40.Research Agendas and Research Studies. The
archives profession has created a number of research agendas since the late
1970s, some of which have had substantial impact on subsequent research and
writing and others, which have had less impact. It is crucial to understand how, why, and what these agendas have
promoted, and especially to see the nature of responses to them. With a few exceptions, the response has been
limited, but this is beginning to change as graduate archival education
programs continue to expand and more doctoral students engage in research on
archival topics. A sense of the
difficulties in the archival community connecting to research, moving from pure
practice to using applied research, can be found in Richard J. Cox, "An
Analysis of Archival Research, 1970-1992, and the Role and Function of the
American Archivist," American Archivist 57 (Spring 1994): 278-288
and Mary Sue Stephenson, "Deciding Not to Build the Wall: Research and the
Archival Profession," Archivaria 32 (1991): 145-151, the latter
decrying the lack of practical connection in research with the working
archivists.
41.In
the past two decades, two events have provided a catalyst to renewed efforts in
archival research. In the early to mid
1980s the Society of American Archivists engaged in a major planning effort for
itself and the broader profession, ultimately producing a working plan for the
profession and its main North American association. At its 1987 annual meeting three commissioned papers were
presented describing needs for research in the identified major sections of the
archival mission, subsequently published as Richard
J. Cox and Helen W. Samuels, "The Archivists' First Responsibility: A
Research Agenda for the Identification and Retention of Records of Enduring
Value," American Archivist 51 (Winter/Spring 1988): 28-42; Lawrence
Dowler, "The Role of Use in Defining Archival Practice and Principles: A
Research Agenda for the Availability and Use of Records," American
Archivist 51 (Winter/Spring 1988): 74-86; and Paul H. McCarthy, "The
Management of Archives: A Research Agenda," American Archivist 51
(Winter/Spring 1988): 52-69. These three articles have been cited
numerous times in articles, including even some research, in the past decade,
and I will organize my discussion about research to follow the functional
structure represented in these writings.
42.Not
surprisingly, the other major impetus for research has been about electronic
records management, already suggested earlier in this report. In fact, electronic records research and
development has, in some ways, emerged as a model in the field with
conferences, funded research, and real collaborative efforts. The issue of modern electronic records
management led to a series of conferences, leading to research agendas in 1991
published by the Minnesota Historical Society for the National Historical
Publications and Records Commission; the reports of the 1994 and 1997
conferences held under the auspices of Archives and Museum Informatics in
Pittsburgh; and. finally, the Electronic Records Research and Development:
Final Report of the 1996 Conference held at the University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, June 28-29, 1996 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan School of
Information and the Bentley Historical Library, 1997). The first conference led to some other
published essays, such as Margaret Hedstrom, "Understanding Electronic
Incunabula: A Framework for Research on Electronic Records," American
Archivist 54 (Summer 1991): 334-355, but more importantly this, and the other
conferences, led to a number of major research efforts. Full proceedings of the 1996 conference have
been published in volume 11, number 3 of Archives and Museum Informatics:
The Cultural Heritage Informatics Quarterly, with a summary article in the July/August
1997 issue of D-lib Magazine: The Magazine of Digital Library Research
at http://www.dlib.org/, by David Bearman and Jennifer Trant. Deliberations on defining records,
electronic records management policy, recognizing record creating events, capturing
records, maintaining records over time, and the continuing development of a
research agenda were the features of this meeting.
43.The
use of archival records has also generated a bit of research, although not
nearly enough to enable the field to be able to discuss with confidence how
individuals make use of records. Most
discussions about how society utilizes archives still rests on assumptions and
impressions about what goes on in the reference rooms, issues made far more
complex by the growing reliance on the World Wide Web for access to information
and evidence sources. The first major user study was Richard H. Lytle,
"Intellectual Access to Archives: I. Provenance and Content Indexing
Methods of Subject Retrieval," American Archivist 43 (Winter 1980):
64-75 and "Report of an Experiment Comparing Provenance and Content
Indexing Methods of Subject Retrieval," ibid. (Spring 1980):
191-206, an interesting contrast between how researchers utilize traditional
finding aids versus automated guides.
It is an interesting commentary on archival research that this study,
while referred to frequently, has not been replicated – especially since a
revolution in attitudes and approaches to archival finding aids has occurred
since its publication. Not surprisingly, based on his model for conducting such
research, Paul Conway has made the most contributions about understanding
archival use. His Partners in
Research; Improving Access to the Nation's Archives (Pittsburgh: Archives
and Museum Informatics, 1994), a study of users in the National Archives, is
the most comprehensive analysis of such use, drawing on interviews, surveys,
and other data. His introductory
chapter, explaining the negative reception of the leadership at the National
Archives about the study and its results, is also important for comprehending
the difficulties in attitudes by archivists toward understanding
researchers. His other study is
"Research in Presidential Libraries: A User Survey," Midwestern
Archivist 11, no. 1 (1986): 35-56.
David Bearman, "User Presentation Language in Archives," Archives
and Museum Informatics 3 (Winter 1989-90): 3-7 was an innovative effort to
analyze the actual questions asked by researchers in archives, and it needs to
be replicated. Closely related to this is William E. Brown, Jr. and Elizabeth
Yakel, “Redefining the Role of the College and University Archives in the
Information Age,” American Archivist, 59 (Summer) 1996: 272-287,
evaluating the way in which academic administrators actually use their
archives. Ann D. Gordon, Using the Nation's Documentary Heritage
(Washington, D.C.: Historical Documents Study, 1992) represents, on the surface
at least, a major assessment of how different research constituencies think of
and ultimately use archival records.
However, it is a flawed study, marred by a bias towards making a case
for the publication of documentary editions and other methodological problems;
I discussed some of these problems in my "Archivists
and the Use of Archival Records: Or, A View from the World of Documentary
Editing," Provenance 9 (1991 [1992]): 89-110.
44.There
are also a number of studies based on the analysis of citations to archival
sources within the published historical literature, another approach to trying
to understand use, including Dianne L. Beattie, "An Archival User Study:
Researchers in the Field of Women's History," Archivaria 29 (Winter
1989-90): 33-50; Clark A. Elliott, "Citation Patterns and Documentation
for the History of Science: Some Methodological Considerations," American
Archivist 44 (Spring 1981): 131-42; Jacqueline Goggin, "The Indirect
Approach: A Study of Scholarly Users of Black and Women's Organizational
Records in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division," Midwestern
Archivist 11, no. 1 (1986): 57-67; Fredric M. Miller, "Use, Appraisal,
and Research: A Case Study of Social History," American Archivist
49 (Fall 1986): 371-92; and Barbara C. Orbach, "The View From the
Researcher's Desk: Historians' Perceptions of Research and Repositories," American
Archivist 54 (Winter 1991): 28-43. The problem with these studies, and
others similar in approach, is trying to reconcile different data gathering
methods in order to develop some consistent knowledge about the use of archival
records. These studies help, but they
remain too few and too inconsistent in approach to provide the kind of
knowledge needed by archivists about the citation of archival records in
publications. Do different disciplines
approach such records differently? Do
the variations in disciplinary training and purpose affect how archival records
are used and ultimately cited?
45.Closely
related to studies about archival use have been those focused on the
researcher’s interaction with reference archivists and finding aids. One of the
first to consider how the emerging bibliographic networks could support
archivists’ interests in creating a national database, with some disturbing
findings about ingrained inconsistent practices working against this, is Avra
Michelson, "Description and Reference in the Age of Automation," American
Archivist 50 (Spring 1987): 192-208.
Donald L. DeWitt, "The Impact of the MARC AMC Format on Archival
Education and Employment During the 1980s," Midwestern Archivist
16, no. 2 (1991): 73-85 provides an early look at how emerging descriptive
standards had influenced the development of position descriptions. With the rise of the World Wide Web and a
new set of archival descriptive standards (EAD), some new studies are being
done comparing retrieval of information from records with the various
approaches, such as Timothy Hutchinson, “Retrieval Experiment Comparing MARC
and EAD,” Archivaria 44 (Fall
1997): 72-100; Robert P. Spindler and Richard Pearce-Moses, "Does AMC Mean
'Archives Made Confusing'? Patron
Understanding of USMARC AMC Catalog Records," American Archivist 56
(Spring 1993): 330-341, examining how for granted archivists have taken a
general research community’s knowledge about archives and their
characteristics; and Helen R. Tibbo, "The Epic Struggle: Subject Retrieval
from Large Bibliographic Databases," American Archivist 57 (Spring
1994): 310-326, determining that even using controlled subject terms leads to
problems in massive retrievals of unrelated materials. The preliminary results of such studies
suggest the strong need for more serious attention to researching these
matters, if the archival community
expects to be able to utilize the new electronic networking means in an
effective manner.
46.There
is also a growing number of studies being done examining online and Web-based
resources and their use, such as Thomas Finholt and JoAnn Brooks,
"Analysis of JSTOR: The Impact on Scholarly Practice of Access to Online
Journal Archives," Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Conference on Scholarly
Communication and Technology, held at Emory University, April 24-25, 1997., in which the study concludes that “most
faculty do not yet use JSTOR. When JSTOR use occurs, frequency of use is
positively related to being male, having a preference for photocopying journal
articles, relying on article abstracts when reading journals, and the frequency
of searching on-line card catalogs. Increased numbers of journal subscriptions
and affiliation with an economics department are negatively related to the
frequency of JSTOR use. The findings suggest that faculty may be willing to
substitute access to digital journal back archives for access to bound
journals, but this willingness may vary by discipline.” Another example is Anne Gilliland-Swetland,
Yasmin Kafai, and Anthony Maddox,
"Digital Portfolio Archives in Learning: Modeling Primary Content
Transformation for Science Education,", a study considering the issues involved in
utilizing “primary source materials in digital format,” especially matters such
as how “many teachers and students are unfamiliar with how to assess critically
the quality and origination of content of varying quality and origins that they
access through digital means such as the World Wide Web” and how “content
holders, such as archives and museums, need to understand better how to prioritize
their collections for digitization, and the most effective means for describing
and visually representing digital versions of primary content for use by
teachers and students.” The growing
quantity of work on digital library projects, many including archival records
and closely related materials, also bring with them new efforts to evaluate
their effectiveness, such as Julian Kilker and Geri Gay, "The Social
Construction of a Digital Library: A Case Study Examining Implications for
Evaluation," Information Technology and Libraries, 17/2 (June
1998): 60-70. These studies are,
obviously, widely dispersed in focus, but they suggest the potential of
studying how digital archives are used or not.
47.Preservation
is another topic receiving renewed research attention. Traditionally, there has been steady
research on the technical aspects on conservation issues, but more research is
now being done about preservation management and its place within archival
institutions. Paul Conway commenced the
renewal of interest in such research with his project for the Society of
American Archivists, trying to assess how the range of archival institutions
approach preservation, published as "Archival Preservation Practice in a
Nationwide Context," American Archivist 53 (Spring 1990):
204-222. Conway expanded this work into
a dissertation, “Archival Preservation in the United States and the Role of
Information Sources,” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Michigan, 1991, one of
the new breed of doctoral studies on archival topics. Another useful source on this topic is Ann Green, JoAnn Dionne,
and Martin Dennis, Preserving the Whole: A Two-Track Approach to Rescuing
Social Science Data and Metadata (Washington, D.C.: The Digital Library
Federation, Council on Library and Information Resources, June 1999) and
available at http://www.clir.org/diglib/dlfhomepage.htm. Examining numerical data files at the Roper
Collection at Yale University, the researchers consider the options of migrating
these files and the problem of digitizing the related deteriorating paper
records. This is a detailed case study
revealing the limitations of current approaches to the long-term maintenance of
these systems. They conclude, among
many observations, that “data producers would be advised and should be
persuaded to take long-term maintenance and preservation considerations into
account as they create data files and as they design value-added systems” (p.
29). The report contains good
information on costs and technology issues.
48.Archival
appraisal has been ignored in research studies, although there is some evidence
this is changing. Eldon Frost, "A
Weak Link in the Chain: Records Scheduling as a Source of Archival
Acquisition," Archivaria 33 (Winter 1991-92): 78-86 provides data
on how poor records retention scheduling has been in bringing records into
archival repositories, and it is a study needing to be replicated in a variety
of other repositories (especially as it deals directly with the administrative
relationship between archival administration and records management). The major
research effort in this area was Anne J. Gilliland-Swetland, “Development of an
Expert Assistant for Archival Appraisal of Electronic Communications: An
Exploratory Study,” Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Michigan, 1995, an
effort to try to determine how archivists make appraisal decisions in order to
support the creation of an expert system. The abstract of this study indicates
that the “researcher developed and tested a prototype expert system that could assist
archivists in academic institutional settings with the macro-appraisal of
electronic mail. The results of this research point out important structural
and policy limitations to such an approach that are based around the current
state of electronic mail technology and its local implementations, as well as
the limitations of archival appraisal as currently expressed.” Other efforts to deepen our knowledge about
appraisal include Richard W. Hite and Daniel J.
Linke, "A Statistical Summary of Appraisal During Processing: A Case Study
with Manuscript Collections," Archival Issues 17, no. 1 (1992):
23-29 and Thomas J. Ruller, "Dissimilar Appraisal Documentations as an
Impediment to Sharing Appraisal Data: A Survey of Appraisal Documentation in
Government Archival Repositories," Archival Issues 17, no. 1
(1992): 65-73, an article considering an important problem in the archives
field.
49.The
research on electronic records, at least in North America, has revolved about
two major research projects. The
University of Pittsburgh School of Information Sciences project on functional
requirements for evidence in recordkeeping, with results reported in various
publications,
had “major objectives” being to “develop a set of well-defined recordkeeping
functional requirements -- satisfying all the various legal, administrative,
and other needs of a particular organization -- which can be used in the design
and implementation of electronic information systems. The project also
proceeded to consider how the recordkeeping functions are affected by
organizational policies, culture, and use of information technology standards,
systems design, and implementation.” The University of British Columbia
project, the “Preservation of the Integrity of Electronic Records,” led by
Luciana Duranti, Terry Eastwood, and Heather McNeil, aimed “to identify and
define the requirements for creating, handling and preserving reliable and
authentic electronic records”. This project has been extended by the
International Research on Permanent Authentic Records in Electronic Systems
(InterPARES), focusing on four major issues: "to identify the elements of electronic
records which are necessary to maintain the authenticity of those records over
time," by "using diplomatic principles" to analyze the
"elements of physical and intellectual form which may affect the
authenticity and nature of an electronic record"; "to determine
whether the evaluation of electronic records for permanent preservation should be
based on theoretical criteria different from those applied to traditional
records" and to "investigate
how digital technologies have affected the methodology of appraisal;"
"to identify and develop the procedures and resources required for the
implementation of the conceptual requirements and the criteria identified in
the first two domains;" and "to formulate principles that will guide
the development of international, national, and organizational strategies,
policies and standards for the long-term preservation of authentic electronic
records." The results of both
projects are being used and compared, as in Margaret Hedstrom, “Building
Record-Keeping Systems: Archivists are Not Alone on the Wild Frontier,” Archivaria
44 (Fall 1997): 44-71.
50.Other
research on electronic records is worth considering, as well. An interesting research project report is
Charles R. McClure and J. Timothy Sprehe, Analysis and Development of Model
Quality Guidelines for Electronic Records Management on State and Federal
Websites; Final Report January 1998, at
http://istweb.syr.edu/~mcclure/nhprc.
The study, funded by the National Historical Publications and Records
Commission, looks at the concern about whether web postings are official
government records or not. The aim of
the project was to develop better records management and preservation
strategies. The analysis is fascinating
and disturbing, demonstrating how most state governments and selected federal
government agencies are not even thinking about web sites and their
implications at all, even though the first part of the report — on the record
definition — is disappointing and not very convincing. One of the most interesting points is the
authors’ criticism about the archivists’ clinging to the notion that all
government publications have permanent value and opening them all to needing to
save all web sites as publications.
This idea of all government publications being permanently valuable has
been a poor idea ever since it was conceived.
The report is mostly useful because it stimulates records professionals
to revisit their notions of World Wide Web sites. The Delaware Public Archives has made available a two-year study
on five systems (three client systems, one financial system, and a Web application)
with implications for records and archives management. Information on the “Electronic Records
Keeping Study”.
A report by the Center for Technology in Government, University at
Albany, SUNY, Models for Action: Practical Approaches to Electronic Records
Management & Preservation, Project Report 98-1 (Albany: Center for
Technology in Government, July 1998) is an important report worth reading by
any records professional. This project
was an effort to develop a “practical way to incorporate essential electronic
records requirements into the design of new information systems” (p. 1). The Center researchers took the University
of Pittsburgh recordkeeping functional requirements, used “business process
improvement and reengineering methodologies” and “system development
methodologies” and worked on electronic records systems at one state agency –
The New York State Adirondack Park Agency.
They worked with a variety of corporate partners as well. The project discovered the need to adapt the
Pittsburgh requirements to include three broad categories of requirements:
“records capture,” “records maintenance and accessibility,” and “system
reliability” (p. 19). The project had
some interesting conclusions. The “use
of the tools served to shift the focus of system design and development away
from technology and toward the capture, maintenance, and ongoing use of the
Agency’s business records” (p. 47).
Using these tools also brought a focus on records. The functional requirements “present records
management requirements in a way that is understandable to both program
managers and technical staff”(p. 50).
The requirements made non-records professionals understand records
management, ensuring “effective communication” (p. 50). “Perhaps the biggest weakness of the tools
is the pre-condition for their use.
That is, an organization must first recognize the importance of its business
records and the costs and risks associated with ignoring them. Without this foundation, it is unlikely that
an organization will invest the time and attention to detail that the tools
demand” (p. 51).
51.Beyond
these aspects of records and archives work, we have a miscellany of research
studies. Some research has also been
completed on the perception of archives by the public. An example of this is Richard J. Cox,
"International Perspectives on the Image of Archivists and Archives:
Coverage by The New York Times, 1992-1993," International
Information and Library Review 25 (1993): 195-231. Some are beginning
to examine closely the nature of how recordkeeping systems are actually built,
their process of evolving, and continuing use, such as Elizabeth Yakel, “Recordkeeping
in Radiology: The Relationships between Activities and Records in Radiological
Processes,” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Michigan, 1997. The profession
itself is gathering a considerable amount of data on itself, as is evident in
the Council of State Historical Records Coordinators, Maintaining State Records in an Era of Change: A National
Challenge; A Report on State Archives and Records Management Programs (N.p.:
COSHRC, April 1996). A companion to
this latter study is Victoria Irons Walch, Where History Begins: A Report on
Historical Records Repositories in the United States (n.p.: Council of
State Historical Records Coordinators, May 1998), a major, if depressing, resource on the state of affairs with non-governmental
historical records repositories. The
report, with data from over two thousand repositories in about half of the
states, includes considerable detail on repository types, acquisition policies,
holdings, users, facilities and equipment, preservation and conservation,
staffing, education and training, financial support, and needs and
priorities. Walch’s introduction is
quite useful, although it is probably far more positive than the data
warrants. All of these studies reveal,
of course, a tremendous need for additional research in virtually all aspects
of archival work.