In 2005, Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner published an article urging archivists to reassess processing strategies to focus less on detailed arrangement and description and more on minimal efforts to provide access to researchers. In 2008, the Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History in Atlanta, Georgia, was awarded a grant from the Council of Library and Information Resources to process the personal papers of Andrew J. Young. The grant stipulated the implementation of Greene and Meissner’s “more product, less process” (MPLP) techniques. This article describes the analysis and strategies behind the decisions made to utilize a variety of processing levels applied to the papers of Andrew J. Young, which cover m...
The study is an introduction into the debate of whether or not minimal processing, based upon the re...
The challenges involved in the preservation of personal digital belongings have implications for dev...
Almost all archivists have at one time or another confronted the issue of managing additions to exis...
In 2005, Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner published an article urging archivists to reassess proce...
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...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
The Northwest Archival Processing Initiative (NWAPI) was the first consortium to implement Greene an...
Since Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner introduced the idea of "More Product Less Process" (MPLP), ...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner published their influential article “More Product, Less Process: Rev...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner’s landmark “More Product, Less Process” method (MPLP) applies the le...
Learning to process archival collections as an intern or student processor constitutes many archivis...
When an institution has a backlog of hidden collections, a technique for processing materials quickl...
Digital preservation has been described as an artisanal form of archives practice, with archivists a...
Archivists and records managers traditionally have arranged manuscripts according to the principle o...
The study is an introduction into the debate of whether or not minimal processing, based upon the re...
The challenges involved in the preservation of personal digital belongings have implications for dev...
Almost all archivists have at one time or another confronted the issue of managing additions to exis...
In 2005, Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner published an article urging archivists to reassess proce...
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...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
The Northwest Archival Processing Initiative (NWAPI) was the first consortium to implement Greene an...
Since Mark A. Greene and Dennis Meissner introduced the idea of "More Product Less Process" (MPLP), ...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner published their influential article “More Product, Less Process: Rev...
Mark Greene and Dennis Meissner’s landmark “More Product, Less Process” method (MPLP) applies the le...
Learning to process archival collections as an intern or student processor constitutes many archivis...
When an institution has a backlog of hidden collections, a technique for processing materials quickl...
Digital preservation has been described as an artisanal form of archives practice, with archivists a...
Archivists and records managers traditionally have arranged manuscripts according to the principle o...
The study is an introduction into the debate of whether or not minimal processing, based upon the re...
The challenges involved in the preservation of personal digital belongings have implications for dev...
Almost all archivists have at one time or another confronted the issue of managing additions to exis...