Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner’s landmark “More Product, Less Process” method (MPLP) applies the least number of necessary processing steps when readying an unprocessed collection for use by researchers. If the number of steps for arrangement, preservation, and description are reduced, the application will naturally reduce the amount of processing time. Using their middle way of ensuring that at least half of the processing steps were done “adequately” rather than traditionally, Whitworth Archives was able to process a significant number of collections for preservation and use
Nearly seven years after Greene and Meissner published their seminal article entitled "More Product,...
In 2019, the Hekman Library of Calvin University was presented with the gift of a lifetime, the dona...
The overall aim of this article is to push for access to born-digital archives, including email arch...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner’s landmark “More Product, Less Process” method (MPLP) applies the le...
Since Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner introduced the idea of "More Product Less Process" (MPLP), ...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
First discussed almost ten years ago, the processing philosophy known as “more product, less process...
This paper traces the transformation of More Product, Less Process or MPLP from a processing methodo...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner published their influential article “More Product, Less Process: Rev...
In 2005, Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner published an article urging archivists to reassess proce...
The study is an introduction into the debate of whether or not minimal processing, based upon the re...
Digital preservation has been described as an artisanal form of archives practice, with archivists a...
Employing More Product, Less Process (MPLP) approaches we are making archival collections more readi...
When an institution has a backlog of hidden collections, a technique for processing materials quickl...
The Northwest Archival Processing Initiative (NWAPI) was the first consortium to implement Greene an...
Nearly seven years after Greene and Meissner published their seminal article entitled "More Product,...
In 2019, the Hekman Library of Calvin University was presented with the gift of a lifetime, the dona...
The overall aim of this article is to push for access to born-digital archives, including email arch...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner’s landmark “More Product, Less Process” method (MPLP) applies the le...
Since Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner introduced the idea of "More Product Less Process" (MPLP), ...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
First discussed almost ten years ago, the processing philosophy known as “more product, less process...
This paper traces the transformation of More Product, Less Process or MPLP from a processing methodo...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner published their influential article “More Product, Less Process: Rev...
In 2005, Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner published an article urging archivists to reassess proce...
The study is an introduction into the debate of whether or not minimal processing, based upon the re...
Digital preservation has been described as an artisanal form of archives practice, with archivists a...
Employing More Product, Less Process (MPLP) approaches we are making archival collections more readi...
When an institution has a backlog of hidden collections, a technique for processing materials quickl...
The Northwest Archival Processing Initiative (NWAPI) was the first consortium to implement Greene an...
Nearly seven years after Greene and Meissner published their seminal article entitled "More Product,...
In 2019, the Hekman Library of Calvin University was presented with the gift of a lifetime, the dona...
The overall aim of this article is to push for access to born-digital archives, including email arch...