings. This topic is discussed in more detail in later modules in this
programme.
LESSON 2
GOVERNANCE OBJECTIVE
rule of law
accountability
protection of entitlements
legislative records
court records
police records
prisons records
accounting records
procurement records
tax records
customs records
electoral registers
policy files
case files
budget papers
policy files
accounting records
personnel records
payroll records
procurement records
fixed assets registers
property registers
pension records
social security records
land registration records
birth/death records
hospital records
school records
environmental monitoring records
treaties
correspondence with national and
international bodies
loan agreements
Human Rights
The ability of government to protect the rights of its citizens and to improve
citizen-government interaction is a critical issue in an increasingly electronic
environment. The rights and entitlements of citizens are based on records. The ability
of a government to continue to respect these rights and entitlements is based on the
quality of the policies, standards and practices employed for the care of those records.
Knowledge Management
Public and private sector organisations are recognizing the benefits that can be derived
from exploiting information in records and publications. At a broader level, nations
are recognizing the value of the information held in records and archives as the basis
for defining and nurturing a national identity and building knowledge based societies.
Records have tremendous power as the basis for societys understanding of itself.
Consider the efforts by some societies to destroy the archives of other societies, such
as in Sierra Leone, Cambodia, Kosovo, East Timor and other regions. The attempt to
destroy peoples evidence of themselves as a people is testament to the power of
records as part of a nations culture and identity.
Financial Management
Good record keeping is essential to clear and accountable financial management.
Without accurate records of actual expenditures, the process of preparing budgets can
become almost meaningless. Poor record keeping affects the entire accounting
function, with the result that reporting and auditing may become virtually impossible.
Corruption and fraud become difficult to detect. Debt management also suffers
because records of borrowing may be divided among different government offices or
may be incomplete. Virtually all approaches to improved financial management rely
upon more efficient use of information, but these approaches cannot succeed if
financial records are badly managed.
Payroll Control
In many countries, government payrolls have been inflated with ghost workers: nonexistent employees who draw a salary, taken by someone else. The personnel file
should be the primary source of evidence that a person actually exists, that the grade is
appropriate to the salary paid and that any additional benefits are appropriate and have
been authorised.
In the absence of complete personnel files, the ghost workers problem cannot be
addressed. Entries on the payroll database cannot be checked against an authoritative
source to ensure that the person actually exists and that payments have been
authorised. Head counts and questionnaires do no more than provide a temporary
solution, and payroll projects often fail because of a lack of reliable data.
Initiatives to computerise payroll and personnel information do not always work
because insufficient attention has been paid to ensuring that personnel files are
accurate and complete. Consequently, the integrated personnel and payroll database
lacks accurate source data. The database cannot be used for personnel management
functions because the data cannot be trusted.
Activity 10
Look back now at your answers to the previous activity. After having read the section
above, can you expand on your list of examples of situations where accountability and
public administration can be affected by poor record keeping? For each situation you
identified in the earlier activity and this activity, try to describe what particular
record-keeping issue might affect public administration. (For example, dont just
write down that investment can be affected by poor record keeping; instead, write that
investment can be affected by delays in answering private sector requests for
information, because records are not accessible.) Be as specific as possible.
Eventually, the registries stopped acting as the point of entry for able recruits. People
working in registries had limited training or experience with record-keeping work.
Consequently, less attention was paid to record keeping. File classification and
indexing systems originally designed to meet the record-keeping requirements of the
colonial period became unwieldy and ultimately unmanageable.
Paradoxically, in many countries, despite the low usage of records, there was an
extreme reluctance to destroy records, even after they ceased to have any value to the
institution. In the absence of rules and guidelines for what should be kept and for how
long, staff were reluctant to authorise destruction. Over time, the registries became
severely congested with older records. Ultimately, many records systems have
collapsed under their own weight.
Even as record keeping has declined in many countries, there have been important
advances in the field of records management in other countries, particularly in Europe,
North America and Australia. For the most part these advances have made little
impact on the countries that require them most. Professional literature has been
almost impossible to acquire owing to poor communications and the lack of foreign
exchange. Even when learning materials could be acquired, the principles were
almost impossible to apply in the deteriorating conditions. As a result, in many of the
neediest countries, records management has seldom been accorded the status of a
profession.
Information users are well aware that there are severe problems in information
retrieval, but they do not know what solutions are required. They do not appreciate
the complexities of establishing and maintaining records systems, nor do they
recognise the connection between the breakdown of record systems and the larger
problem of public administration. As a result, record system reforms rarely feature in
government priorities.
Donor support to governments has, in many cases, exacerbated the situation. Donors
have seldom recognised the significance of records management in supporting public
service reform objectives. Yet the expanding range of donor-supported government
commitments depend on efficient record-keeping systems and place increasing
demands on the existing ones.
Some of the symptoms of a failure to manage records effectively are
the existence of different versions of the same information and the absence of a
definitive or authentic record
the loss of contextual information, such as the originator and the date of creation
The breakdown of records control has prompted archivists and records managers to
attempt to design national and international codes of practice and standards for
records management. These codes provide guidance on implementing strategies and
procedures in any organisation that needs to control and manage its records in order to
meet its own business, legal and accountability requirements, as well as the needs of
staff and clients and society at large.
Activity 11
Think about the consequences for you as a citizen if your governments
record-keeping system ceased to function. Think of at least three or four types of
public records that you as a citizen would want to be able to access. Write down each
type then write down the consequences of not being able to gain access to that
information from your government.
Activity 12
Before looking at Figure 6, ask yourself what assumptions you make about the care of
records in your organisation. Do you assume they are well kept? Do you see records
care as a problem? Do you see people using records for decision making? Write
down as many assumptions as you can, then consider whether the reality in your
organisation matches your assumptions.
ASSUMPTION
REALITY
ASSUMPTION
REALITY
Before the invention of electronic technologies, few records required more than the
naked eye to be understandable. Handwritten or typed documents could be read
easily, photographs and maps were usable without special equipment. For many
years, archivists managed materials that could be boxed, stored and made available
with little more effort than providing a desk and a place to read.
The first modern records that relied on technology to be usable were films and sound
recordings. These materials required some form of equipment to make them
accessible, such as projectors, turntables, or cassette decks. Access to these machines
was often relatively easy, and the knowledge required to use them was minimal.
Operating a turntable or an 8mm projector was did not necessarily require
sophisticated technical expertise. Records and archives managers responsible for such
records were often able to obtain the equipment necessary to read the records: that
is, listen to the sound recording or view the film. They were also able to rerecord the
information on films or records relatively easily. Transferring film to videotape or
copying 78 rpm records to audiocassette also required equipment and supplies but,
once the equipment was in hand, the process of copying was not complicated.
Indeed, copying of films or sound recordings has become quite commonplace in many
archival repositories with the technical resources. In reference rooms in some parts of
the world, researchers can easily access video copies of films or cassette copies of oral
interviews. These non-traditional records are more accessible and the originals
perhaps better protected because improvements in technology have increased the
options available for storage, preservation and use.
Unlike paper records or even sound recordings or films, electronic records are not so
easily accessible. The very nature of electronic records is that they are technology
dependent, requiring some form of digital equipment in order to be readable. Without
a computer, information in electronic form cannot be accessed or used, nor can it be
transferred to another format, be it electronic or paper. Archivists and records
managers wishing to preserve and use electronic information are faced with the
difficulty of dealing with a technology-dependent medium.
The Internet allows for virtually instant communication through electronic mail
systems, and it provides access to thousands of databases on any subject, from
economics and politics to science, technology, literature, medicine and the fine arts.
While computer technologies offer great advantages in speed and efficiency, their use
has not always been well planned. In many countries, this information technology has
been perceived as the solution to public sector information problems. In particular,
public sector reform programmes often include an assumption that information
technology will enable a culture of open information.
There is also an expectation that installing new technologies, such as networks and
Internet access, will allow for more innovative administrative and will enhance such
functions as policy development and financial management. Ultimately the
technology is expected to empower citizens to participate more fully in government.
However, even in industrialised countries the economic gains have not been as great
as expected.
In many countries with limited resources, and particularly in those regions outside
major cities, it can be difficult if not impossible to provide trained staff, ensure
adequate and continuous electricity supplies and guarantee sustainable technical
support. Yet, computerisation is fashionable. It is regarded as the modern solution
and clients want to be seen to be using cutting edge technologies. But many
countries are simply not in a position to move rapidly from a currently disabled
manual record system to an automated one.
Moreover, government officials, donors and information technology consultants rarely
recognise the implications of managing and preserving information over time.
Although the paperless office environment is not an immediate, practical proposition,
a growing volume of government work is carried out electronically and may never
appear on paper. The official record is increasingly in electronic form. Even the most
technologically advanced governments are only just beginning to address the
problems this raises. Consider the following difficulties associated with managing
records generated with computer technologies.
Technological Dependence
Electronic records are entirely dependent upon technology both for their creation and
their storage. As a result, they must be managed over time in a computerised
environment. Given the rapid obsolescence of computer hardware and software and
the degradation of storage media, the mechanisms for the management of electronic
records require a higher level of sophistication than is needed to manage paper
records. For example, some countries have chosen to use digital audiotape to store
electronic records. However, it is estimated that the tape is only a reliable storage
medium for five years, by which time records will have to be transferred to fresh
tapes. Optical disks are much more stable, but the software used to access and
retrieve the data stored on disks is liable to become obsolete because there are no
software standards in this area.
The last point underlines the fact that electronic records are more of a management
issue than a technical issue. Records and archives managers need to build the tools
and techniques necessary to ensure that electronic records are managed properly, and
these tools are not just technical in nature but, more importantly, should address key
management changes in the organisation.
appropriate legislation
Activity 13
Have computers been installed in your organisation? Write a brief description of the
types of activities computers have been used for. Then write a list of the types of
records necessary for or generated by each of those activities. Do you think that the
record-keeping requirements have been adequately considered during the installation
of the computer systems? Can you write down two or three actions you might take to
ensure the computerised system and the record-keeping system are well connected?
Activity 14
Write a brief description of the present perception senior managers in your
organisation have of a records manager. What do they believe a records manager
does? What do they think a records manager does not do?
Then write a brief description of the present perception senior managers in your
organisation have of an archivist. What do they believe an archivist does? What do
they think an archivist does not do?
How do these perceptions differ from those suggested so far in this module? What
steps would you think should be taken to bridge the gap between the perceptions in
your organisation and the approach outlined in the module?
SUMMARY
Lesson 2 has introduced the concept of information as a strategic resource. It has
reinforced the ideas introduced in Lesson 1, that records follow a life cycle and that
their care ought to be part of a continuum process. It discussed the importance of good
record keeping for accountability, not only in government but within any organisation.
This lesson also discussed some of the reasons for this emphasis on records as
strategic tools, including the importance of records for good administration and the
effect of computerisation on record keeping. It looked at the problem of collapsed
records systems in government and their effect on public services. It concluded by
emphasising the need to consider records as a strategic resource and to strengthen the
relationship between records and archives management into a unified and integrated
whole.
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. Why is record keeping a fundamental activity of public administration?
2. Why have some countries lost control of their records systems?
3. Identify some key records required for the following key government objectives:
rule of law
accountability
management of resources
protection of entitlements
services for citizens
international obligations.
4. Explain the role of records in
protecting human rights
ensuring governance and accountability
maintaining a sustainable government infrastructure
knowledge management
the management of human resources
financial management
the control of payroll
private sector investment
the decentralisation of administrative functions.
5. Why has records management been neglected in many countries?
6. How have computers changed the way governments and organisations work?
7. What is Internet and what does it allow organisations to do?
8. What is the effect of computerisation on record keeping?
9. Why have government officials, donors and information technology consultants been
so supportive of the installation of computer technologies?
10. Name three problems computers can bring to the process of record keeping, and three
requirements for successful computerisation.
11. Why should records be considered a strategic resource?
12. Explain the reasons for linking records and archives management functions more
closely together.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activity 9
The concept of accountability is discussed in this lesson. Compare your answers with
the information provided in the module and see where you had similar or different
ideas.
Activity 10
Again, look through the information in this module and compare it with your answers
for this activity and the previous one.
Activity 11
Every citizen in a country relies on records. What about your birth certificate, your
confirmation of employment or your land deeds or title documents. If the government
did not ensure those records were protected, you might not be eligible for government
or employee pensions or you might not be able to prove you owned your land. There
are many other examples; every person relies on records every day to prove their
rights and identify their responsibilities.
Activity 12
Compare your answers with the information provided in Figure 6. Did you identify
many of the assumptions listed in the figure? How do you think you could change
those assumptions, whether they are in yourself or in your organisation?
Activity 13
Computers can be used for a wide range of tasks, from word processing to more
sophisticated database management work. It is often the case that record-keeping
requirements have not been adequately considered during the installation of the
computer systems. This activity helps you recognise potential problems; other
modules in this study programme will discuss these issues and possible solutions in
more detail.
Activity 14
As you work through the other lessons in this module and the other modules in this
study programme, you should keep thinking about the roles of the records manager
and archivist and how the functions overlap and intertwine. Consider steps your
organisation could take to increase linkages and strengthen the role of record keeping
for accountability and efficiency.
LESSON 3
Information
Management
records
management
(records managers)
archives
management
publications
management
(archivists)
(librarians)
database
management
(informations
systems managers)
The key activities discussed here are information management, records management
and archives management.
It is often assumed that information management concerns only information and data
created by computers. However, as will be shown below, the most effective
information management system manages all information, regardless of medium and
format. Records and archives are both vital information sources that should be
managed within a wider information management programme.
When a records management system works well, the information contained in records
can be readily retrieved, facilitating administration. As well, it is easier to manage the
disposal of unneeded records and the retention of valuable information. Space,
facilities and resources can be used efficiently and economically. Finally, because
they are accessible and identifiable, records retain their value and utility both to
government and to society as a whole.
Further, archives can have continuing value for the creating agency. Governments
may need to refer to fifty-year-old building plans when planning renovations; business
may wish to refer to old minutes of meetings to confirm actions or decisions.
Archives have a value to creating agencies as well as to researchers and members of
the public.
This study programme focuses largely on the management of public sector records,
and much attention is paid to the care of current and semi-current records. However,
the archival component, particularly the role of archives as part of societys culture, is
not neglected.
Lesson 3 introduces the idea of developing an integrated records management (IRM)
Programme, which ensures that all information, records and archives are managed as a
strategic resource of government.
to preserve records and archives in an accessible, intelligible and usable form for
as long as they have continuing utility or value
to make information from records and archives available in the right format, to the
right people, at the right time.
The archival institution is the permanent home for an agencys records with enduring
value. But those records will not reach the archival institution if they are not well
managed throughout their life. Provenance and original order must be respected,
obsolete records must be destroyed in a timely fashion and valuable records must be
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
58
Goals
The goals of an integrated records and archives management programme include
improved access to records and archives, enhancing sound decision making, the
effective delivery of government programmes and services, accountability and
transparency of government and the protection of citizens rights
monitor and evaluate the programme to assess its efficiency and effectiveness
(value for money) and to make any necessary structural readjustments.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
59
Priorities
Consequently, the priorities for records and archives management are
safeguarding and providing access to the archival heritage of the nation and
contribute thereby to safeguarding the documentary memory of the nation and,
thereby, the world.
Benefits
There are many benefits to the implementation of an IRM programme. These may
include
Drawbacks
There are also some dangers to an IRM programme, particularly if it is not
implemented fully. These include
the mishandling of information because the appropriate tools and techniques are
not applied (for example, using library methods to manage records, or records
management practices to manage computer programmes)
Activity 15
Write down at least three benefits you think might come from implementing an
integrated records management programme in your own organisation. Be as specific
as possible. Can you think of any drawbacks? Write down as many as you can think
of. How do you think these could be reduced or overcome?
Managing Archives
Restructuring
Existing Systems
Managing Current
Records
Providing Physical
Protection for
Records
Managing
Archival Records
Supporting and
Sustaining IRM
Programme
analyse, maintain
and, if necessary,
restructure records
systems
implement
preservation
measures
develop and
maintain records
centre facilities
receive archival
records as per
records schedules
develop and
implement
classification
systems and records
schedules
promote training
and education for
records and archives
personnel
arrange and
describe records
according to
archival principles
and practices
determine resource
requirements,
including facilities
and staffing
dispose of archival
or obsolete records
develop strategic
and business plans
to achieve an IRM
Programme
re-evaluate
preservation
requirements as
necessary
re-evaluate and
revise systems and
procedures as
necessary
provide public
access to records
review and revise
organisational
policies and
structures
promote records
services to the
government and the
public
Return to
Restructuring
Existing Systems
as Required
While the specific management issues relating to such records require that they be
discussed independently, it is important to recognise that the basic principles of
records and archives management apply, regardless of the origins or purpose of the
records.
Thus, for example, if you are particularly interested in studying the care of hospital
records, not only would you study Managing Hospital Records, but you would also
need to understand the information provided in the core modules on records and
archives management, including this introductory module.
Activity 16
Consider each of the stages of the integrated records management programme outlined
above. Ask yourself the following questions about records in offices as well as
records in records centres and materials in archival institutions:
Does your organisations records legislation require review or revision?
Do your organisations policies and structures need review?
How are records organised and controlled when they are created and used in
offices?
Could those methods be improved?
How are records protected from physical danger or loss?
Is there a separate records centre? Is it well used, under used or over used?
Are records transferred to the archival institution on a regular basis?
Are those transfers documented fully?
How well known is the work of records and archives managers in your
organisation?
What educational or professional development opportunities exist for records
personnel?
SUMMARY
Lesson 3 has provided an introduction to the actions that must be taken to develop an
integrated records management (IRM) programme. The lesson discussed the
relationship between records, archives and information management. It then
examined the goals and objectives of an ideal integrated records management
programme. Then it outlined the key stages in developing such a programme.
Lesson 4 outlines the key tasks involved in restructuring existing systems. Lesson 5
outlines the key activities in records and archives management. Lesson 6 discusses
the work involved in sustaining and supporting an IRM programme. Lesson 7
explains where to go for more information on records and archives management
issues.
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. Explain the concept of information management.
2. Does information management only involve information and data created by
computers?
3. What is records management?
4. Name three benefits of a well-run records management system.
5. What is archives management?
6. Why is a public archival repository important to a democratic society?
7. Explain the concept of integrated records management.
8. Why must the archival institution be considered an essential part of a wider records
and archives institution?
9. What are the goals of an IRM programme?
10. What are the priorities of an IRM programme?
11. What are the benefits of an IRM programme?
12. What are the drawbacks to an IRM programme?
13. Name the six key stages in the development of an IRM programme.
14. Name the steps involved in each of the stages of an IRM programme.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activity 15
Each organisation will identify different benefits and drawbacks. Compare your list
with the information in this module. It is important to seek solutions to potential
drawbacks or problems, so that changes to any programme are implemented as
smoothly as possible. The information in the other modules in this study programme
offer advice on how to address senior management concerns and so reduce the chance
that changes in organisational methods or structures result in problems.
Activity 16
Each of these questions is addressed in various modules in this study programme. The
purpose of this activity is to help you start thinking about the current situation in your
organisation. Whether or not you are in a position to make any changes yourself, it is
extremely valuable not only to learn about principles and concepts but also to apply
them to your own situation so that the theories are compared with your own realities.
LESSON 4
the establishment, within the records and archives institution, of the archival
agency as a public institution, responsible not only for records generated in the
government service but also for any other para-statal or private records of national
or regional importance
protection for the rights of individuals and organisations that may have provided
information held in records, under terms of confidentiality
provision for public scrutiny of the programme of the records and archives
institution and its success in achieving its targets.
Within the records law itself, the following areas should be clearly delineated to
ensure that the legislation is comprehensive and usable:
the life-cycle concept of records and the continuum concept of records care
Activity 17
Before proceeding further with this lesson, review the legislation governing the care
of records and archives in your jurisdiction. Answer the following questions, then
review your answers as you read through the information in the lesson.
Does the legislation define records and archives? What are those definitions?
Under the legislation, what agency is responsible for records care?
Does the legislation include any reference to a continuum of care for records?
Is the idea of a records life cycle addressed?
Is the care of local government or private records addressed in the legislation?
What places of deposit are identified in the legislation?
What public access provisions are included in the legislation?
Is there a financial component included in the legislation, to ensure adequate
financing for the care of records and archives?
Key Definitions
Any records legislation must define precisely all relevant terminology, including
records, public records, archives and National Archives. The definitions should
ensure that wide protection is offered to records
To ensure the law is interpreted correctly, it should include the definitions of technical
terms in accordance with standard international terminology (such as the ICAs
Dictionary of Archival Terminology). The three phases of the life cycle of records
current records, semi-current records and archives should also be defined, as
should any other terms subject to misinterpretation, such as retention schedule or
records centre.
Ideally, the records and archives institution should be made responsible specifically to
whomever plays the central governing role within the country, such as the president or
prime minister. If this is not possible, the most appropriate minister should be
responsible, such as the minister responsible for the civil service in that jurisdiction.
The law should provide for the appointment of a director of the records and archives
institution in accordance with the general legislation and other rules regulating
appointments to the civil service. The law should also establish his or her
responsibility for implementing general records policies, for the day-to-day
management of the records and archives institution and for other matters specified
elsewhere in the legislation.
As well, the director should be responsible for safeguarding and providing access to
all public records selected for preservation (archives) other than those still held in
offices or other places of deposit as identified in the legislation.
The law should allow for the establishment of a records class (or cadre) within the
civil service. It should have its own scheme of service (to be agreed with the Public
Service Commission or its equivalent); responsibility for its management should be
assigned to the director (in consultation with other appropriate bodies and officials).
The administrative importance of records work makes it essential that the records
class should incorporate not only the staff of the headquarters of the records and
archives institution and of the archival agency but also registry staff throughout the
government. This systematic classification will ensure the development of a uniform
system of care for records throughout their life cycle.
It would be extremely useful to establish an advisory committee on records care. Its
purpose would be to advise the president or responsible minister on public records
matters generally; establish a general policy for the management of public records;
advise and support the director in his or her work; and play a role in the issue of
retention schedules and the appointment of places of deposit.
Whenever possible, a country should strive to reduce the period during which records
are restricted, especially to make sure access rules are in accord with any freedom of
information or privacy legislation. Extended closure of records should be limited to
specified categories of records, such as those
Public records to which members of the public had access before transfer to the
archival institution or to a place of deposit should continue to be open to public
inspection irrespective of their age.
At the same time, the admissibility of records as evidence in a court of law needs to be
addressed in the records law or related legislation. In particular, provision needs to be
made for the inviolability of government records and for the legal admissibility of
records in non-traditional formats, including microform and electronic formats. This
is often covered by legislation relating to rules of evidence; it is important that the
archival facility confirm that adequate provision is made somewhere in the
governments legislation.
Financial Management
The legislation should establish the financial rules under which the records and
archives institution will operate. The precise content and terminology will vary in
accordance with the rules and conventions operating within each country. These rules
include the fixing of fees for the provision of services, such as supplying photocopies.
If there is no existing legislation that protects the export of materials constituting the
national cultural heritage, or if such legislation does not protect public records and
other historical documents, appropriate provision should be made in the records law.
This provision could also include the basic framework on which a national register of
private archives might be established, if the archival institution is not a primary
repository for such records. The law may also include penalties for wilful mutilation
or destruction of public records.
The issues to be addressed and the solutions chosen will naturally vary from nation to
nation and, within national governments, from one organisation or agency to another.
The nature of the policies developed will depend on the level and nature of use of the
governments records and the degree to which it recognises information as a strategic
asset. As well, policies will be affected by the nature of available information and
communications technologies.
Policies should allow the records and archives institution to do the following.
the physical
Establish priorities for the development and expansion of information systems and
information technologies.
Protect staff against physical dangers or health risks associated with their work.
For example, a nations records legislation may require that public records must be
preserved in order to be legally admissible as evidence in a court of law. A policy
may be developed to ensure that all government departments recognise the role of the
records and archives institution in the protection of records as evidence.
If a government department then wishes to microfilm records or replace them with
electronic digitised images, for instance, it must do so in consultation with the records
and archives institution, to ensure that the act of microfilming or digitising records
does not affect the legal admissibility of the records.
Policy documents should be formally approved by the highest authorities and
publicised or made available as widely as necessary to ensure that all people involved
with information or records management are aware of the issues and actions in
question.
Activity 18
What kind of policies does your organisation have relating to records and archives
management? Write a brief description of the policies in each area, then write down
two or three suggestions you would make to improve policies in each area. In
particular, determine if your government has national policies about
the coordination of information management
the care of electronic records
centralised versus decentralised records care
the roles of and relationships between records managers and archivists.
In many countries perhaps in most the archival institution has also a role as the
repository of valuable private records, that have originated outside government service
but are of interest to the nation. These too are exploited in research or reference for
the benefit of the nation and of the public interest. Similarly, regional and local
archival agencies also acquire private records relevant to their jurisdictions.
Activity 19
Where is your archival institution located within the administration of your
government or organisation? Where is the function of records management placed?
Describe how you might change the organisational structure to support an integrated
records and archives management programme. What steps would be required? Who
would need to be involved in such a restructuring process?
MINISTER
PERMANENT SECRETARY
Deputy Secretary (Central Management)
Director of Accommodation
Director of Information
Director of Personnel
Head of IT
Records Manager
Records Management Unit
Chief Librarian
Records Supervisor
Central Records Office
Records Supervisor
Local Records Office 1
Records Supervisor
Local Records Office 2
Registry and
Records Staff
Registry and
Records Staff
Registry and
Records Staff
Staffing
The quality of any records management programme is directly related to the quality of
the staff who operate it. Records work must be seen as a worthwhile career for those
who are well educated, intelligent and industrious, not as the posting of last resort for
those who are unqualified, incompetent and idle.
When planning a restructured records and archives institution, it is necessary to
consider the number of staff needed, the tasks they will undertake, their particular
qualifications and the requirements for their promotion through the civil service.
The director of the records and archives institution is ultimately responsible for
ensuring all staff are adequately trained for their work. He or she must see that staff
receive clear instructions and guidelines in the form of directives, manuals and
handbooks.
Accommodation
Adequate accommodation is essential to the proper functioning of the records service.
Three particular types of accommodation are required. These are
Records offices must be located conveniently for the action officers whom they serve.
They should be kept separate from other administrative units, such as the typing pool.
They should be large enough to house the current files for which they are responsible
and the records office staff who handle them. The accommodation must be secure and
well maintained, and it must be of strong construction so that it can bear the weight of
the files.
Records centres serve as intermediate storage facilities: they receive and administer all
records, in whatever format, that are retired from current records systems; provide a
reference service based upon the records; and dispose of records in accordance with
disposal schedules and plans.
Records centres are temporary or intermediate storage facilities, in the sense that they
hold records between the time they leave the records office and the time they are sent
to the archival institution or destroyed. The records centre is a high-density, low-cost
storage area, which must be equipped with a system for retrieving and consulting the
records held. The records centre should be safe, secure, clean, efficient and
economical.
Archival repositories must provide a controlled physical environment for the archives
held within them. Environmental conditions must always be within acceptable limits,
created by the use of adequate insulation and building materials in the construction of
the facility. Where it is not possible to have a purpose-built repository, it is necessary
either to provide an artificial environment by using air conditioning or to maximise
the beneficial effects that can be obtained from natural means of ventilation.
The archival repository will provide solid shelving for the storage of archives and
sufficient space for storage, retrieval, reference and administrative work. It will have
environmental monitors, policies and procedures for the secure storage of materials
and a programme for the regular cleaning of shelves, storage areas and work spaces.
The archives should be protected as much as possible from insects, damp, mould,
vermin and animals as well as from damage, theft and vandalism.
Archival repositories must allow room for expansion over time, because they will
always continue to acquire records, even with the implementation of disposal
schedules to ensure that unwanted records are destroyed before they reach the
repository.
file folders
boxes
shelving
office furniture.
Activity 20
Describe or draw a floor plan of the archival institution, records centre or records
office in your organisation, depending on where you presently work. (If you are not
working in any of these offices, contact an appropriate archival institution, records
centre or records office and use that as an example.) Is there adequate space for all
necessary activities? What types of equipment are available? Is there adequate
equipment?
Next, describe briefly at least three changes to the accommodation you would suggest
in order to improve records care. Then suggest at least three type of equipment you
might wish to acquire to enhance the work of the organisation. How might you fund
the accommodation changes or the purchase of additional equipment?
This brief overview of the strategic planning process is intended to show how it can be
a valuable tool in restructuring records services in a government. However, it does
not offer a complete discussion of the process of strategic planning or strategic
management; see the appropriate module in this study programme for more guidance.
The key steps in developing and implementing a strategic plan include
determining the organisations goals and objectives within the time frame
provided.
A sample strategic plan for a records and archives institution follows. This strategic
plan could serve as the basis for changing the organisational placement and focus of
the archival institution; it would be used in conjunction with other planning tools
needed to establish the records and archives institution, such as revised legislation,
policy statements and procedural documents.
Activity 21
The fictitious strategic plan includes two specific objectives, as follows.
1.
Train two professional staff members per year for four years in records and
archives management.
2.
Develop a plan to expand the professional resources and library of archival and
records management literature to support training.
Write a proposal for how you would accomplish these objectives. What resources
would you need? Where would you begin? How would you evaluate your work?
Republic of Erewhon
Records and Archives Institution Strategic Plan, 19982002
Mission Statement
The Records and Archives Institution of the Republic of Erewhon endeavours to ensure the efficient
and economical management of the records of the government of Erewhon throughout their life cycle
and the preservation of those public records of archival value for current and future use by the
government and citizens of Erewhon and others.
Environmental Analysis
The National Archives of Erewhon was established in 1959, and it has served as the nations repository
for archival records of the government since that time. In 1961 the University of Erewhon established a
Special Collections Division, which has actively acquired private records relating to the history of the
Republic of Erewhon both before and after independence.
In 1978 the government established the National Library of Erewhon, and the National Archives
transferred its collection of publications to the National Library at that time. Since then the National
Archives has been responsible for public records, with a small archival reference library for staff use.
In 1996 the government revised records legislation establishing a National Records and Archives
Institution, encompassing comprehensive records management services and management of the
National Archives of Erewhon.
The primary users of the National and Archives Institution and the National Archives of Erewhon are
government officials, academic researchers, citizens conducting local, family or community research,
and university students and school children for projects.
Civil Service Reform
As part of the implementation of civil service reforms, the National Records and Archives Institution
has undertaken to restructure existing records services within government. This is a requirement of
donor aid and time limits have been established.
Assessment of Resources
At present, the National Records and Archives Institution has the following resources.
Staff
20 full-time professional staff (6 with diplomas in records management, 4 with masters in archival
studies
25 full-time support staff.
Buildings
one central records repository and reference area, in a separate building near Government House
three offsite storage areas for semi-current and archival records, none with environmental controls
or monitors.
Equipment and supplies
recently acquired microfilming equipment, to international standards
three trucks and two cars
no computer resources.
Financial resources
sufficient budget to maintain existing operations but not to provide additional services, training or
expansion.
Existing Holdings
The National Records and Archives Institution has custody of both semi-current and archival records
and administrative responsibility for current records. Current holdings include:
5000 linear metres of semi-current records, 1000 of which are identified and accessible
500 linear metres of archival records, 300 of which are arranged, described and accessible.
The National Records and Archives Institution also has a small reference library, consisting of
approximately 100 publications. These are generally for staff use only.
Goals and Objectives
Given the requirements of the National Records and Archives Institution to restructure government
records systems, and given the high and increasing use of archival records by government personnel,
the National Records and Archives Institutions goals and objectives for the years 19982002 are as
follows.
Goals
Following are the overall goals to be achieved in the four years.
1
Retrain key staff in current records management practices, to ensure their ability to execute
restructuring and processing appropriately.
Complete the processing of the 4000 unprocessed semi-current records, to ensure accessibility by
government and ease of transfer to archives.
Objectives
Specifically, the following steps will be taken to achieve these goals.
1
Train two professional staff members per year for four years in records and archives management.
Develop a plan to expand the professional resources and library of archival and records
management literature to support training.
Restructure the records systems in two government departments per year, beginning with the key
policy-making departments.
Review and report on the restructuring process monthly to ensure compliance with the restructuring
programme.
Hold monthly meeting between newly trained staff, restructuring staff and processing staff to
ensure conformity of policies and procedures.
Assign three professional and five support staff exclusively to clearing the backlog of unprocessed
semi-current records.
Acquire space within an appropriate government building to undertake the processing work.
Replace the shelving systems used for semi-current records storage with stable metal shelving to
allow for the return of records once processed.
Review all administrative and descriptive systems and improve as required prior to completing the
description of processed semi-current records.
10 Prepare a report on the acquisition of computer systems for managing information about holdings.
Resources required: 100,000 Erewhon currency
Review date:
Dec. 1999.
SUMMARY
Lesson 4 has examined the work involved in developing an integrated records
management (IRM) programme. The lesson has considered the goals and objectives
of such a programme and the need to restructure existing services.
It has outlined the issues involved in reviewing and revising records legislation, in
determining national and organisational policies and in determining resource
requirements. It has also examined the role of strategic planning in achieving the
changes required to create an IRM programme.
Specific topics discussed include
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. What is the purpose of reviewing existing records services?
2. What is the concept of a records and archives institution?
3. Why must records-related legislation be reviewed and revised?
4. Name five areas a comprehensive records law should address.
5. What nine records-related issues should be addressed in any records legislation? For
each issue, explain its meaning and describe why its inclusion in records legislation is
important to good records care.
6. Why must national policies be reviewed once legal and legislative issues have been
considered?
7. Name at least five things good records policies should do.
8. Why must organisational policies and structures be reviewed?
9. Name at least seven things that organisational policies should do to protect records.
10. Where are a records and archives institution and archival facility best placed in the
organisational structure?
11. Where should a records management unit be placed within the organisation?
12. What resources are needed for a functioning records and archives institution?
13. How might archival institutions generate income?
14. What is a strategic plan?
15. Why should an organisation develop a strategic plan for its records and archives
institution?
16. Describe the four key steps involved in developing a strategic plan.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activities 17-20
These activities are designed to allow you to compare the information provided in this
lesson with the reality of records care in your organisation. You may not be in a
position to affect the development or revision of legislation, the establishment of
policies, the administrative structure or the physical layout or resources. However, it
is valuable to work through these activities in as much detail as possible. The
questions will help you start thinking about the current situation in your organisation.
Whether or not you are in a position to make any changes yourself, it is extremely
valuable not only to learn about principles and concepts but also to apply them to your
own situation.
All the issues addressed are discussed in more detail in various modules in this study
programme. You are encouraged to take careful notes and to refer back to your work
in this introductory module as you proceed with your studies.
Activity 21
Many questions arise when determining how to achieve objectives such as these. For
example, if you were developing a training programme, you would need to consider
the following.
Who will do staff work when various members are off on training leave?
If you were to expand your institutions library, you would need to think about
LESSON 5
For each activity described in this lesson, the following information is provided:
Refer back to Figures 8 and 9 to review the different stages and key activities in
records and archives management. The first activity, restructuring existing systems,
was discussed in Lesson 4. This lesson discusses subsequent activities involved in
maintaining the existing system, specifically
managing archives.
appraising records and retaining those with continuing value while disposing of
non-current records.
Business systems analysis becomes business process re-engineering if the aim is not
just to examine the organisations information systems and processes but also to
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
90
For example, correspondence management can be a system. The system may include
several elements, such as
preparing the response (which may involve consultation with various people)
Step 2:
Responsibility:
Directing correspondence
Mail room, departmental staff
Step 3:
Responsibility:
Preparing a response
Departmental staff, other departments
Step 4:
Responsibility:
Step 5:
Responsibility:
Step 6:
Responsibility:
A business systems analysis would examine those six steps and answer the following
questions.
How long does it take for the task to be completed? Is that an adequate amount of
time, or does it take too long?
How many people are involved? Too many people? Not enough?
How often are there errors, misunderstandings or problems in the execution of the
task? Do people think others are responsible for tasks when they are not? Do
people undertake work that is not within their own area of responsibility?
Does the final outgoing correspondence answer the question raised by the
incoming letter? How often is a follow-up letter or clarification required?
Are the documents filed appropriately? Can they be easily found again if needed?
Depending on the answers to these and similar questions, the agency might choose to
change its procedures in order to improve efficiency and reduce costs.
Business Systems Analysis and Records Management
Business systems analysis is not just conducted in order to improve day-to-day office
systems, such as filing or classification. Business systems analysis should be closely
linked to records management. Records systems how information is created, filed,
retrieved and disposed of can be significantly affected by changes in systems and
processes.
The records manager in an organisation can offer significant input to business systems
analysis. He or she can comment on the effect of systems re-engineering on records
keeping, ensuring that records are managed efficiently and according to legislative or
policy requirements.
The records and archives institution may choose to undertake its own systems analysis
of the functions of its own agency. For example, the archival institution may revise
establishing the provenance of records and their original purpose and arrangement
identifying those records that still need to be retained within the organisation
determining the procedures, costs and facilities required to eliminate the backlog
of unneeded records and managing those to be kept.
maintaining control over the documentation used to record the creation, use and
disposal of current records, such as registers and logs
ensuring the regular transfer of records from current to semi-current storage and
the destruction of obsolete records.
Activity 22
Examine the filing practices in your organisation. Ask yourself the following
questions:
Is the filing system precise? In other words, is there only one logical place to
file papers or are there several places where papers could be filed?
Is the filing system based on logical, common-sense structures? For example,
is the coding system understandable or could it be improved?
Does the filing system allow for expansion or is it less flexible?
Classification organises records into categories, based on the functions and activities
the records represent, so that decisions about their organisation, storage, transfer and
disposal may be made on a category-wide basis, not file by file or item by item.
There are four main types of classification systems used for the arrangement of series
of files within government. These four are not mutually exclusive; they may be used
at different levels within the same system. The preferred system is one based on the
functions or activities. The four types are
1. function or activity, reflecting the work of the agency
2. hierarchical, reflecting administrative structures
3. keyword or theme, reflecting functions or subjects within a hierarchy
4. alphabetical.
Coding is used to represent any classification system, by replacing file titles with
numerical or alphanumerical codes. Figure 13 illustrates an excerpt from a
classification and coding scheme.
ADM/P&E/APP
ADM/P&E/COM
ADM/P&E/EFR
ADM/P&E/ORG
ADM/P&S/ELM
ADM/P&S/MES
ADM/P&S/REP
ADM/P&S/TEL
Once records have been classified and scheduled, their care should become a matter of
routine. Procedures should then be developed for managing the records in the office,
transferring them out or destroying them on the disposal date and receiving records in
the records centre or archival repository.
CLASSES OF DOCUMENTS
PERIOD AFTER
WHICH DOCUMENTS
MAY BE DESTROYED
2 Finance
FY + 9 years
FY + 4 years
FY + 9 years
FY + 9 years
FY + 1 year
6. APEX documentation
FY + 2 years
7. Accounts Ledgers
Purchase Ledger 1: paper records
FY + 1 year
tape records
FY + 6 years
FY + 1 year
tape records
FY + 6 years
FY + 1 year
FY + 6 years
FY + 1 year
tape records
FY + 2 years
FY + 2 years
8. Payments vouchers
FY + 6 years
FY + 2 years
FY + 6 months
FY + 6 months
FY + 6 months
1.
FIN (B) 7
FY + 6 months
FIN (B) 13
FY + 2 years
L 42
FY + 2 years
J 644
FY + 6 months
FY + 6 months
FY + 2 years
FY + 6 years
FY + 2 years
Appraisal involves analysing records at the macro level (that is, in their series rather
than file by file or item by item) to determine which categories are to be retained for
how long and which will be transferred to archival storage and which will be
destroyed. Disposal is the outcome of appraisal: records are disposed of (by transfer
to records centre or archival repository or by destruction) or they are retained in the
office of origin until their administrative or legal value has diminished or altered.
must be conducted with an awareness of the functions that the records were intended
to serve and of their context in relation to other records.
Appraisal and disposal are distinct but linked activities. They need not be taken in
immediate conjunction with one another; indeed, the different actions involved often
take place over an extended period. However, appraisal that is not eventually followed
by disposal is pointless, and disposal without prior appraisal is injudicious if not
unlawful.
To achieve successful appraisal and disposal, managers must
maintain the principle of respect des fonds, which preserves the administrative
context of the records and their organic relationship with each other
ensure that records are controlled in a systematic fashion throughout the life cycle
use functional analysis to chart the flow of records and information through
administration and to determine the nature and value of records
The primary value of records can be further subdivided into three categories.
Operational value: The primary value of records for
the continuance of the administration or operations of
the creating agency or a successor in function or as
evidence thereof. Also known as administrative value.
Note: the term administrative in this context refers
not to housekeeping records but to those records with
operational or core value to the organisation; to avoid
confusion in these modules, the term operational
value is used.
Note that the evidential value does not refer to probative value or legal admissibility
of the records but rather to their value as evidence that the organisation existed and
carried out functions over time.
Informational value: The secondary value of records
or archives for reference and research deriving from the
information contained in them and often incidental to
their original purpose.
Disposing of Records
Once records have been classified and scheduled and appraisal guidelines have been
established, they may be disposed of. Current records will become semi-current,
archival or obsolete. Disposal involves sending records from the office to the records
centre or the archival repository or destroying them under secure conditions if they are
obsolete.
For more information on appraisal, see Building
Records Appraisal Systems.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
101
Activity 23
Is there a process in place in your organisation for disposing of records? If so, are
records disposed of according to written schedules or established criteria? Explain
the processes used. Indicate at least two steps you would take to improve the
processes.
The good and orderly management of records and archives, especially the efficient
management of all records storage areas, is an efficient method of ensuring the
survival of the material.
Preservation: A term referring to the passive
protection of archival material in which no physical or
chemical treatment to the item occurs.
Conservation: The intrusive protection of archival
material, by the minimal physical and chemical
treatments necessary to resist further deterioration,
which will not adversely affect the integrity of the
original.
Preservation conditions will naturally vary depending on the stage of the records life
cycle. Records in current use will not necessarily be held in climate-controlled
environments of the standard required for archives. Semi-current records kept in
records centres will be safely stored, but minimal preservation work may be done until
the records have been deemed archival.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
102
controlled lighting
The best modern archives buildings are purpose-designed and built. They provide a
physical environment for the documents held within them by using the principle of
thermal inertia: that is, the environmental conditions within them are always within
acceptable limits because of the insulation and building materials used.
In successful buildings of this kind, the basics of environmental control occur
naturally. The main duty of the archives staff in this situation is to monitor the
building to see that no defects develop and that there are no areas that do not conform
to the general standard.
If the programme of environmental control is working and the staff are accustomed to
looking after the materials they are responsible for, there will be relatively little need
for remedial conservation. However, there must be some way of guaranteeing that
documents that have suffered damage from damp, mould, insects, vermin or misuse
can be restored according to good modern methods.
In archival repositories where paper archives are stored, the ideal is to maintain the
following conditions with no rapid changes or significant variations:
Temperature and relative humidity outside these ranges, and fluctuations in particular,
lead to deterioration of the paper archives.
Activity 24
How are records stored in your organisation? Describe the physical conditions and
indicate at least three actions you would recommend to improve the physical
protection of records.
Both creating agencies and the archival institution should develop emergency plans to
protect the records or archives in their care. Decentralised or regional offices should
have their own plans.
As part of emergency planning, the organisation needs to identify vital records: those
records essential to the operations of the organisation.
Vital records: Records considered critical to the
ongoing operations of an organisation or the
re-establishment of operations after an emergency or
disaster. Also known as essential records.
It should be centrally co-ordinated, with one staff member or team responsible for
its development.
Sufficient funds should be available to supply the necessary equipment and ensure
that staff are paid for time spent out of hours either on practices or on real
emergencies.
The equipment and supplies needed to cope with emergencies should be readily
available.
The plan should identify vital records and include information on how to protect
them.
There should be agreed procedures for dealing with each category of material and
each category of disaster.
The archival institutions plan should protect both archival holdings and its own
operational records.
For more information on preservation issues, see
Preserving Records and Emergency Planning for
Records and Archives Services. See also the
associated manual, Planning for Emergencies: A
Procedures Manual.
Activity 25
Does your organisation have a mechanism in place to protect records in an
emergency? How recently was the plan developed? Has it ever been tested or
revised? Describe the plan and indicate at least two suggestions you would make to
improve the plan or its implementation.
If your organisation does not have such a plan, write a brief description of three steps
you would take, in priority order, to establish such a plan.
receive and administer all records, in whatever format, that are retired from current
records systems
The records centre must be capable of holding all the records that are eligible for it
(including records in specialised media) and providing a dependable retrieval service
for them.
Activity 26
Does your organisation have a separate records centre? If so, describe the physical
conditions of the centre. Is it safe, secure and clean? If your organisation does not
have a separate records centre, write a brief description of how semi-current records
are presently managed.
MANAGING ARCHIVES
The management of archives takes place in the last phase of the records life. Archives
management is concerned with the care, custody, description and retrieval of records
once they have been transferred to the archival agency. Once records are selected and
transferred to the archival repository, they become archives in the formal sense and are
covered by specific legislative provisions, policies or guidelines.
The steps involved in managing archives include
boxing records
listing records
preparing the materials for transfer out of the custody of the creator.
Whether archives are accessioned internally or from external sources, the following
conditions must apply to ensure that the appraisal and accessioning processes are
managed efficiently.
There must be good co-ordination between the records office or records centre and
the archival institution.
Appropriate staff at the archival institution must keep constantly in touch with the
creation, care and use of records in the organisation as a whole.
Each accession should have a file in which relevant correspondence and notes on
its progress are recorded.
Receiving Archives
All transfers of materials to the archival institution must be recorded. This is done by
completing an accession form (shown in Figure 15).
The most essential parts of this record (the accession forms and the accessions
register) should be treated as permanent. As soon as materials arrive at the archival
institution, the appropriate staff should follow the steps outlined below.
Check the archives for signs of insect infestation or mould, and notify the
preservation department if they need treatment before they come into contact with
other, unaffected, accessions.
Acknowledge receipt of the accession, so that the transferring agency has a record
of what has happened to the materials.
Yes
No
No
Covering Dates:
Yes
Can Records be Opened After 30 Years? (specify items to be opened earlier or later)
Further Information (note any items missing or retained, or containing special materials
such as photographs, maps, coins and so on)
Date:
Position:
Signature:
Date:
Arrangement of Archives
When arranging archival materials, the archival repository must follow the
internationally accepted principle of respect des fonds, which encompasses respect for
the provenance and original order of archives. When describing archives, the
institution aims to provide information about the content and context of archives that
will meet the following two objectives.
Administrative control ensures that all series and items are accounted for in the
repository and can be found and used.
Intellectual control identifies for users what materials are held, what subjects they
deal with, and how they can be found.
Materials received in the archival institution may already be in good order, or they
may be a confused mass of individual items. Normally, when consignments of
archives are transferred from the records centre or from functioning administrative
agencies, the materials are already arranged in series that reflects their original order
and use. In other cases, items may have been rescued from unsuitable storage or from
private sources.
As soon as possible after receiving materials, the archival repository will place the
materials into a chosen order, following the universal principles of archival
arrangement.
Before any arrangement is decided on it is essential that the responsible archivists
should investigate the archives and their originating agencies thoroughly, including
doing background reading, to be sure that they understand the materials and their
legislative, administrative and historical background.
Once the origins of the archives have been reviewed, the materials are then sorted into
groups and series. These groups and series are intended to (and do usually) reflect the
systems used when the records were originally created and kept while in active use.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
112
The terminology and the procedures that follow are in accord with international
standards and practice.
Arrangement comes before description, but it is part of the same process. It is usually
done by sorting the materials in a suitable workshop area. If the materials have been
received in good order, the process should be straightforward. Where the materials
have been received in disorder, sorting and arrangement may require some research in
order to establish the original system and order.
The main levels of arrangement, as described in Lesson 1, are the group, the subgroup,
the series and the item.
Description of Archives
As archives are arranged they will also be described. There are various types of
descriptive tools that the archival repository may create. One of the most valuable is
the archival guide. The guide to holdings consists of a sequence of descriptions of all
the series held and links these descriptions to other related groups and series. The
guide does not give details of items within a series. The guide is the overall initial
finding aid to the contents of the archival institution.
Finding aid: A document, published or unpublished,
listing or describing a body of records or archives.
Before describing the groups and series, the guide should outline the administrative
history of the organisation that created the records, explain the processes from which
the materials resulted and outline the subsequent custodial history of the materials.
Any relevant legislation or policies should be cited, and any administrative and
organisational changes should also be mentioned. If further information can be found
in other sources, such as published books, articles and theses, these should be
mentioned. However, the administrative history is included to help readers
understand and interpret the archives; anything not relevant should be excluded.
Another type of finding aid is the list. Once archives have been arranged into groups
and series and put into order within them, they should be listed, normally by the item.
Descriptions of groups and series consist mainly of administrative and custodial
histories. Lists generally concentrate on describing the content of the records. They
describe only the files or items belonging to one series.
The guide and the lists provide the basic finding aids of the archival institution. By
using these, most users should be able to identify which records they need to consult.
However, many readers who come to the archival institution in pursuit of a specific
enquiry do not know which group or series may contain the information that they
seek. To direct these users, and to exploit the archival holdings fully, it may be
necessary to construct an index highlighting names, places, dates and subjects
occurring in the guide and lists.
Archives services that have limited resources may find that providing indexes cannot
have a high priority. However, they may also find that users then rely on staff to help
them identify relevant information. Indexing may save staff time and allow greater
access to the material. A good index will allow users to make quick and accurate
searches, thus saving everybodys time. With computer technologies, indexing can
become an automatic part of the descriptive process. However, developing a
comprehensive index to the finding aids system is a considerable task, regardless of
the technology available, and it should be developed as part of a well-planned
description strategy.
Developing Standards and Guidelines
Any description or indexing work requires strict control, or its usefulness will be
much reduced by inconsistencies. Rules and standards must be enforced at all times.
The construction of a set of authority files, to be used by everyone involved with
description or indexing, will ensure that standards are maintained.
Strict enforcement of the rules and protecting the archives by correct handling deters
people from misusing documents and even from potential criminal action. Sloppy
enforcement has the opposite effect. It is important therefore that the director of the
archival institution has a strict, clear, legally enforceable and consistent policy over
the implementation of the rules.
Professional archival practice around the world is that all users identify themselves
when they attend the search room and that a permanent record of that identity, and of
the materials consulted, is kept. It is a widespread practice to issue tickets or passes to
users of archival materials and record who has these passes.
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
115
The conduct of everyone in the reference area is controlled by a set of rules agreed by
relevant authorities, based upon current legislation, and clearly displayed and
explained. The rules are based upon the powers and duties of the staff (and users) as
determined by law. The nature and extent of the legal authority the rules possess
should be indicated at the head of the rules.
It is essential that archival materials requested by users should be tracked when they
are not in their permanent location in the repository. The tracking procedure allows
them to be controlled at all times when they are out of place, facilitates their
replacement in the correct location and provides a record of which documents have
been seen.
It is particularly important that archival materials produced for users be checked back
into the direct control of the archives staff and replaced accurately.
Many archival sources are held in the form of microfilm. In general, it is best to have
procedures that will allow users to do as much of the work of selecting the material
they want and setting up the microfilm themselves as possible. However, there may
be circumstances in which the archives staff find it desirable to do this work
themselves.
For more information on archives, see Managing
Archives. See also the associated manual, Managing
Archives: A Procedures Manual.
Activity 27
What are the processes used in your organisation to accession, arrange and describe
archival materials? If possible, obtain copies of any forms or processing instructions
used and compare them against the information in this lesson. Can you identify three
or four actions you might take to improve the processes?
SUMMARY
This lesson has provided an overview of the actual activities involved in records and
archives management, in order to protect records through their life cycle and offer a
continuum of care. These activities include the following steps.
Managing archives
acquiring and receiving archives
arranging and describing archives according to archival principles and practices
providing public access to archives.
The final lesson in this module will discuss supporting and sustaining an Integrated
Records Management (IRM) Programme.
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. Define the following terms
current records
business systems re-engineering
disposal
retention
appraisal
primary valve
secondary value
administrative value
fiscal value
legal value
evidential value
informational value
intrinsic value
preservation
conservation
arrangement
description.
2. What is the purpose of managing current records?
3. Where are current records normally maintained?
4. Explain each of the five steps involved with organising and controlling current records.
Be as detailed and specific as possible to ensure you understand each step clearly.
5. Explain the main requirements of a filing system.
6. Explain the concept and purpose of appraisal and disposal.
7. What four actions must records and archives managers undertake to achieve successful
appraisal and disposal?
8. Why do records need to be protected physically?
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activities 22-27
These activities are designed to allow you to compare the information provided in this
lesson with the systems used to manage records in your organisation. It is valuable to
work through these activities in as much detail as possible. The questions will help
you start thinking about the current situation in your organisation. Whether or not you
are in a position to make any changes yourself, it is extremely valuable not only to
learn about principles and concepts but also to apply them to your own situation.
All the issues addressed are discussed in more detail in various modules in this study
programme. You are encouraged to take careful notes and to refer back to your work
in this introductory module as you proceed with your studies.
LESSON 6
There are various ways the archival institution may promote the use of its resources to
the wider public. Activities include
Before embarking on any particular project, the officer responsible for promotion and
outreach should carry out research to discover whether the proposed programme
would be appreciated or effective. Once it has been established that it would, detailed
research should be carried out on the best way to present the project. For example, if
it is a programme aimed at school children, it will need to be presented differently
from one aimed at government officials or the general public. It may be decided that
expertise from outside the archival institution should be called in.
Detailed costings should be carried out before the archival institution commits to any
major project. Outreach projects can provide publicity and revenue, but they can also
incur considerable financial loss. As well as including any material costs, calculations
THE MANAGEMENT OF PUBLIC SECTOR RECORDS: PRINCIPLES AND CONTEXT
122
should also calculate the cost of staff time. Exhibitions and publications can absorb a
large amount of time and, unless the staff complement is increased, will take staff
away from their routine duties. The value of any project will need to be assessed in
the light of the detrimental effect it may have on the normal running of the records and
archives institution, as well as in the light of expected benefits.
The consequences of any outreach programme also need to be considered. Any large
publicity programme could result in a dramatic increase in readers or written
enquiries. Such an increase would be in accord with the fundamental mission of the
service, but if the archival institution is unable to cope with the demands, the overall
effect may be detrimental.
Activity 28
How do records and archives managers in your organisation encourage the use of
records and archives and promote the importance of good record keeping? Can you
identify three or four activities you might undertake to encourage a greater
appreciation for records care?
All new members of staff must be given all necessary information concerning
appointment, pay, promotion, leave, pension, discipline and so forth. They should
also be given training on
security
handling of records
The training should emphasise the uniqueness and importance of the records and
archives in their charge.
As well as providing training, it is essential to document all policies and procedures
governing the work of records care. All procedures should be set out in a clearly
worded procedures manual, available to all affected staff and regularly updated.
Similarly, the design of all forms should be controlled, and copies of forms should be
included with the procedures manual, with instructions on how to complete them.
Activity 29
How are records and archives staff in your organisation trained? What procedures or
training manuals are available? Can you identify three or four activities you might
undertake to improve training opportunities?
worthwhile career for those who are well educated, intelligent and industrious, not as
the posting of last resort for those who are unqualified, incompetent and idle.
The head of any records and archives institution is ultimately responsible for ensuring
that records staff throughout the organisation are adequately trained for the work they
are expected to undertake. As well, the head must ensure that staff receive adequate
instruction in the tasks they are required to perform, as well as receiving appropriate
standards, manuals and guidelines to assist their work. Agency records managers will
also be involved in the selection and training of their departmental staff.
The work of all components of the records and archives institution is facilitated if
there is a clear organisational structure. This structure must be aligned to the work
that is to be done, and it is the means whereby responsibility for the various duties is
delegated to members of staff.
All records-related work should be subject to evaluation. It is essential that the
investment made in it should be rewarded by effective performance and the provision
of an excellent service. Criteria by which performance could be measured should be
established by consultation at the planning stage.
All records managers and archivists should have a set of defined duties clearly
delegated to them. They should have opportunities to contribute to the day-to-day
management and strategic planning of the service. This is usually done by holding
regular meetings of all professional and paraprofessional members of staff. These
meetings should be formal, with minutes taken of decisions made. This structure
helps the agency establish procedures for accountability.
The chief resource of any records and archives institution is its staff. These people are
generally well motivated and willing. To translate these assets into achievements, it is
necessary to have a management structure that allocates clear tasks to each, with
responsibility and a share in the development of policy; it is also necessary to have a
reporting and reviewing programme that recognises good work done, and sets out
attractive and realistic programmes for the future.
A clear management structure is needed to link the various parts of records care
together, to allow for a continuum of care through the records life cycle. For
example, the heads of the records offices, records centres and archival agency will
report to the head of the records and archives institution; the people responsible for
regional records offices, records centres or archival agencies will report to the heads
of the appropriate agencies; the managers within each regional office will report to the
head of that regional office; and the rest of the staff will report to the managers, unless
there are further established lines of command.
The overall strategy for the archival institution will be drawn up by the head of the
records and archives institution with advice from his or her staff. The head of the
archival agency and the people responsible for regional archives will interpret this
strategy and develop programmes and projects for their own staff.
The posts identified here are offered as a general model that may be adapted to
particular cases.
Head of the records and archives institution: the head of the whole service,
including the records offices, records centre and archival agency.
Heads of the records offices, records centres and archival institutions: the officers
responsible for the management and direction of the records offices, records
centres or archival agency.
Department heads in the archival agency, such as head of preservation (the officer
responsible for all preservation and conservation services); head of reference (the
officer responsible for reference and outreach services); head of records services
(the officer responsible for supervising and co-ordinating records work with
creating agencies).
Staff in records offices, such as: officers responsible for supervising and
co-ordinating records work within the agency and liaising with others within the
overall records and archives institution.
These codes are intended to ensure that the professionals involved care for records in
the best manner possible to ensure their preservation for current and future use by as
wide a range of people as possible.
Following are the key principles found in many codes of ethics adopted by records and
archives professionals around the world.
Records professionals encourage and promote the greatest possible use of the
records in their care, giving due attention to confidentiality, personal privacy,
physical preservation and legislative or policy requirements.
Records professionals carry out their duties according to accepted records and
archives principles and practices, to the highest standard of conduct.
Activity 30
Do many records and archives staff belong to national or international records or
archives associations? Does your institution adhere to a specific code of ethics or
similar document guiding professional practice by record keepers? If so, explain the
documents used and the process for following an established code of conduct.
If your organisation does not adhere to such specific codes, can you identify three or
four steps you might take to encourage adoption of international professional
standards for records and archives work?
SUMMARY
Lesson 6 has discussed the steps involved in supporting and sustaining an IRM
programme. These include
Lesson 6 has outlined some of the requirements of the professional class of records
and archives managers, and it has discussed key principles that must guide
professional records work in order to maintain a public service ethic. These principles
include the following.
Performing tasks without discrimination on the basis of race, colour, religion, sex,
age or national or ethnic origin.
Encouraging and promoting the greatest possible use of the records in their care,
giving due attention to confidentiality, personal privacy, physical preservation and
legislative or policy requirements.
Carrying out duties according to accepted records and archives principles and
practices, to the highest standard of conduct.
STUDY QUESTIONS
1. Identify three ways records and archives managers can promote good records care to
the sponsor agency.
2. Identify five professional principles that should govern an archivists or records
managers work with records and archives.
3. Why is good record keeping critical to an organisation?
4. What should a records and archives institution do before embarking on any promotion
or outreach project?
5. Why is staff training important to good records care?
6. What is the role of professional associations in the promotion of good record keeping?
7. Explain the importance of a clear management structure for records care.
8. Describe the scope of work of the various positions identified below:
9. Describe five key principles found in many codes of ethics adopted by records and
archives professionals around the world.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activity 28
The idea of promoting records and archives work is discussed in various modules in
this study programme, including Managing Archives and Strategic Planning for
Records and Archives Services.
Activity 29
Training can include such diverse activities as overseas degree programmes and inhouse one-day workshops. It is important to recognise that many different types of
training are available and can be valuable; it is not always necessary for people to
leave their positions in order to attend graduate schools, for example, in order to study
records and archives management. This study programme is one way of providing
training to people without requiring them to leave their jobs.
Activity 30
Lesson 7 discusses various resources, including records or archives associations,
available to people around the world. It is worth investigating both national and
international associations and determining if their codes of conduct and guidelines for
professional practice can be adopted within your institution. Such guidelines are
extremely helpful in establishing criteria for work and developing objective standards
for practice.
LESSON 7
WHAT TO DO NEXT?
The Management of Public Sector Records: Principles and Context has outlined the
purpose of records and archives management. It has defined the key terminology,
theories and principles underpinning records and archives care. This module has
provided an introduction to the Management of Public Sector Records Study
Programme. Other modules explore records and archives issues in more detail.
Activity 31
Based on the work you have done for this module, what priorities would you establish
for yourself in order to study more about records and archives management and
implement various recommendations found in this module? What would you do first?
What next? Why?
Managing Archives
Preserving Records
GETTING HELP
Many institutions, particularly in countries with limited resources, have little access to
resources for archival and records work. However, there are places you can go to get
more information or to obtain assistance. Following are names and addresses of some
of the major records and archives organisations or agencies around the world; these
groups can offer advice and assistance. Note that the organisations listed here are also
identified in the Additional Resources tool and are included here as an introduction
only.
See the Additional Resources document for
information on other organisations and associations
involved with records and archives management
generally.
share a common interest in improving the ways society stores, retrieves, analyses,
manages, archives and disseminates information.
Association of Canadian Archivists
PO Box 2596, Station D
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1P 5W6
Tel: +1 613 445 4564
Fax: +1 613 445 4565
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://www.archives.ca/aca/
The Association of Canadian Archivists is the national archival organisation in
Canada. The Association publishes a journal and newsletter, organises annual
conference and participates in a variety of educational opportunities for archivists in
Canada.
Association of Commonwealth Archivists and Records Managers (ACARM)
12 John Street
London WC1N 2EB, UK
Tel: +44 171 831 4101
Fax: +44 171 831 7404
ACARM provides a network of professional information and advice for records
managers and archivists in countries of the Commonwealth.
Association for Information and Image Management (AIIM)
1100 Wayne Ave., Suite 1100
Silver Spring, MD 20910-5603 US
Tel (toll free in US): +1 888 839 3165
Tel: +1 301 587 8202
Fax: +1 301 587 2711
or
2 Crown Walk
Winchester Hampshire
SO23 8BB UK
Phone: +44 1962 868333
Fax: +44 1962 868111
Website: www.aiim.org
The Association for Information and Image Management was organised to bring
together the users and providers of document and information management
technologies, such as document management, knowledge management, workflow and
imaging. This organisation has a mail order bookstore that offers publications,
standards and tools that apply to every facet of Records Management from hard copy
filing to electronic imaging.
The ICA is the professional organisation for the world archival community, dedicated
to the preservation, development and use of the worlds archival heritage. The
International Council on Archives brings together national archival institutions,
professional associations of archivists, regional, local and other archival facilities and
individual archivists. The ICA has more than 1,450 members in 170 countries and
territories. It is a non-governmental organisation, and it works in close co-operation
with inter-governmental organisations like UNESCO and the Council of Europe. It
also maintains close links with other non-governmental organisations.
ICAs wide-ranging international activities include
The ICA has a full-time Secretariat of five people, based in the Paris headquarters,
which undertakes the general administration of the organisation. The professional
output of the ICA comes from its network of members and contacts throughout the
world who give their time and their professional expertise on a voluntary basis. The
ICA publishes a number of valuable works including Janus, Archivum and the ICA
Bulletin as well as proceedings of various conferences and a regularly updated ICA
Directory. The ICA includes regional branches, sections, committees and project
groups involved with a range of records and archives issues. These various groups are
listed below.
The International Council on Archives is the professional, international,
non-governmental organisation representing the interests of archives and archivists
world wide. Is aims are to promote the preservation, development and use of the
worlds archival heritage. The ICA brings together national archive administrations,
professional associations of archivists, regional, local and other archives and
individual archivists.
REGIONAL BRANCHES
SECTIONS
Committee on Sigillography
PROJECT GROUPS
ARCHIVAL INSTITUTIONS
Many national and state or provincial archives in the metropolitan English-speaking
countries have excellent leaflets and publications that can be adapted to smaller or
different contexts. Many of the institutions also provide useful information on their
websites. This list only highlights some key institutions; note that many of their
websites include links to other national or state repositories and related agencies.
Library of Congress
110 First Street, SE
Washington, DC
20540, US
Tel: +1 202 426 5213
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://lcweb.loc.gov
The Library of Congress is involved with extensive research into the management and
preservation of records and archives. Much information is available online and
publications can be ordered.
National Archives of Australia
PO Box 34
Dickson
Canberra, A.C.T. 2602 Australia
Fax: +61 6 257 7564
Website: http://www.naa.gov.au
The National Archives of Australia offers a number of publications free, including
information about various archival issues. The NAA also participates in international
activities and makes many of its resources available on its website.
National Archives of Canada
395 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON
K1A 0N3, Canada
Tel: +1 613 996 7430 (Library)
Fax: +1 613 995 6274 (Library)
Website: http://www.archives.ca
The National Archives of Canada is an active partner in international archival
projects, including hosting the International Council on Archives website and
participating in a range of ICA activities. The National Archives website includes
valuable information about archival policies and procedures, examples of on-line
research tools and finding aids and information about exhibitions and publications.
Activity 32
Find out if your institution has any information about any of the agencies listed above.
Does your organisation receive publications, participate in conferences or meetings or
otherwise work with any of these groups?
In your opinion, which groups should your institution consider communicating with
first, if any, and what would you expect to achieve by doing so? How would you go
about building a productive relationship?
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
There are many publications available about records and archives management. The
Additional Resources tool lists many more publications than are listed here; this
bibliography includes key works that might be of value, particularly in your
institutions resource centre or library. Some are more easily obtained than others,
and some more up-to-date than others. However, older publications also contain
valuable information and may be more easily found in libraries in your particular
country or region than very new publications that have not yet circulated around the
world. Core publications are identified with an asterisk (*).
Core publications are also identified in the
Additional Resources document; refer to that
document for information on more general
publications on records and archives management.
Textbooks
The following books on records and archives management are valuable resources.
* Bradsher, JG, ed. Managing Archives and Archival Institutions. Chicago, IL:
Society of American Archivists, 1991
Cook, Michael. Information Management and Archival Data. London, UK:
Library Association Publishing, 1993.
Cook, Michael. The Management of Information from Archives. 2d ed. Aldershot,
UK: Gower, 1999.
* Couture, Carol and Jean-Yves Rousseau. The Life of a Document: A Global
Approach to Archives and Records Management. Montreal, PQ: Vehicule Press,
1982.
Craig, Barbara, ed. The Archival Imagination: Essays in Honour of Hugh A.
Taylor. Ottawa, ON: Association of Canadian Archivists, 1992.
* Daniels, Maygene F and Timothy Walch, eds. A Modern Archives Reader: Basic
Readings on Archival Theory and Practice. Washington, DC: National Archives
and Records Service, 1984.
Eastwood Terry, ed. The Archival Fonds: from Theory to Practice. Ottawa, ON:
Bureau of Canadian Archivists, 1992.
*
Ellis, Judith, ed. Keeping Archives. 2d ed. Port Melbourne, AUS: DW Thorpe in
association with the Australian Society of Archivists, 1993.
Jenkinson, Sir Hilary. A Manual of Archive Administration. 2d ed (rev). London,
UK: Humphries, 1965. (2d ed. first published in 1937).
This publication is long out of print but copies may be available to examine in
larger archival institutions.
McKemmish, Sue and Michael Piggott. The Records Continuum: Ian Maclean
and Australian Archives First Fifty Years. Clayton, Vic, AUS: Ancora Press,
1994.
McKemmish, Sue and Frank Upward. The Archival Document. Clayton, Vic,
AUS: Ancora Press, 1993.
Walne, Peter, ed. Selected Guidelines for the Management of Records and
Archives: A RAMP Reader. (RAMP Study PGI-90/WS/6). Paris, FR: UNESCO,
1990. Available electronically through the UNESCO website.
Manuals
The Society of American Archivists publishes and distributes a number of
manuals on basic archival practice. A full list of publications is available from the
Society of American Archivists, Publications Department, 600 S. Federal, Suite
504, Chicago, Illinois, USA, 60605, Telephone: +1 312 922 0140, or on the
Internet at http://www.archivists.org.
Activity 33
Check your institutions library or resource centre. What books or other resources do
you have about emergency planning issues? Are any of the publications listed above
available in your institution? If so, examine two or three of them and assess their
currency and value to your institution. If not, identify two or three publications you
think would be most useful to help develop or expand your preservation library.
Devise a plan outlining how you could realistically obtain copies of these.
SUMMARY
This lesson has provided an overview of the entire module, The Management of
Public Sector Records: Principles and Context. This lesson has then discussed how
to establish priorities for action and suggested that the main priorities for action are
often as follows:
Priority 1: Complete other modules in the MPSR study programme
Priority 2: Discuss the topic with colleagues
Priority 3: Read other literature on the topic
Priority 4: Join and participate in professional associations.
The lesson then outlined ways to find out more information or get help with records
and archives issues. The lesson concluded with a discussion of valuable information
resources relevant to records and archives management.
STUDY QUESTIONS
In your own words, explain the reason why the priorities proposed in this lesson are
offered in the order they are in.
Indicate two of the organisations listed in this lesson that you would choose to
contact first and explain why.
Indicate two of the publications listed in this lesson that you would choose to
purchase first and explain why.
ACTIVITIES: COMMENTS
Activity 31
Every institution will find itself at a different stage of development in terms of records
and archives management. Similarly, every person will have a different level of
knowledge of records and archives issues. It is important to study core materials first
and become comfortable with key principles and concepts before exploring those with
colleagues or reading into more complex literature. However, contact with colleagues
and access to other literature is valuable, and joining and participating in professional
associations is one way to expand your horizons and those of your institution.
Activity 32
If resources are limited, it is wise to communicate with international organisations
first, as they often obtain and filter information from national or regional associations.
Thus valuable information is passed on to your organisation through the international
group, which can save resources for all. It is also advisable to focus on records and
archives management information before obtaining specialised publications or
information.
Activity 33
As mentioned in relation to the earlier activity, it is important to begin with general
information and ensure you have a good resource library of introductory and overview
publications before developing a more specialised library.