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Archival science

Archival science, or archival studies, is the study and theory of building and curating archives, which are collections of documents, recordings, photographs and various other materials in physical or digital formats.

Various documents curated for readers at the National Archives, UK

To build and curate an archive, one must acquire and evaluate the materials, and be able to access them later. To this end, archival science seeks to improve methods for appraising, storing, preserving, and processing (arranging and describing) collections of materials.[1]

An archival record preserves data that is not intended to change. In order to be of value to society, archives must be trustworthy. Therefore, an archivist has a responsibility to authenticate archival materials, such as historical documents, and to ensure their reliability, integrity, and usability. Archival records must be what they claim to be; accurately represent the activity they were created for; present a coherent picture through an array of content; and be in usable condition in an accessible location.[2]

An archive curator is called an archivist; the curation of an archive is called archive administration.

History edit

 
The earliest archival manuals: Jacob von Rammingen, Von der Registratur (1571), Baldassarre Bonifacio, De Archivis (1632)

Archival science emerged from diplomatics, the critical analysis of documents.[3][4]

In 1540, Jacob von Rammingen (1510–1582) wrote the manuscript of the earliest known archival manual. He was an expert on registries (Registraturen), the German word for what later became known as archives.[5]

Rammingen elaborated a registry for the Augsburg city council. However, since he could not attend the council meeting, he described the structure and management of the archives in writing. Although this is not the first work about archival science (Rammingen himself refers to earlier literature about record-keeping), earlier manuals were usually not published. Archival science had no formal beginning. Jacob von Rammingen's manual was printed in Heidelberg in 1571.[5]

Traditionally, archival science has involved the study of methods for preserving items in climate-controlled storage facilities. It is also the study of cataloguing and accession, of retrieval and safe handling. The advent of digital documents along with the development of electronic databases has caused the field to re-evaluate its means and ends.[6] While generally associated with museums and libraries, the field also can pertain to individuals who maintain private collections or business archives. Archival Science is taught in colleges and universities, usually under the umbrella of Information Science or paired with a History program.

A list of foundational thinkers in archival studies could include: American archivist Theodore Schellenberg and British archivist Sir Hilary Jenkinson. Some important archival thinkers of the past century include: Canadian archivist and scholar Terry Cook, South African archivist Verne Harris, Australian archival scholar Sue McKemmish, UCLA faculty and archival scholar Anne Gilliland, University of Michigan faculty and archival scholar Margaret Hedstrom, American archival scholar and University of Pittsburgh faculty member Richard Cox, Italian archival scholar and faculty at University of British Columbia Luciana Duranti, and American museum and archival scholar David Bearman.

Standards edit

There is no universal set of laws or standards that governs the form or mission of archival institutions.[7] The forms, functions, and mandates of archival programs and institutions tend to differ based on geographical location and language, the nature of the society in which they exist and the objectives of those in control of the archives.[7] Instead, the current standards that have been provided and are most widely followed, such as the ICA standard, ISO standard, and DIRKS standard, act as working guidelines for archives to follow and adapt in ways that would best suit their respective needs.

Following the introduction of computer technology in archival repositories, beginning in the 1970s, archivists increasingly recognized the need to develop common standards for descriptive practice, in order to facilitate the dissemination of archival descriptive information.[8] The standard developed by archivists in Canada, Rules for Archival Description, also known as RAD, was first published in 1990. As a standard, RAD aims to provide archivists with a consistent and common foundation for the description of archival material within a fonds, based on traditional archival principles.[9] A comparable standard used in the United States is Describing Archives: A Content Standard, also known as DACS.[10] These standards are in place to provide archivists with the tools for describing and making accessible archival material to the public.[11]

Metadata comprises contextual data pertaining to a record or aggregate of records. In order to compile metadata consistently, so as to enhance the discoverability of archival materials for users, as well as support the care and preservation of the materials by the archival institution, archivists look to standards appropriate to various kinds of metadata for different purposes, including administration, description, preservation, and digital storage and retrieval. For example, common standards used by archivists for structuring descriptive metadata, which conveys information such as the form, extent, and content of archival materials, include Machine-Readable Cataloguing (MARC format), Encoded Archival Description (EAD), and Dublin core.[12]

Provenance in archival science edit

Provenance in archival science refers to the "origin or source of something; information regarding the origins, custody, and ownership of an item or collection".[13] As a fundamental principle of archives, provenance refers to the individual, family, or organization that created or received the items in a collection. In practice, provenance dictates that records of different origins should be kept separate to preserve their context.[13] As a methodology, provenance becomes a means of describing records at the series level.

The principle of provenance edit

Describing records at the series level to ensure that records of different origins are kept separate, provided an alternative to item-level manuscript cataloguing.[14] The practice of provenance has two major concepts: "respect des fonds", and "original order". "Respect des fonds" rose from the conviction that records entering an archive have an essential connection to the person or office that generated and used them; archivists consider all the records originating with a particular administrative unit (whether former, or still existing) to be a separate archival grouping, or "fonds", and seek to preserve and describe the records accordingly, with close attention to evidence of how they were organized and maintained at the time they were created.[15]: 167–168  "Original order", refers to keeping records "as nearly as possible in the same order of classification as obtained in the offices of origin", gives additional credibility to preserved records and to their originating "fonds".[14] Records must be kept in the same order they were placed in the course of the official activity of the agency concerned; records are not to be artificially reorganized. Records kept in their original order are more likely to reveal the nature of the organizations which created them, and more importantly, of the order of activities out of which they emerged.[16]

Not infrequently, practical considerations of storage mean that it is impossible to maintain the original order of records physically. In such cases, however, the original order should still be respected intellectually in the structure and arrangement of finding aids.

Practices before the emergence of provenance edit

Following the French Revolution, a newfound appreciation for historical records emerged in French society. Records began to "acquir[e] the dignity of national monuments",[17] and their care was entrusted to scholars who were trained in libraries.[16] The emphasis was on historical research, and it seemed obvious at the time that records should be arranged and catalogued in a manner that would "facilitate every kind of scholarly use".[17][16] To support research, artificial systematic collections, often arranged by topic, were established and records were catalogued into these schemes.[15] With archival documents approached from a librarianship perspective, records were organized according to classification schemes and their original context of creation were frequently lost or obscured.[16] This form of archival arrangement has come to be known as the "historical manuscripts tradition".

Emergence of provenance edit

The principle of "respect des fonds" and of "original order" was adopted in Belgium and France about 1840 and spread throughout Europe during the following decades.[15] Following the rise of state-run archives in France and Prussia, the increasing volume of modern records entering the archive made adherence to the manuscript tradition impossible; there were not enough resources to organize and classify each record. Provenance received its most pointed expression in the "Manual for the Arrangement and Description of Archives", a Dutch text published in 1898 and written by three Dutch archivists, Samuel Muller, Johan Feith, and Robert Fruin. This text provided the first description of the principle of provenance and argued that "original order" is an essential trait of archival arrangement and description.[18]

Complementing the work of the Dutch archivists and supporting the concept of provenance were the historians of the era. Through subject-based classification aided research, historians began to concern themselves with objectivity in their source material. For its advocates, provenance provided an objective alternative to the generally subjective classification schemes borrowed from librarianship. Historians increasingly felt that records should be maintained in their original order to better reflect the activity out of which they emerged.

Debates edit

Although original order is a generally accepted principle, there has been some debate about applicability to personal archiving.[15] Original order is not always ideal for personal archives.[16] However, some archivists insist that personal records are created and maintained for much the same reason as organizational archives and should follow the same principles.[16]

Preservation in archival science edit

 
Archival boxes at the NASA archives

Preservation, as defined by the Society of American Archivists (SAA), is the act of protecting materials from physical deterioration or loss of information, ideally in a noninvasive way.[19] The goal of preservation is to maintain as much originality as possible while retaining all the information which the material has to offer. Both scientific principles and professional practices are applied to this technique to be maximally effective. In an archival sense, preservation refers to the care of all the aggregates within a collection. Conservation can be included in this practice and often these two definitions overlap.[11]

The beginnings of preservation edit

Preservation emerged with the establishment of the first central archives. In 1789, during the French Revolution, the Archives Nationales was established and later, in 1794, transformed into a central archive.[15] This was the first independent national archive and its goal was to preserve and store documents and records as they were. This trend gained popularity and soon other countries began establishing national archives for the same reasons, to maintain and preserve their records as they were created and received.[11]

Cultural and scientific change reinforced the concept and practice of preservation. In the late eighteenth century, many museums, national libraries, and national archives were established in Europe; therefore ensuring the preservation of their cultural heritage.[11]

Archival preservation edit

Preservation, like provenance, is concerned with the proper representation of archival materials. Archivists are primarily concerned with maintaining the record, along with the context in which it was produced, and making this information accessible to the user.[11]

Tout ensemble is a definition relating to preservation. This definition encompasses the idea of context and the importance of maintaining context. When a record is removed from its fellow records, it loses its meaning. In order to preserve a record it must be preserved in its original entirety or else it may lose its significance. This definition relates to the principle of provenance and respect des fonds as it similarly emphasizes the idea of the original record.[11]

Metadata is key for the preservation of context within archival science. Metadata, as defined by the SAA, is "data about data".[12] This data can help archivists locate a specific record, or a variety of records within a certain category. By assigning appropriate metadata to records or record aggregates, the archivist successfully preserves the entirety of the record and the context in which it was created. This allows for better accessibility and improves authenticity.[20]

Physical maintenance is another key feature of preservation. There are many strategies to preserve archives properly: rehousing items in acid-free containers, storing items in climate controlled areas, and copying deteriorating items.[11]

Digital preservation edit

Digital preservation involves the implementation of policies, strategies, and actions in order to ensure that digitized documents remain accurate and accessible over time. Due to newly emerging technologies, archives began to expand and require new forms of preservation. Archival collections expanded to include new media such as microfilm, audiofiles, visualfiles, moving images, and digital documents. Many of these new types of media have a shorter life expectancy than paper.[11] Migration from older non-paper formats to newer non-paper formats is necessary for the preservation of digital media so they can remain accessible.[20]

Metadata is an important part of digital preservation as it preserves the context, usage, and migration of a digital record. Similarly to traditional preservation, metadata is required to preserve the authenticity and accessibility of a record.[20]

Information access edit

Preserved materials in digital archives can be accessed usually by specifying their metadata, or by content-based search such as full text search when using dedicated information retrieval approaches. These usually return results ranked in terms of their relevance to user queries. Novel retrieval methods for document archives can use other ranking factors such as contemporary relevance and temporal analogy.[21]

Critical archival studies edit

In 2002, the journal Archival Science published a series of articles that analyzed systems of power in archival practice, theory, and recordkeeping.[22] This approach was described in 2017 by Punzalan, Caswell, and Sangwand as "critical archival studies".[23] Critical archival studies applies critical theory to archival science, with the goal of developing and implementing archival practices that are more fully inclusive of matters pertaining to race, class, gender, sexuality, and ability.[23] For example, it includes documentation of racist acts and references past omissions of such.[23] There are synergies between critical archival studies and digital humanities, to work to resist oppression.[24]

Archival studies have focused renewed concern on recognition and representation of indigenous, community, and human rights archives.[25] Archival practice is increasingly alert to colonial and imperialist implications.[25] Since 2016, the concept of "symbolic annihilation" has been used to describe the disappearance of communities through systematic or implicit lack of representation or under-representation in archives. It was initially adapted into the archival literature by Caswell from feminist uses of symbolic annihilation.[26] This absence can also be found in archival policies as well as description and annotation practices.[26] Preservation and usage of accurate language and descriptions of community archives ensures that community values are not neglected, and contributes to critical archival discussions regarding omissions in historical documentation.[26]

Hughes-Watkins has demonstrated that mainstream archival institutions tend to preserve homogeneous, Eurocentric content within archival practice, with a significant lack of attention to other, diverse perspectives.[27]

Professional and advanced education edit

In 2002, the Society of American Archivists published guidelines for a graduate program in archival studies.[28] The guidelines were most recently revised and re-approved in 2016.[29]

Formal courses of study in archival science are available at the master's and doctoral level. A master's degree is typically a two-year professional program focusing on acquiring a knowledge base of archival skills (including digital records and access systems)[30] whereas a doctorate is more broad in scope and includes critical inquiry of its archival practices, with graduates typically preparing for careers in research and teaching.[31] Archival science students may have academic backgrounds in areas such as anthropology, economics, history, law, library science, museum studies or information science.[31]

Associations edit

Professional edit

Professional archivist associations seek to foster study and professional development:

Regional edit

Smaller professional regional associations provide more local professional development. These include the New England Archivists, Society of Rocky Mountain Archivists, Society of Ohio Archivists, Society of North Carolina Archivists, and Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives Conference.

See also edit

  • Archival appraisal – Process of examining a body of records to determine its value for an archival library
  • Archival processing – Surveying, arranging, preserving collections
  • Archival bond – the relationship that each archival record has with the other records produced as part of the same activity
  • Digital artifactual value – intrinsic value of a digital object, exclusive of its informational content
  • Encoded Archival Description – Standard for encoding archival record information
  • Finding aid – Organization tool for archives
  • Library science – Branch of academic disciplines
  • Manuscript processing – Surveying, arranging, preserving collections
  • Preservation (library and archival science) – Set of activities aimed at prolonging the life of a record or object
  • Provenance – Chronology of the ownership, custody or location of a historical object
  • Records management – Management of the information and records of an organization
  • List of archives

References edit

  1. ^ "The Archival Paradigm—The Genesis and Rationales of Archival Principles and Practices". Council on Library and Information Resources. Retrieved 2007-04-03.
  2. ^ "About records, archives and the profession". International Council on Archives. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  3. ^ Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Archival Science". A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2012-12-07.
  4. ^ Duranti, Luciana; Heather MacNeil (January 1996). "The Protection of the Integrity of Electronic Records: An Overview of the UBC-MAS Research Project". Archivaria. 1 (42): 46–67. Retrieved 2007-02-16.
  5. ^ a b Weidling, T. (2013). "Den äldsta arkivläran: Jacob von Rammingens båda läroböcker i registratur- och arkivskötsel från 1571, samt en monografi om arkiv från 1632 av Baldassare Bonifacio" [The oldest archival science: Jacob von Rammingen's two manuals of registry and archival management from 1571, and a monography on archives from 1632 by Baldassare Bonifacio]. Scandinavian Journal of History (in Swedish). 38 (2): 270–271. doi:10.1080/03468755.2013.776405.
  6. ^ "Foreword". Standards for Archival Description: A Handbook. Society of American Archivists. from the original on 5 April 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-03.
  7. ^ a b Adrian Cunningham, "Archival Institutions", in Archives: Recordkeeping in Society, ed. Sue McKemmish et al. (Wagga Wagga, New South Wales: Charles Sturt University, Centre for Information Studies, 2005), pp. 21-22.
  8. ^ Roe, Kathleen D. (2005). Arranging & Describing Archives & Manuscripts. Chicago: Society of American Archivists. p. 37.
  9. ^ Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Rules for Archival Description". A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  10. ^ Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Describing Archives: A Content Standard". A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Michèle V. Cloonan, "Preserving Records of Enduring Value," in Currents of Archival Thinking, ed. Terry Eastwood and Heather MacNeil (Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited, 2010), 69-88.
  12. ^ a b Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Metadata." A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  13. ^ a b Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Provenance". A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  14. ^ a b Gilliland-Swetland, Luke (1991). "The Provenance of a Profession: The Permanence of the Public Archives and Historical Manuscripts Traditions in American Archival History". The American Archivist. 54 (2): 160–175 [161]. doi:10.17723/aarc.54.2.w42580v137053675.
  15. ^ a b c d e Posner, Ernst (1940). "Some Aspects of Archival Development Since The French Revolution". The American Archivist. 3 (3): 159–172. doi:10.17723/aarc.3.3.q64h3343h663402j.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Douglas, Jennifer (2010). "Origins: Evolving Ideas about the Principle of Provenance," in Currents of Archival Thinking, ed. Terry Eastwood and Heather MacNeil (Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited), p. 23-43.
  17. ^ a b Posner (1940), p. 166.
  18. ^ Cook, Terry (1997). "What is Past is Prologue: A History of Archival Ideas Since 1898, and the Future Paradigm Shift". Archivaria. 43: 17–62.
  19. ^ Pearce-Moses, Richard (2005). "Preservation". A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists. Retrieved 2016-01-01.
  20. ^ a b c Kate Cumming, "Metadata Matters," in Managing Electronic Records, ed. Julie McLeod and Catherine Hare (London: Facet Publishing, 2005) pp. 34-49.
  21. ^ Mari Sato, Adam Jatowt, Yijun Duan, Ricardo Campos, Masatoshi Yoshikawa: Estimating Contemporary Relevance of Past News for Enhancing Search in Archival Collections, Proceedings of the 21tst ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL 2021), ACM Press, Illinois, USA (2021)
  22. ^ "List of Contributors". Archival Science. 2: 161–163. 2002. doi:10.1023/A:1020827012752. S2CID 195292343. Retrieved 2022-05-19.
  23. ^ a b c Caswell, Michelle; Punzalan, Ricardo; Sangwand, T-Kay (2017-06-27). "Critical Archival Studies: An Introduction". Journal of Critical Library and Information Studies. 1 (2). doi:10.24242/jclis.v1i2.50.
  24. ^ Sangwand, T-Kay; Christian-Lamb, Caitlin; Lindblad, Purdom (2018). "Bridging Justice Based Practices for Archives + Critical DH". DH2018. Retrieved 2020-02-09.
  25. ^ a b Sangwand, T.-Kay (2018-11-29). "Preservation is Political: Enacting Contributive Justice and Decolonizing Transnational Archival Collaborations". KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies. 2: 10. doi:10.5334/kula.36. ISSN 2398-4112. S2CID 158673749.
  26. ^ a b c Caswell, Michelle; Cifor, Marika; Ramirez, Mario H (2016-06-01). ""To Suddenly Discover Yourself Existing": Uncovering the Impact of Community Archives". The American Archivist. 79 (1): 56–81. doi:10.17723/0360-9081.79.1.56. ISSN 0360-9081. S2CID 147802336.
  27. ^ Hughes-Watkins, Lae'l (2018-05-16). "Moving Toward a Reparative Archive: A Roadmap for a Holistic Approach to Disrupting Homogenous Histories in Academic Repositories and Creating Inclusive Spaces for Marginalized Voices". Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies. 5 (1). ISSN 2380-8845.
  28. ^ "Guidelines for a Graduate Program in Archival Studies". Society of American Archivists. from the original on 6 April 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-03.
  29. ^ "Guidelines for a Graduate Program in Archival Studies". www2.archivists.org. Society of American Archivists. 7 December 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  30. ^ Wosh, Peter J.; Hajo, Cathy Moran; Katz, Esther (2012). "Teaching Digital Skills in an Archives and Public History Curriculum". In Hirsch, Brett D. (ed.). Digital Humanities Pedagogy (1 ed.). Open Book Publishers. p. 85. doi:10.2307/j.ctt5vjtt3.8. ISBN 978-1-909254-26-8. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  31. ^ a b Gilliland-Swetland, Anne J. (2000). "Archival Research: A "New" Issue for Graduate Education". The American Archivist. 63 (2): 259–260. doi:10.17723/aarc.63.2.6226636045t48543. ISSN 0360-9081. JSTOR 40294141.

External links edit

  • The Academy of Certified Archivists
  • Australian Society of Archivists

archival, science, archival, studies, study, theory, building, curating, archives, which, collections, documents, recordings, photographs, various, other, materials, physical, digital, formats, various, documents, curated, readers, national, archives, ukto, bu. Archival science or archival studies is the study and theory of building and curating archives which are collections of documents recordings photographs and various other materials in physical or digital formats Various documents curated for readers at the National Archives UKTo build and curate an archive one must acquire and evaluate the materials and be able to access them later To this end archival science seeks to improve methods for appraising storing preserving and processing arranging and describing collections of materials 1 An archival record preserves data that is not intended to change In order to be of value to society archives must be trustworthy Therefore an archivist has a responsibility to authenticate archival materials such as historical documents and to ensure their reliability integrity and usability Archival records must be what they claim to be accurately represent the activity they were created for present a coherent picture through an array of content and be in usable condition in an accessible location 2 An archive curator is called an archivist the curation of an archive is called archive administration Contents 1 History 2 Standards 3 Provenance in archival science 3 1 The principle of provenance 3 2 Practices before the emergence of provenance 3 3 Emergence of provenance 3 4 Debates 4 Preservation in archival science 4 1 The beginnings of preservation 4 2 Archival preservation 4 3 Digital preservation 4 4 Information access 5 Critical archival studies 6 Professional and advanced education 7 Associations 7 1 Professional 7 2 Regional 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp The earliest archival manuals Jacob von Rammingen Von der Registratur 1571 Baldassarre Bonifacio De Archivis 1632 Archival science emerged from diplomatics the critical analysis of documents 3 4 In 1540 Jacob von Rammingen 1510 1582 wrote the manuscript of the earliest known archival manual He was an expert on registries Registraturen the German word for what later became known as archives 5 Rammingen elaborated a registry for the Augsburg city council However since he could not attend the council meeting he described the structure and management of the archives in writing Although this is not the first work about archival science Rammingen himself refers to earlier literature about record keeping earlier manuals were usually not published Archival science had no formal beginning Jacob von Rammingen s manual was printed in Heidelberg in 1571 5 Traditionally archival science has involved the study of methods for preserving items in climate controlled storage facilities It is also the study of cataloguing and accession of retrieval and safe handling The advent of digital documents along with the development of electronic databases has caused the field to re evaluate its means and ends 6 While generally associated with museums and libraries the field also can pertain to individuals who maintain private collections or business archives Archival Science is taught in colleges and universities usually under the umbrella of Information Science or paired with a History program A list of foundational thinkers in archival studies could include American archivist Theodore Schellenberg and British archivist Sir Hilary Jenkinson Some important archival thinkers of the past century include Canadian archivist and scholar Terry Cook South African archivist Verne Harris Australian archival scholar Sue McKemmish UCLA faculty and archival scholar Anne Gilliland University of Michigan faculty and archival scholar Margaret Hedstrom American archival scholar and University of Pittsburgh faculty member Richard Cox Italian archival scholar and faculty at University of British Columbia Luciana Duranti and American museum and archival scholar David Bearman Standards editThere is no universal set of laws or standards that governs the form or mission of archival institutions 7 The forms functions and mandates of archival programs and institutions tend to differ based on geographical location and language the nature of the society in which they exist and the objectives of those in control of the archives 7 Instead the current standards that have been provided and are most widely followed such as the ICA standard ISO standard and DIRKS standard act as working guidelines for archives to follow and adapt in ways that would best suit their respective needs Following the introduction of computer technology in archival repositories beginning in the 1970s archivists increasingly recognized the need to develop common standards for descriptive practice in order to facilitate the dissemination of archival descriptive information 8 The standard developed by archivists in Canada Rules for Archival Description also known as RAD was first published in 1990 As a standard RAD aims to provide archivists with a consistent and common foundation for the description of archival material within a fonds based on traditional archival principles 9 A comparable standard used in the United States is Describing Archives A Content Standard also known as DACS 10 These standards are in place to provide archivists with the tools for describing and making accessible archival material to the public 11 Metadata comprises contextual data pertaining to a record or aggregate of records In order to compile metadata consistently so as to enhance the discoverability of archival materials for users as well as support the care and preservation of the materials by the archival institution archivists look to standards appropriate to various kinds of metadata for different purposes including administration description preservation and digital storage and retrieval For example common standards used by archivists for structuring descriptive metadata which conveys information such as the form extent and content of archival materials include Machine Readable Cataloguing MARC format Encoded Archival Description EAD and Dublin core 12 Provenance in archival science editProvenance in archival science refers to the origin or source of something information regarding the origins custody and ownership of an item or collection 13 As a fundamental principle of archives provenance refers to the individual family or organization that created or received the items in a collection In practice provenance dictates that records of different origins should be kept separate to preserve their context 13 As a methodology provenance becomes a means of describing records at the series level The principle of provenance edit Describing records at the series level to ensure that records of different origins are kept separate provided an alternative to item level manuscript cataloguing 14 The practice of provenance has two major concepts respect des fonds and original order Respect des fonds rose from the conviction that records entering an archive have an essential connection to the person or office that generated and used them archivists consider all the records originating with a particular administrative unit whether former or still existing to be a separate archival grouping or fonds and seek to preserve and describe the records accordingly with close attention to evidence of how they were organized and maintained at the time they were created 15 167 168 Original order refers to keeping records as nearly as possible in the same order of classification as obtained in the offices of origin gives additional credibility to preserved records and to their originating fonds 14 Records must be kept in the same order they were placed in the course of the official activity of the agency concerned records are not to be artificially reorganized Records kept in their original order are more likely to reveal the nature of the organizations which created them and more importantly of the order of activities out of which they emerged 16 Not infrequently practical considerations of storage mean that it is impossible to maintain the original order of records physically In such cases however the original order should still be respected intellectually in the structure and arrangement of finding aids Practices before the emergence of provenance edit Following the French Revolution a newfound appreciation for historical records emerged in French society Records began to acquir e the dignity of national monuments 17 and their care was entrusted to scholars who were trained in libraries 16 The emphasis was on historical research and it seemed obvious at the time that records should be arranged and catalogued in a manner that would facilitate every kind of scholarly use 17 16 To support research artificial systematic collections often arranged by topic were established and records were catalogued into these schemes 15 With archival documents approached from a librarianship perspective records were organized according to classification schemes and their original context of creation were frequently lost or obscured 16 This form of archival arrangement has come to be known as the historical manuscripts tradition Emergence of provenance edit The principle of respect des fonds and of original order was adopted in Belgium and France about 1840 and spread throughout Europe during the following decades 15 Following the rise of state run archives in France and Prussia the increasing volume of modern records entering the archive made adherence to the manuscript tradition impossible there were not enough resources to organize and classify each record Provenance received its most pointed expression in the Manual for the Arrangement and Description of Archives a Dutch text published in 1898 and written by three Dutch archivists Samuel Muller Johan Feith and Robert Fruin This text provided the first description of the principle of provenance and argued that original order is an essential trait of archival arrangement and description 18 Complementing the work of the Dutch archivists and supporting the concept of provenance were the historians of the era Through subject based classification aided research historians began to concern themselves with objectivity in their source material For its advocates provenance provided an objective alternative to the generally subjective classification schemes borrowed from librarianship Historians increasingly felt that records should be maintained in their original order to better reflect the activity out of which they emerged Debates edit Although original order is a generally accepted principle there has been some debate about applicability to personal archiving 15 Original order is not always ideal for personal archives 16 However some archivists insist that personal records are created and maintained for much the same reason as organizational archives and should follow the same principles 16 Preservation in archival science edit nbsp Archival boxes at the NASA archivesPreservation as defined by the Society of American Archivists SAA is the act of protecting materials from physical deterioration or loss of information ideally in a noninvasive way 19 The goal of preservation is to maintain as much originality as possible while retaining all the information which the material has to offer Both scientific principles and professional practices are applied to this technique to be maximally effective In an archival sense preservation refers to the care of all the aggregates within a collection Conservation can be included in this practice and often these two definitions overlap 11 The beginnings of preservation edit Preservation emerged with the establishment of the first central archives In 1789 during the French Revolution the Archives Nationales was established and later in 1794 transformed into a central archive 15 This was the first independent national archive and its goal was to preserve and store documents and records as they were This trend gained popularity and soon other countries began establishing national archives for the same reasons to maintain and preserve their records as they were created and received 11 Cultural and scientific change reinforced the concept and practice of preservation In the late eighteenth century many museums national libraries and national archives were established in Europe therefore ensuring the preservation of their cultural heritage 11 Archival preservation edit Preservation like provenance is concerned with the proper representation of archival materials Archivists are primarily concerned with maintaining the record along with the context in which it was produced and making this information accessible to the user 11 Tout ensemble is a definition relating to preservation This definition encompasses the idea of context and the importance of maintaining context When a record is removed from its fellow records it loses its meaning In order to preserve a record it must be preserved in its original entirety or else it may lose its significance This definition relates to the principle of provenance and respect des fonds as it similarly emphasizes the idea of the original record 11 Metadata is key for the preservation of context within archival science Metadata as defined by the SAA is data about data 12 This data can help archivists locate a specific record or a variety of records within a certain category By assigning appropriate metadata to records or record aggregates the archivist successfully preserves the entirety of the record and the context in which it was created This allows for better accessibility and improves authenticity 20 Physical maintenance is another key feature of preservation There are many strategies to preserve archives properly rehousing items in acid free containers storing items in climate controlled areas and copying deteriorating items 11 Digital preservation edit Main article Digital preservation Digital preservation involves the implementation of policies strategies and actions in order to ensure that digitized documents remain accurate and accessible over time Due to newly emerging technologies archives began to expand and require new forms of preservation Archival collections expanded to include new media such as microfilm audiofiles visualfiles moving images and digital documents Many of these new types of media have a shorter life expectancy than paper 11 Migration from older non paper formats to newer non paper formats is necessary for the preservation of digital media so they can remain accessible 20 Metadata is an important part of digital preservation as it preserves the context usage and migration of a digital record Similarly to traditional preservation metadata is required to preserve the authenticity and accessibility of a record 20 Information access edit Preserved materials in digital archives can be accessed usually by specifying their metadata or by content based search such as full text search when using dedicated information retrieval approaches These usually return results ranked in terms of their relevance to user queries Novel retrieval methods for document archives can use other ranking factors such as contemporary relevance and temporal analogy 21 Critical archival studies editIn 2002 the journal Archival Science published a series of articles that analyzed systems of power in archival practice theory and recordkeeping 22 This approach was described in 2017 by Punzalan Caswell and Sangwand as critical archival studies 23 Critical archival studies applies critical theory to archival science with the goal of developing and implementing archival practices that are more fully inclusive of matters pertaining to race class gender sexuality and ability 23 For example it includes documentation of racist acts and references past omissions of such 23 There are synergies between critical archival studies and digital humanities to work to resist oppression 24 Archival studies have focused renewed concern on recognition and representation of indigenous community and human rights archives 25 Archival practice is increasingly alert to colonial and imperialist implications 25 Since 2016 the concept of symbolic annihilation has been used to describe the disappearance of communities through systematic or implicit lack of representation or under representation in archives It was initially adapted into the archival literature by Caswell from feminist uses of symbolic annihilation 26 This absence can also be found in archival policies as well as description and annotation practices 26 Preservation and usage of accurate language and descriptions of community archives ensures that community values are not neglected and contributes to critical archival discussions regarding omissions in historical documentation 26 Hughes Watkins has demonstrated that mainstream archival institutions tend to preserve homogeneous Eurocentric content within archival practice with a significant lack of attention to other diverse perspectives 27 Professional and advanced education editIn 2002 the Society of American Archivists published guidelines for a graduate program in archival studies 28 The guidelines were most recently revised and re approved in 2016 29 Formal courses of study in archival science are available at the master s and doctoral level A master s degree is typically a two year professional program focusing on acquiring a knowledge base of archival skills including digital records and access systems 30 whereas a doctorate is more broad in scope and includes critical inquiry of its archival practices with graduates typically preparing for careers in research and teaching 31 Archival science students may have academic backgrounds in areas such as anthropology economics history law library science museum studies or information science 31 Associations editProfessional edit Professional archivist associations seek to foster study and professional development Archives and Records Association UK and Ireland Archives and Records Association Ireland Association of Moving Image Archivists Association of Records Managers and Administrators Association of Canadian Archivists International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives International Council on Archives Society of American Archivists Regional edit Smaller professional regional associations provide more local professional development These include the New England Archivists Society of Rocky Mountain Archivists Society of Ohio Archivists Society of North Carolina Archivists and Mid Atlantic Regional Archives Conference See also editArchival appraisal Process of examining a body of records to determine its value for an archival library Archival processing Surveying arranging preserving collections Archival bond the relationship that each archival record has with the other records produced as part of the same activityPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Digital artifactual value intrinsic value of a digital object exclusive of its informational contentPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Encoded Archival Description Standard for encoding archival record information Finding aid Organization tool for archives Library science Branch of academic disciplinesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Manuscript processing Surveying arranging preserving collectionsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Preservation library and archival science Set of activities aimed at prolonging the life of a record or objectPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Media preservation Preservation of media Provenance Chronology of the ownership custody or location of a historical object Records management Management of the information and records of an organization List of archivesReferences edit The Archival Paradigm The Genesis and Rationales of Archival Principles and Practices Council on Library and Information Resources Retrieved 2007 04 03 About records archives and the profession International Council on Archives Retrieved 2011 11 03 Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Archival Science A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2012 12 07 Duranti Luciana Heather MacNeil January 1996 The Protection of the Integrity of Electronic Records An Overview of the UBC MAS Research Project Archivaria 1 42 46 67 Retrieved 2007 02 16 a b Weidling T 2013 Den aldsta arkivlaran Jacob von Rammingens bada larobocker i registratur och arkivskotsel fran 1571 samt en monografi om arkiv fran 1632 av Baldassare Bonifacio The oldest archival science Jacob von Rammingen s two manuals of registry and archival management from 1571 and a monography on archives from 1632 by Baldassare Bonifacio Scandinavian Journal of History in Swedish 38 2 270 271 doi 10 1080 03468755 2013 776405 Foreword Standards for Archival Description A Handbook Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on 5 April 2007 Retrieved 2007 04 03 a b Adrian Cunningham Archival Institutions in Archives Recordkeeping in Society ed Sue McKemmish et al Wagga Wagga New South Wales Charles Sturt University Centre for Information Studies 2005 pp 21 22 Roe Kathleen D 2005 Arranging amp Describing Archives amp Manuscripts Chicago Society of American Archivists p 37 Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Rules for Archival Description A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2016 01 01 Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Describing Archives A Content Standard A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b c d e f g h Michele V Cloonan Preserving Records of Enduring Value in Currents of Archival Thinking ed Terry Eastwood and Heather MacNeil Santa Barbara California Libraries Unlimited 2010 69 88 a b Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Metadata A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Provenance A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b Gilliland Swetland Luke 1991 The Provenance of a Profession The Permanence of the Public Archives and Historical Manuscripts Traditions in American Archival History The American Archivist 54 2 160 175 161 doi 10 17723 aarc 54 2 w42580v137053675 a b c d e Posner Ernst 1940 Some Aspects of Archival Development Since The French Revolution The American Archivist 3 3 159 172 doi 10 17723 aarc 3 3 q64h3343h663402j a b c d e f Douglas Jennifer 2010 Origins Evolving Ideas about the Principle of Provenance in Currents of Archival Thinking ed Terry Eastwood and Heather MacNeil Santa Barbara California Libraries Unlimited p 23 43 a b Posner 1940 p 166 Cook Terry 1997 What is Past is Prologue A History of Archival Ideas Since 1898 and the Future Paradigm Shift Archivaria 43 17 62 Pearce Moses Richard 2005 Preservation A Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology Society of American Archivists Retrieved 2016 01 01 a b c Kate Cumming Metadata Matters in Managing Electronic Records ed Julie McLeod and Catherine Hare London Facet Publishing 2005 pp 34 49 Mari Sato Adam Jatowt Yijun Duan Ricardo Campos Masatoshi Yoshikawa Estimating Contemporary Relevance of Past News for Enhancing Search in Archival Collections Proceedings of the 21tst ACM IEEE CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries JCDL 2021 ACM Press Illinois USA 2021 List of Contributors Archival Science 2 161 163 2002 doi 10 1023 A 1020827012752 S2CID 195292343 Retrieved 2022 05 19 a b c Caswell Michelle Punzalan Ricardo Sangwand T Kay 2017 06 27 Critical Archival Studies An Introduction Journal of Critical Library and Information Studies 1 2 doi 10 24242 jclis v1i2 50 Sangwand T Kay Christian Lamb Caitlin Lindblad Purdom 2018 Bridging Justice Based Practices for Archives Critical DH DH2018 Retrieved 2020 02 09 a b Sangwand T Kay 2018 11 29 Preservation is Political Enacting Contributive Justice and Decolonizing Transnational Archival Collaborations KULA Knowledge Creation Dissemination and Preservation Studies 2 10 doi 10 5334 kula 36 ISSN 2398 4112 S2CID 158673749 a b c Caswell Michelle Cifor Marika Ramirez Mario H 2016 06 01 To Suddenly Discover Yourself Existing Uncovering the Impact of Community Archives The American Archivist 79 1 56 81 doi 10 17723 0360 9081 79 1 56 ISSN 0360 9081 S2CID 147802336 Hughes Watkins Lae l 2018 05 16 Moving Toward a Reparative Archive A Roadmap for a Holistic Approach to Disrupting Homogenous Histories in Academic Repositories and Creating Inclusive Spaces for Marginalized Voices Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies 5 1 ISSN 2380 8845 Guidelines for a Graduate Program in Archival Studies Society of American Archivists Archived from the original on 6 April 2007 Retrieved 2007 04 03 Guidelines for a Graduate Program in Archival Studies www2 archivists org Society of American Archivists 7 December 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2023 Wosh Peter J Hajo Cathy Moran Katz Esther 2012 Teaching Digital Skills in an Archives and Public History Curriculum In Hirsch Brett D ed Digital Humanities Pedagogy 1 ed Open Book Publishers p 85 doi 10 2307 j ctt5vjtt3 8 ISBN 978 1 909254 26 8 Retrieved 23 April 2023 a b Gilliland Swetland Anne J 2000 Archival Research A New Issue for Graduate Education The American Archivist 63 2 259 260 doi 10 17723 aarc 63 2 6226636045t48543 ISSN 0360 9081 JSTOR 40294141 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Archival science The Academy of Certified Archivists Australian Society of Archivists Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archival science amp oldid 1214655744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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