15.Specialized Monographs. The
archives field has begun to support the publication of volumes focused on
particular archival functions, such as appraisal, or topics, such as academic
archives. Over the past two decades, as well, the archives discipline has had a
number of monographs published about certain aspects of its practice and
theory. It is critically important for
individuals to read these publications along with the basic textbooks and
manuals. The nature of textbooks and
manuals often works against reflecting change in archival knowledge and
practice, but these specialized publications often contribute to debates within
the field about needed changes and other issues, revealing that archival theory
is not static but actually quite dynamic.
In fact, many of these publications focus on particular areas of the
profession undergoing change or needing to be changed. Some of these are directly in response to
other monographs, articles, and studies.
16.The
nature and value of these kinds of publications can be seen in the first of
this kind in the archives field. Richard C. Berner, Archival Theory and
Practice in the United States: A Historical Analysis (Seattle: University
of Washington Press, 1983) provided an in-depth analysis of the development to the
early 1980s in the archival functions of arrangement and description, creating
as well a model for viewing the development of the American archival community
that remains current today (the idea of public archives and historical
manuscripts traditions). Other publications examine aspects of archival
arrangement and description, and they need to be read along with the Berner
study. While not part of either the
basic manual or archival fundamental series, Steven L. Hensen, Archives,
Personal Papers, and Manuscripts: A Cataloging Manual for Archival
Repositories, Historical Societies, and Manuscript Libraries, 2nd ed.
(Chicago: Society of American Archivists, 1989) adds an important tool to the
basic manuals on archival arrangement and description and it needs to be
included on the reading list; it demonstrates the development of descriptive
standards generated by computers that Berner lamented was not occurring until
the 1970s. Elizabeth Black, Authority
Control: A Manual for Archivists (Ottawa: Planning Committee on Descriptive
Standards, Bureau of Canadian Archivists, 1991) is part of a group of
publications sponsored by the Bureau of Canadian Archivists and intended to
provide the foundation for a new Canadian archival descriptive standard, also
emerging because of the need for the network of computers to be used in ways
beneficial to the archival discipline.
17.While
archival arrangement and description has generally been a primary emphasis of
this profession, archival appraisal has spawned the greatest quantity of such
specialized publications, reflecting the ongoing debates about the purpose,
practice, and principles supporting this function. This may be because this is both the most difficult and
intellectual aspect of the profession. Frank Boles, Archival Appraisal (New York:
Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc., 1991) was a pioneering effort to create a model
for archival appraisal by studying how
archivists think through the process of selecting records. The first chapter of this work provides a
very useful review of thinking about this function through the 1980s. Joan K. Haas, Helen W. Samuels, and
Barbara T. Simmons, Appraising the Records of Modern Science and Technology:
A Guide (Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1985) represents
a hybrid between manual and study, drawing on intensive investigation about the
nature of scientific and technical records to develop some basic procedures for
appraising these records. Lessons
learned by one of these individuals went into the writing of a major
re-thinking about the nature of records generated by colleges and universities.
Helen W. Samuels, Varsity Letters: Documenting Modern Colleges and
Universities (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1992) remains one of the most
discussed and used volumes on archival appraisal. Other volumes on archival appraisal, also combining aspects of
how-to manuals with more in-depth analysis of appraisal issues, include my own Documenting
Localities: A Practical Model for American Archivists and Manuscripts Curators
(Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1996) describing why archivists have traditionally
been focused on localities while laying out some procedures for how to
re-engineer both appraising and collecting.
18.Electronic
records management has also generated substantial new writings in the form of
monographs. The classic monograph on
this topic is David Bearman, Electronic Evidence: Strategies for Managing
Records in Contemporary Organizations (Pittsburgh: Archives and Museum
Informatics, 1994), an argumentative, stimulating, and controversial set of
essays on how archivists and others need to re-examine and re-think their most
cherished notions on electronic records management. Bearman galvanized archivists and other records professionals
into re-thinking how to work with electronic records. Another volume on this topic is Charles M. Dollar, Archival
Theory and Information Technologies: The Impact of Information Technologies on
Archival Principles and Methods (Macerata: University of Macerata Press,
1992), widely-recognized for being a benchmark in capturing changing
perspectives of archivists on the topic of electronic records management; a
newer work by Charles Dollar, Authentic Electronic Records: Strategies for
Long-Term Access (Chicago:
Cohassett Associates, 1999) reflects more recent research and debates and a
portion of this book, with more complete description, can be viewed at
consultant Rick Barry’s homepage. My own The First Generation of Electronic
Records Archivists in the United States: A Study in Professionalization
(Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press, Inc., 1994) is an effort to describe the
substance of the same changing viewpoints from the 1960s through the 1980s,
reflecting a period when electronic records were not viewed as records at all
to a period when it was glibly assumed that all records programs would easily
be working with such documents to a time when it became obvious that social
science data archives and other methods were not sufficient. There are other basic writings on electronic
records management. Records managers will also want to examine Guidelines on
Best Practices for Using Electronic Information: How to Deal With
Machine-Readable Data and Electronic Documents, rev. ed. (Luxembourg:
Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 1997), available
at http://www2.echo.lu/dlm/en/gdlines.html.
The Guidelines consider basic definitions, the life cycle
approach, design and creation, preservation, and access and dissemination
concerns. This set of best practices
draws from Proceedings of the DLM-Forum on Electronic Records; Brussels,
18-20 December 1996 (Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, 1997).
19.These
monographs need to be supplemented with continually appearing reports providing
interesting views on electronic records management and the continuing quest for
standards, policies, and solutions. CENSA, the Collaborative Electronic
Notebook Systems Association, issued a report at the end of December 1999
entitled “Titanic 2020.” The report
argues that current information technology is not taking into account the need
to maintain records over the long-term, suggesting that within ten years the
number of records produced may be doubling every sixty minutes. The report worries about the short-term
mentality in designing new systems. The
report argues that this problem is far greater, more expensive, and laden with
serious implications that the Y2K bug.
Another useful report on a web site is that of the proceedings of the
"Preservation and Access for Electronic University Records"
conference, hosted by Arizona State University in October 1999, and with
presentations by “archivists, technology professionals, attorneys, university
registrars and librarians from ten universities across the nation.” The topics
included records management for electronic courseware, metadata, collaborative
enterprise system design issues and web page preservation, and the
presentations are available at http://www.asu.edu/it/events/ecure/. The presentations include many bibliographic
references and links to other Web sites.
The self-reported conference highlights are “Emerging issues such as how to manage: Research data as
institutional records; Distance education learning materials; Web-based
documents; Electronic theses and dissertations,” and presentations on other
issues such as “Access to electronic records and personal privacy; Ownership of
electronic data, course materials, university records; Short- and long-term
retention and records management; The state and federal regulatory
environment; Case studies to learn from
successes and build challenges; and Legal and ethical issues.” Another report, Guideline
for Managing E-mail (Prairie Village, Kansas: ARMA International, 2000)
brings together a lot of useful information about the elements needed in
setting organizational policies for electronic mail. The publication is a commonsense approach to electronic mail
issues, with advice such as “The e-mail policy should be developed within the
larger context of the organization’s records management structure” (p. 1) and
“Each organization’s e-mail policy will reflect its own culture and the legal
and regulatory framework within which it operates” (p. 3). The report defines electronic mail,
describes organizational environment issues, examines the creation and use of electronic
mail, looks at the matter of managing electronic mail, and considers its
disposition. Some appendices are
included on the topics of electronic mail and litigation and as evidence, along
with a bibliography and glossary.
However, the report includes this statement: “The lack of commercial off-the-shelf technology and the expense
of custom-developed solutions, however, may make electronic preservation of
large volumes of e-mail records impractical at the present time. For many organizations, preserving e-mail
records will require printing the e-mail messages to and then preserving the
paper or microfilming the printed copies” (p. 15). This is the fatal flaw to this report, suggesting the problem
still facing records professionals concerned with electronic mail and other
electronic records. There is a
considerable body of literature and viewpoints suggesting that too much is lost
in printing out electronic mail.
20.Some
of these specialized monographs have teetered uneasily between being research
studies and manuals for improving practice.
Some, as the ones about electronic records management, must be
supplemented by conference reports and other publications. This is, of course, one of the age-old
tensions in the archives field, and it could be considered a distinctive mark
of this field’s literature rather than an issue for debate. Philip C. Brooks, Research in Archives:
The Use of Unpublished Primary Sources (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1969), besides being one of the oldest specialized studies in the field,
represents an effort to describe how researchers need to approach archives;
today, however, it is probably read more by archivists than those outside the
field. Heather MacNeil, Without
Consent: The Ethics of Disclosing Personal Information in Public Archives
(Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1992) is an analysis of the problems of
determining how to provide access to records possessing personal information,
considering changing notions of research and evolving records systems. Without Consent builds to a set of
recommendations about how to allow research in such records. A traditional
approach to archival reference can be found in Frank G. Burke, Research and
the Manuscript Tradition (Lanham,
Md.: The Scarecrow Press, and Chicago: The Society of American Archivists, 1997)
describing the nature of evidence in archives and historical manuscripts, the
evolution of archival finding aids, the acquisition and appraisal of historical
manuscripts and archives, the nature of technology uses in and challenges to
the archival community, issues concerning archival arrangement and
description, the use and misuse of
deeds of gift, security and access approaches in archival repositories, legal
and ethical dilemmas, and changes in personal communications in our modern
electronic age and the implications for archivists and researchers. We can add to this genre of writing, William Maher, The
Management of College and University Archives (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow
Press, 1992). His volume is both a basic “how-to” manage academic
archives, as well as a serious effort in bringing together a considerable
amount of information about the nature
of these archival programs. The Maher
volume is also one of the testiest writings on the relationship of theory to
practice, taking the viewpoint that most archival theory is useless for
practical purposes.
21.There are some works, sometimes bringing together previously
published materials that strive less to make practical solutions and more
simply to analyze and document the nature of the archival profession and its
work. My American Archival Analysis: The Recent Development of the
Archival Profession in the United States (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press,
1990) is one such example, seeking to explain the ferment of change
characterizing the American archival profession in the 1970’s and 1980’s. Another example of a repackaging of
previously published materials is Luciana Duranti, Diplomatics: New Uses for
an Old Science (Lanham, MD: Society of American Archivists and Association
of Canadian Archivists in association with Scarecrow Press, 1998), bringing
together one of the most important series of articles on archival theory
published in the past two decades.
Duranti’s description of the Renaissance science of diplomatics has been
used and re-used in the discussions about the definition of the record,
comprehending recordkeeping systems, and managing electronic records. There are other essays and writings on
diplomatics, but Duranti’s effort is directed right at the implications for
modern archival work even though it represents an extremely rigid view of
archival theory. For Duranti,
diplomatics is the core of both older and modern archival science, and, in her
opinion, there can be no wavering from this basic supposition. Many others hold more liberal views, or
discount her view altogether.
Regardless, Duranti’s book and other writings make for stimulating
reading.