Study Deck 1 Flashcards
To transfer records from the individual or office of creation to a repository authorized to appraise, preserve, and provide access to those records.
Archive
- A written or printed work of a legal or official nature that may be used as evidence or proof; a document. 2. Data or information that has been fixed on some medium; that has content, context, and structure; and that is used as an extension of human memory or to demonstrate accountability. 3. Data or information in a fixed form that is created or received in the course of individual or institutional activity and set aside (preserved) as evidence of that activity for future reference. 4. An instrument filed for public notice. 5. Audio-A phonograph record. 6. Computing-A collection of related data elements treated as a unit, such as the fields in a row in a database table. 7. Description-An entry describing a work in a catalog; a catalog record.
Record
The systematic and administrative control of records throughout their life cycle to ensure efficiency and economy in their creation, use, handling, control, maintenance, and disposition.
Records Management
- The origin or source of something. 2 Information regarding the origins, custody, and ownership of an item or collection..
Provenance
The distinct phases of a record’s existence, from creation to final disposition. According to Theodore Schellenberg: stage one, record is created; stage two, active period of record, maximum value, used or referred by the creating office and others involved in decision making; end of stage 2 record is reviewed and determined to have no further value-then destroyed or record can enter stage 3, semi-active status, still has value but not needed day to day, often goes to off site storage; end of stage 3 record is reviewed at which point a determination is made destroy or send to stage 4, which is reserved for inactive records with long-term, indefinite, archival value. Sent to an archival repository where specific activities are undertaken to preserve and describe the records.
Life Cycle of Records
Archivists combine the principles of provenance and original order into the overarching principle of __________________
respect des fonds
An overarching concept, of which provenance and original order are parts, that means that in order to protect the integrity of archives, all archives from one particular creator or source (provenance) must be kept together as a unified whole, not separated into artificial groups or intermingled with archives from another source, and that all archives within that unified whole should be preserved in the order in which they were made and used (original order).
respect des fonds
What is the motivation for record making?
Motivations all derive from some sort of warrant: laws, regulations, standards, professional practices, and even cultural or traditional notions.
What is the most common reason for creating records?
Personal
Personal records relate to particular people in their private, individual, and family capacities. May include: birth, marriage, diaries, correspondence.
What are reasons for creating records?
- Personal
- Social
- Economic
- Legal
- Instrumental
- Symbolic
What is NARA?
National Archives and Records Administration
In the ancient world, designates any collection of written records, including materials we now would consider the domain of libraries.
Archives
A legal action to recover property, including public records, that has been improperly or illegally taken from the owning or custodial entity.
replevin
The most influential American theoretician of archival appraisal.
Theodore R. Schellenberg Long career at National Archives (1903-1970)
- The process of identifying materials offered to an archives that have sufficient value to be accessioned.
- The process of determining the length of time records should be retained, based on legal requirements and on their current and potential usefulness.
- The process of determining the market value of an item; monetarily.
appraisal