In the mid-1970s, a sustained discussion about the management of modem congressional collections first emerged in archival literature. Much of the debate over congressional collections during the intervening twenty years concerned the appropriate disposition of the voluminous constituent correspondence and casework files. Most archivists agreed that the casework and constituent correspondence records created and filed under the old paper-based system were bulky, hard to use, and of little research value
Too often the pressure of the present day work environment lures archivists into ignoring their prof...
From 1950 to 1985 the federal government experienced much success in disposing of records with insuf...
This article investigates the daily practices of Senate archivists and discusses the range of their ...
The 1978 Conference on the Research Use and Disposition of Senators\u27 Papers affirmed the value in...
One of the more difficult decisions for congressional archivists is deciding what to do with case fi...
The Congressional Papers Roundtable of the Society of American Archivists was organized in 1984 and ...
Because the records of individual Members of the House of Representatives are considered personal pr...
share a common interest in the survival of a useful record of the United States Congress, the nation...
This article deals with policy records at the front end of their lives; that is, preserving them f...
Archivists and records managers traditionally have arranged manuscripts according to the principle o...
Congressional records, although defined as personal manuscript collections, are comparable to busine...
Unlike congressional and presidential papers collections, which have a rich archival literature in s...
The records of large historical agencies embracing geographically dispersed sites pose great opportu...
From 1789 to 1985 the federal government has created some 170 million cubic feet of records. At the ...
Historians and other researchers have begun to recognize over the last half century or so that the p...
Too often the pressure of the present day work environment lures archivists into ignoring their prof...
From 1950 to 1985 the federal government experienced much success in disposing of records with insuf...
This article investigates the daily practices of Senate archivists and discusses the range of their ...
The 1978 Conference on the Research Use and Disposition of Senators\u27 Papers affirmed the value in...
One of the more difficult decisions for congressional archivists is deciding what to do with case fi...
The Congressional Papers Roundtable of the Society of American Archivists was organized in 1984 and ...
Because the records of individual Members of the House of Representatives are considered personal pr...
share a common interest in the survival of a useful record of the United States Congress, the nation...
This article deals with policy records at the front end of their lives; that is, preserving them f...
Archivists and records managers traditionally have arranged manuscripts according to the principle o...
Congressional records, although defined as personal manuscript collections, are comparable to busine...
Unlike congressional and presidential papers collections, which have a rich archival literature in s...
The records of large historical agencies embracing geographically dispersed sites pose great opportu...
From 1789 to 1985 the federal government has created some 170 million cubic feet of records. At the ...
Historians and other researchers have begun to recognize over the last half century or so that the p...
Too often the pressure of the present day work environment lures archivists into ignoring their prof...
From 1950 to 1985 the federal government experienced much success in disposing of records with insuf...
This article investigates the daily practices of Senate archivists and discusses the range of their ...