Archival security is not just about guarding against theft and vandalism; it is about accountability and ethics and the potential challenges to archives and archivists. This essay considers three cases -the ownership and control of the records of indigenous peoples, the use of records of the U.S. Supreme Court, and the misadminstration of electronic mail messages to the White House. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
This article deals with policy records at the front end of their lives; that is, preserving them f...
The article faces the problems related to long-term preservation of the digital archives content. Ar...
The central archival concern is the preservation of the record and access to that record. If archivi...
Although the principles and model practices of archival security are well known in the United State...
Records hold enormous power over people’s life and well-being, so does their absence. Withholding, d...
Archivists today make some of the most difficult ethical and legal decisions at the public service d...
Archivists are uniquely situated to problematize the use and misuse of records in a legal context. B...
Reviews five recent books with implications about how archivists need to be concerned with governmen...
This paper presents an exploratory review of archival literature on access to displaced archives. In...
Traditionally, archives are associated with a yearning for keeping, storing and retention. It is jus...
Our digital memories are threatened by archival hubris, technical misdirection, and simplistic appli...
Archivists serve many constituencies and often find themselves mediating conflicting interests among...
Privacy became a public issue during the 1970s to an extent that was unprecedented in American histo...
This paper examines the intersection of privacy and access in archival repositories. Archival reposi...
This essay explores the question of whether records professionals are as aware of the ethical dimens...
This article deals with policy records at the front end of their lives; that is, preserving them f...
The article faces the problems related to long-term preservation of the digital archives content. Ar...
The central archival concern is the preservation of the record and access to that record. If archivi...
Although the principles and model practices of archival security are well known in the United State...
Records hold enormous power over people’s life and well-being, so does their absence. Withholding, d...
Archivists today make some of the most difficult ethical and legal decisions at the public service d...
Archivists are uniquely situated to problematize the use and misuse of records in a legal context. B...
Reviews five recent books with implications about how archivists need to be concerned with governmen...
This paper presents an exploratory review of archival literature on access to displaced archives. In...
Traditionally, archives are associated with a yearning for keeping, storing and retention. It is jus...
Our digital memories are threatened by archival hubris, technical misdirection, and simplistic appli...
Archivists serve many constituencies and often find themselves mediating conflicting interests among...
Privacy became a public issue during the 1970s to an extent that was unprecedented in American histo...
This paper examines the intersection of privacy and access in archival repositories. Archival reposi...
This essay explores the question of whether records professionals are as aware of the ethical dimens...
This article deals with policy records at the front end of their lives; that is, preserving them f...
The article faces the problems related to long-term preservation of the digital archives content. Ar...
The central archival concern is the preservation of the record and access to that record. If archivi...