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National Archives of Australia

The National Archives of Australia (NAA), formerly known as the Commonwealth Archives Office and Australian Archives, is an Australian Government agency that serves as the national archives of the nation. It collects, preserves and encourages access to important Commonwealth government records.[3]

National Archives of Australia
Agency overview
FormedMarch 1961
Preceding agencies
  • Commonwealth Archives Office (part of the NLA)
  • Australian Archives
JurisdictionGovernment of Australia
HeadquartersKings Avenue, Parkes, ACT
35°18′18″S 149°07′50″E / 35.304877°S 149.130574°E / -35.304877; 149.130574
Employees404[1]
Annual budgetA$82.733 million (2018–19)[2]
Minister responsible
  • Tony Burke, Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations and Minister for the Arts
Agency executive
  • Simon Froude, Director-General
Parent agencyAttorney-General's Department
Key document
  • Archives Act 1983
Websitenaa.gov.au
The National Archives of Australia national office on Queen Victoria Terrace in Canberra.

Established under and governed by the Archives Act 1983, its main roles are "to collect and preserve Australia's most valuable government records and encourage their use by the public, and to promote good information management by Commonwealth government agencies, especially in meeting the challenges of the digital age". The NAA also develops exhibitions, publishes books and guides to the collection, and delivers educational programs.

Eastern facade of the current home of the NAA, 2009.

History edit

After World War I the Commonwealth National Library (later National Library of Australia) was responsible for collecting Australian Government records. The library appointed its first archives officer in 1944.

In March 1961, the Commonwealth Archives Office formally separated from the National Library of Australia and was renamed as the Australian Archives in 1975.

In 1966, Peter Scott of the Commonwealth Archives Office developed the Australian Series System (aka Commonwealth Records Series System).[4][5] This system represented a change in traditional archival theories of provenance, and it caters for changes of name and provides a flexible framework to arrange records across the different agencies which share the same organisational content.[6]

The Archives Act 1983 gave legislative protection to Commonwealth government records for the first time, with the Australian Archives responsible for their preservation.

The agency was renamed the National Archives of Australia in February 1998.

Function edit

Under the Act, the National Archives has two main roles:[7]

  • to collect and preserve Australia's most valuable government records and encourage their use by the public
  • to promote good information management by Commonwealth government agencies, especially in meeting the challenges of the digital age.

Facilities edit

The Archives' National Office is in Canberra.

In 1998 the Canberra reading room, galleries and public areas of National Archives moved into a heritage-listed building known as "East Block" in the Parliamentary Triangle. The building, one of the national capital's original offices, was built in 1926 beside the Provisional Parliament House. Over the years East Block housed various government departments and served as Canberra's first post office and telephone exchange.

 
Peter Durack in 1948

On Friday, 9 June 2017 (International Archives Day), the National Archives of Australia officially opened the new, purpose-built National Archives Preservation Facility in Canberra, separate from the National Office which houses the reading room and galleries. The building is 17,000 m2 (180,000 sq ft), and added storage for more than 100 km (62 mi) of paper and audio-visual records.[8] On 21 September 2018, the National Archives Preservation Facility was officially renamed the Peter Durack Building after the Hon Peter Durack QC, who introduced the bill creating Australia's National Archives in 1983.[9]

In addition to the National Office of Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), the National Archives has offices and reading rooms in the capital city of each state and the Northern Territory:[10]

Collections edit

The National Archives of Australia's collection of 40 million items covers records pertaining to the government of Australia, including Federation, Governors-General, Prime Ministers, Cabinet and Ministers.

Among the most popular with the public are defence service and immigration records which often contain valuable family history.

The Archives' repositories are not open to the public but items can be requested for digitisation or for viewing in reading rooms. Most records over 26 years old (gradually reducing to 20 years) are released for public access on request. However some have certain information exempted from access. These exemptions may include documents relating to defence and security and sensitive personal information.

Cabinet notebooks have a longer closed period, gradually decreasing from 50 to 30 years by 2021. Access to items of cultural sensitivity to Indigenous Australians may also be restricted.

 
William James (Jack) Mildenhall photographed in 1927

There are several notable collections held by the National Archives of Australia, including:

Recent modernisation efforts and collaborations edit

"Discovering Anzacs" digital partnership edit

In 2014, the National Archives of Australia, in partnership with Archives New Zealand, created the digital repository Discovering Anzacs to commemorate the centenary of World War I and each nation's role in the war effort at home and abroad. The repository features the complete and fully digitised service records of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC). Service records are also displayed geographically on a map of the world to indicate each individual's place of birth, enlistment, death and burial. Users are encouraged to transcribe the official records to improve access and add personal comments, photos and stories to give greater context to each record.[11]

Diversity initiatives edit

In 2014, the National Archives of Australia announced its Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) to foster better relations with its Indigenous population, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The RAP is a multifaceted approach to drawing attention to the history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, engaging and illustrating their culture respectfully, and providing improved access to their historical records. A main feature of this initiative is the Bringing Them Home name index, which leverages the National Archives' collection of records to facilitate genealogical research for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The National Archives also seeks to have 3 percent of their workforce as Indigenous.[12][13]

Digital initiatives edit

Digital Continuity 2020 edit

On 27 October 2015, the National Archives of Australia announced its Digital Continuity 2020 program to modernise the information management practices of the government for the digital age. The policies of Digital Continuity 2020 issued by the authority of the National Archives apply to the whole of the Australian Government and seek to improve efficiency and access of all services.[14]

Deadline 2025 edit

"Deadline 2025" is a collaboration between the National Archives of Australia and the National Film and Sound Archive to prioritise digitisation of valuable audio-visual media stored on magnetic tape which may deteriorate to the point of being unusable by 2025.[15]

In March 2021, a review of the National Archives commissioned by the government found that only six per cent of the collection would be able to be digitised by 2025 with the current resource levels, and recommended that the government spend A$67.7 million on a program to digitise the content most at risk of deterioration within the following seven years. The footage includes recordings from the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, ASIO surveillance, film taken on early Australian Antarctic research expeditions,[16] recordings of John Curtin's war-time speeches, and tapes of the Stolen Generation inquiry. The NAA started a fundraising campaign after the government initially failed to commit to funding the project, but in June 2021 announced that the full amount would be provided, in order to digitise the at-risk collection by hiring additional archivists and enhancing its cybersecurity. The pledge of the full amount allows for a faster schedule to digitise the at-risk material, with a completion date of four years away rather than seven.[17]

Governance edit

As ruled in the Archives Act 1983, the National Archives reports to its Minister, the Attorney-General. Like all government agencies, it is accountable to the Australian Parliament. The National Archives of Australia Advisory Council provides advice to the Minister responsible for the Archives and the Director-General.

National Directors edit

  • 1944–68 – Ian MacLean, Chief Archivist
  • 1968–70 – Keith Penny, Chief Archivist
  • 1970–71 – Keith Pearson, Director, Commonwealth Archives Office
  • 1971–75 – John Dunner, Director, Commonwealth Archives Office
  • 1975–84 – Robert Neale, Director-General, Australian Archives
  • 1984–89 – Brian Cox, Director-General, Australian Archives
  • 1990–2000 – George Nichols, Director-General, Australian Archives/National Archives of Australia
  • 2000–03 – Anne-Marie Schwirtlich, acting Director-General, National Archives of Australia
  • 2003–11 – Ross Gibbs, Director-General, National Archives of Australia
  • 2011–Jan 2012 – Stephen Ellis, acting Director-General, National Archives of Australia
  • 2012–2021 – David Fricker, Director-General, National Archives of Australia
  • 2022–present – Simon Froude, Director-General, National Archives of Australia

Council edit

2020–2021 edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National Archives of Australia National Archives of Australia Advisory Council Annual Report 2017–18". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  2. ^ "Portfolio Budget Statement 2018-2019 National Archives of Australia" (PDF). Australian Government Attorney-General's Department. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  3. ^ "About Us". National Archives of Australia. 17 October 2018.
  4. ^ "Organising our holdings". naa.gov.au. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  5. ^ Scott, Peter (October 1966). "The Record Group Concept: A Case for Abandonment". The American Archivist. 29 (4): 493–504. doi:10.17723/aarc.29.4.y886054240174401. JSTOR 40290645.
  6. ^ Cook, Terry (Spring 1997). "What is Past is Prologue: A History of Archival Ideas Since 1898, and the Future Paradigm Shift". Archivaria. 43: 17–63.
  7. ^ "Selecting National Archives". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  8. ^ "Safeguarding the nation's memory". National Archives of Australia. 9 June 2017.
  9. ^ "National Archives facility named in honour of former Attorney-General Peter Durack QC". National Archives of Australia. 21 September 2018.
  10. ^ "Locations and opening hours". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  11. ^ "About". Discovering Anzacs. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  12. ^ Fricker, David (1 July 2014). "Reconciliation Action Plan 2014-15". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  13. ^ "Annual Report 2017-18" (PDF). National Archives of Australia. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  14. ^ "Digital continuity 2020 the future of e-government" (PDF). National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  15. ^ (PDF). National Archives of Australia. 12 September 2018. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  16. ^ Travers, Penny; Tregenza, Holly (26 April 2021). "National Archives of Australia warns historical recordings, films and images could soon be lost". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  17. ^ Christian, Kate (1 July 2021). "National Archives of Australia says funding is a 'game-changer' in race to preserve priceless national memories". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2 July 2021.

External links edit

  • National Archives of Australia
  • Archives Act 1983, at ComLaw
  • Documenting a Democracy
  • Australian Prime Ministers website
  • Discovering Anzacs
  • Access to archives under the Archives Act

national, archives, australia, formerly, known, commonwealth, archives, office, australian, archives, australian, government, agency, that, serves, national, archives, nation, collects, preserves, encourages, access, important, commonwealth, government, record. The National Archives of Australia NAA formerly known as the Commonwealth Archives Office and Australian Archives is an Australian Government agency that serves as the national archives of the nation It collects preserves and encourages access to important Commonwealth government records 3 National Archives of AustraliaAgency overviewFormedMarch 1961Preceding agenciesCommonwealth Archives Office part of the NLA Australian ArchivesJurisdictionGovernment of AustraliaHeadquartersKings Avenue Parkes ACT35 18 18 S 149 07 50 E 35 304877 S 149 130574 E 35 304877 149 130574Employees404 1 Annual budgetA 82 733 million 2018 19 2 Minister responsibleTony Burke Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations and Minister for the ArtsAgency executiveSimon Froude Director GeneralParent agencyAttorney General s DepartmentKey documentArchives Act 1983Websitenaa gov auThe National Archives of Australia national office on Queen Victoria Terrace in Canberra Established under and governed by the Archives Act 1983 its main roles are to collect and preserve Australia s most valuable government records and encourage their use by the public and to promote good information management by Commonwealth government agencies especially in meeting the challenges of the digital age The NAA also develops exhibitions publishes books and guides to the collection and delivers educational programs Eastern facade of the current home of the NAA 2009 Contents 1 History 2 Function 3 Facilities 4 Collections 5 Recent modernisation efforts and collaborations 5 1 Discovering Anzacs digital partnership 5 2 Diversity initiatives 5 3 Digital initiatives 5 3 1 Digital Continuity 2020 5 3 2 Deadline 2025 6 Governance 6 1 National Directors 6 2 Council 6 2 1 2020 2021 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editAfter World War I the Commonwealth National Library later National Library of Australia was responsible for collecting Australian Government records The library appointed its first archives officer in 1944 In March 1961 the Commonwealth Archives Office formally separated from the National Library of Australia and was renamed as the Australian Archives in 1975 In 1966 Peter Scott of the Commonwealth Archives Office developed the Australian Series System aka Commonwealth Records Series System 4 5 This system represented a change in traditional archival theories of provenance and it caters for changes of name and provides a flexible framework to arrange records across the different agencies which share the same organisational content 6 The Archives Act 1983 gave legislative protection to Commonwealth government records for the first time with the Australian Archives responsible for their preservation The agency was renamed the National Archives of Australia in February 1998 Function editUnder the Act the National Archives has two main roles 7 to collect and preserve Australia s most valuable government records and encourage their use by the public to promote good information management by Commonwealth government agencies especially in meeting the challenges of the digital age Facilities editThe Archives National Office is in Canberra In 1998 the Canberra reading room galleries and public areas of National Archives moved into a heritage listed building known as East Block in the Parliamentary Triangle The building one of the national capital s original offices was built in 1926 beside the Provisional Parliament House Over the years East Block housed various government departments and served as Canberra s first post office and telephone exchange nbsp Peter Durack in 1948On Friday 9 June 2017 International Archives Day the National Archives of Australia officially opened the new purpose built National Archives Preservation Facility in Canberra separate from the National Office which houses the reading room and galleries The building is 17 000 m2 180 000 sq ft and added storage for more than 100 km 62 mi of paper and audio visual records 8 On 21 September 2018 the National Archives Preservation Facility was officially renamed the Peter Durack Building after the Hon Peter Durack QC who introduced the bill creating Australia s National Archives in 1983 9 In addition to the National Office of Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory ACT the National Archives has offices and reading rooms in the capital city of each state and the Northern Territory 10 South Australia Adelaide Queensland Brisbane Northern Territory Darwin Tasmania Hobart Victoria Melbourne Western Australia Perth New South Wales SydneyCollections editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The National Archives of Australia s collection of 40 million items covers records pertaining to the government of Australia including Federation Governors General Prime Ministers Cabinet and Ministers Among the most popular with the public are defence service and immigration records which often contain valuable family history The Archives repositories are not open to the public but items can be requested for digitisation or for viewing in reading rooms Most records over 26 years old gradually reducing to 20 years are released for public access on request However some have certain information exempted from access These exemptions may include documents relating to defence and security and sensitive personal information Cabinet notebooks have a longer closed period gradually decreasing from 50 to 30 years by 2021 Access to items of cultural sensitivity to Indigenous Australians may also be restricted nbsp William James Jack Mildenhall photographed in 1927There are several notable collections held by the National Archives of Australia including founding documents including the Royal Commission of Assent the Constitution Act and other records created when the six colonies federated to create the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January 1901 World War I and World War II service records Some 376 000 service records for men and women who served in World War I have been digitised and are available online at the Discovering Anzacs website the Griffin drawings Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin s winning entry for the design of Australia s federal capital Mildenhall glass plate photographs taken by government photographer Jack Mildenhall the 7700 images record Canberra during the 1920s and 1930s more than 34 000 immigration photographs copyright patent and trademark registration recordsRecent modernisation efforts and collaborations edit Discovering Anzacs digital partnership edit In 2014 the National Archives of Australia in partnership with Archives New Zealand created the digital repository Discovering Anzacs to commemorate the centenary of World War I and each nation s role in the war effort at home and abroad The repository features the complete and fully digitised service records of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps ANZAC Service records are also displayed geographically on a map of the world to indicate each individual s place of birth enlistment death and burial Users are encouraged to transcribe the official records to improve access and add personal comments photos and stories to give greater context to each record 11 Diversity initiatives edit In 2014 the National Archives of Australia announced its Reconciliation Action Plan RAP to foster better relations with its Indigenous population the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples The RAP is a multifaceted approach to drawing attention to the history of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples engaging and illustrating their culture respectfully and providing improved access to their historical records A main feature of this initiative is the Bringing Them Home name index which leverages the National Archives collection of records to facilitate genealogical research for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples The National Archives also seeks to have 3 percent of their workforce as Indigenous 12 13 Digital initiatives edit Digital Continuity 2020 edit On 27 October 2015 the National Archives of Australia announced its Digital Continuity 2020 program to modernise the information management practices of the government for the digital age The policies of Digital Continuity 2020 issued by the authority of the National Archives apply to the whole of the Australian Government and seek to improve efficiency and access of all services 14 Deadline 2025 edit Deadline 2025 is a collaboration between the National Archives of Australia and the National Film and Sound Archive to prioritise digitisation of valuable audio visual media stored on magnetic tape which may deteriorate to the point of being unusable by 2025 15 In March 2021 a review of the National Archives commissioned by the government found that only six per cent of the collection would be able to be digitised by 2025 with the current resource levels and recommended that the government spend A 67 7 million on a program to digitise the content most at risk of deterioration within the following seven years The footage includes recordings from the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody ASIO surveillance film taken on early Australian Antarctic research expeditions 16 recordings of John Curtin s war time speeches and tapes of the Stolen Generation inquiry The NAA started a fundraising campaign after the government initially failed to commit to funding the project but in June 2021 announced that the full amount would be provided in order to digitise the at risk collection by hiring additional archivists and enhancing its cybersecurity The pledge of the full amount allows for a faster schedule to digitise the at risk material with a completion date of four years away rather than seven 17 Governance editAs ruled in the Archives Act 1983 the National Archives reports to its Minister the Attorney General Like all government agencies it is accountable to the Australian Parliament The National Archives of Australia Advisory Council provides advice to the Minister responsible for the Archives and the Director General National Directors edit 1944 68 Ian MacLean Chief Archivist 1968 70 Keith Penny Chief Archivist 1970 71 Keith Pearson Director Commonwealth Archives Office 1971 75 John Dunner Director Commonwealth Archives Office 1975 84 Robert Neale Director General Australian Archives 1984 89 Brian Cox Director General Australian Archives 1990 2000 George Nichols Director General Australian Archives National Archives of Australia 2000 03 Anne Marie Schwirtlich acting Director General National Archives of Australia 2003 11 Ross Gibbs Director General National Archives of Australia 2011 Jan 2012 Stephen Ellis acting Director General National Archives of Australia 2012 2021 David Fricker Director General National Archives of Australia 2022 present Simon Froude Director General National Archives of AustraliaCouncil edit 2020 2021 edit Dr Denver Beanland Chair Jade Balfour Anne Henderson Professor John Williams Dr Phil Robertson Dr Rosemary Laing Suzanne Hampel Professor Emeritus Sally Walker Kevin Andrews MP Senator Kim CarrSee also editList of national archives Palace letters Xena software References edit National Archives of Australia National Archives of Australia Advisory Council Annual Report 2017 18 National Archives of Australia Retrieved 13 November 2018 Portfolio Budget Statement 2018 2019 National Archives of Australia PDF Australian Government Attorney General s Department Retrieved 13 November 2018 About Us National Archives of Australia 17 October 2018 Organising our holdings naa gov au Retrieved 17 October 2018 Scott Peter October 1966 The Record Group Concept A Case for Abandonment The American Archivist 29 4 493 504 doi 10 17723 aarc 29 4 y886054240174401 JSTOR 40290645 Cook Terry Spring 1997 What is Past is Prologue A History of Archival Ideas Since 1898 and the Future Paradigm Shift Archivaria 43 17 63 Selecting National Archives National Archives of Australia Retrieved 20 November 2018 Safeguarding the nation s memory National Archives of Australia 9 June 2017 National Archives facility named in honour of former Attorney General Peter Durack QC National Archives of Australia 21 September 2018 Locations and opening hours National Archives of Australia Retrieved 20 November 2018 About Discovering Anzacs Retrieved 20 November 2018 Fricker David 1 July 2014 Reconciliation Action Plan 2014 15 National Archives of Australia Retrieved 25 November 2018 Annual Report 2017 18 PDF National Archives of Australia 12 September 2018 Retrieved 25 November 2018 Digital continuity 2020 the future of e government PDF National Archives of Australia Retrieved 25 November 2018 Annual Report 2017 18 PDF National Archives of Australia 12 September 2018 p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 25 November 2018 Travers Penny Tregenza Holly 26 April 2021 National Archives of Australia warns historical recordings films and images could soon be lost ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 2 July 2021 Christian Kate 1 July 2021 National Archives of Australia says funding is a game changer in race to preserve priceless national memories ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 2 July 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Archives of Australia National Archives of Australia History of the NAA Archives Act 1983 at ComLaw Documenting a Democracy Australian Prime Ministers website Discovering Anzacs Access to archives under the Archives Act Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Archives of Australia amp oldid 1193516881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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