This thesis describes the main systems of classification used in public archives since the end of the eighteenth century. It provides an overview of the theory on which all archival classification is based. Grounded on the principles of this theory, pertinence-based and provenance-based classifications are described in the historical, juridical and intellectual context that framed their development and use. Each system of classification is examined to see how it structures archival material for both intellectual and physical control.Arts, Faculty ofLibrary, Archival and Information Studies (SLAIS), School ofGraduat
The purpose of this paper is to search for the origin and development of the construct...
Archival appraisal is the most challenging and at the same time the most improtant task performed by...
The concept of systems accounts for the organization and patterns of order that characterize the na...
The main goal of this study is to outline a possible relation between archival classification and kn...
The archival body of knowledge had its origin in the legal disciplines and developed over the centur...
This work tries to outline the theoretical background established by archival science manuals, based...
Since its emergence as a discipline, in the nineteenth century (1889), the theory and practice of Ar...
Classification is a fundamental activity for the organization and management of archival document co...
The attention paid to the original position (initial deposit) of archive material in the phase of re...
The classification structures and systems are privileged resources for knowledge organization. Given...
Abstract. This dissertation attempts to investigate issues related to requirements that the archives...
Variously described as a “powerful guiding principle ” (Dearstyne, 1993), and “the only principle ” ...
It is a common feeling among archivists that the basic principles of archival theory may have to be ...
The thesis seeks to examine the extent to which the archival conceptual base has changed over time ...
We present a bibliometric study of the Treaty of Documentation of Paul Otlet where the goal was to a...
The purpose of this paper is to search for the origin and development of the construct...
Archival appraisal is the most challenging and at the same time the most improtant task performed by...
The concept of systems accounts for the organization and patterns of order that characterize the na...
The main goal of this study is to outline a possible relation between archival classification and kn...
The archival body of knowledge had its origin in the legal disciplines and developed over the centur...
This work tries to outline the theoretical background established by archival science manuals, based...
Since its emergence as a discipline, in the nineteenth century (1889), the theory and practice of Ar...
Classification is a fundamental activity for the organization and management of archival document co...
The attention paid to the original position (initial deposit) of archive material in the phase of re...
The classification structures and systems are privileged resources for knowledge organization. Given...
Abstract. This dissertation attempts to investigate issues related to requirements that the archives...
Variously described as a “powerful guiding principle ” (Dearstyne, 1993), and “the only principle ” ...
It is a common feeling among archivists that the basic principles of archival theory may have to be ...
The thesis seeks to examine the extent to which the archival conceptual base has changed over time ...
We present a bibliometric study of the Treaty of Documentation of Paul Otlet where the goal was to a...
The purpose of this paper is to search for the origin and development of the construct...
Archival appraisal is the most challenging and at the same time the most improtant task performed by...
The concept of systems accounts for the organization and patterns of order that characterize the na...