From: kadie@sal.cs.uiuc.edu (Carl M Kadie)
Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk,alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk
Subject:  Archivists' statement on electronic records
Date: 25 Mar 1995 12:58:13 GMT
Message-ID: <3l1415$isf@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>

[A re-re-reposting from emailing lists. - Carl]

Date:         Fri, 24 Mar 1995 13:23:29 -0800
Sender: Open Lib/Info Sci Education Forum <JESSE%UTKVM1.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu>
From: Mary S Stephenson <mss@UNIXG.UBC.CA>
Subject:      SAA Press Release


I am posting this at the request of my SLAIS colleague Luciana Duranti
(a member of the SAA Council), who is not a member of this list.
Please send all responses, questions, etc. to her e-mail address
luciana@unixg.ubc.ca  rather than to me or to the list as a whole.  Sorry
for any duplications.

Mary Sue Stephenson
School of Library, Archival and Information Studies
The University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC

###################################################################


                   The Society of American Archivists
                          Position Statement on
                       Archival Issues Raised by
                  Information Stored in Electronic Form


     Increasingly individuals and organizations use computers and
telecommunications technologies to communicate and conduct business. The
rapid change in recordkeeping technologies and practices raises concerns
about the retention, access, and preservation of information stored in
electronic form.

     The most widely publicized legal case that addressed these issues,
known as the PROFS litigation, was initiated by a Freedom of Information
Act request for access to electronic documents maintained by the White
House.(1) The PROFS litigation has caused judicial review of questions
surrounding the legal status of information stored in electronic mail
systems and authority over the disposition of federal records,
presidential records, and personal materials of federal officials.

     The PROFS litigation raises many specific legal issues concerning the
Freedom of Information Act, the Federal Records Act, the Presidential
Records Act, and the Administrative Procedures Act, as well as specific
technical concern regarding the design and configuration of information
systems.

     The litigation also raises fundamental questions about the nature of
information generated, transmitted, and stored in electronic form and the
independence and authority of archivists in carrying out their
responsibility to identify records, to determine their value for
administrative, legal, fiscal, and research purposes, and to recommend the
most appropriate methods to ensure continuing access to electronic
records. The implications of the legal cases reach beyond the particular
records, individuals, and institutions involved in the legal actions.
Their resolution will have a lasting impact on the nature of the
historical record in the information age and on the ability of present and
future researchers to use electronic records as reliable and authentic
evidence of past events, facts, and actions.

     Therefore, The Society of American Archivists, the largest and oldest
association of archivists in the United States, representing more than
3,000 individuals and 500 institutions, proclaims its position, as
follows:

     1.  Electronic communications that are created, stored, or
transmitted through electronic mail systems in the normal course of
activities are records.

     Organizations -- large and small, public and private -- and
individuals create records for a wide variety of purposes. Records
document transactions and decisions, provide evidence of past actions, and
keep track of rights and obligations.  Organizations and individuals rely
increasingly on electronic systems to communicate, transact business,
formulate and develop policies, and disseminate regulations, policies, and
directives. The records created, transmitted, and stored as a result of
the use of these systems must be subject to the same statutes,
regulations, standards, policies, and professional practices that pertain
to records in all other formats. Organizations should review policies
governing access, privacy, security, and retention of records to ensure
that consistent standards are in place for all records regardless of
format.  The use of electronic systems to create and store records should
not diminish organizational control over records, adequacy of
documentation, processes for establishing accountability, individual
rights to access records, or protection against the inappropriate or
unauthorized use of records.

     2. Professional archivists should have exclusive authority to
determine the long-term value of records and the most appropriate methods
for ensuring preservation and continuing access to records.  In
determining the long-term value of records, archivists should be
shielded from undue political or personal pressures.

     Archivists must have sufficient authority and independence to
determine the adequacy of documentation, the effectiveness of
recordkeeping systems, and the continuing value of records.  Archivists
should not be pressured into approving the destruction of records because
they may implicate, embarrass, or expose the originators or subjects of
the records to unfavorable publicity.

     These decisions must be based exclusively on professional judgment,
guided by a professional code of ethics which forbids professional
archivists from revealing or profiting from information they encounter in
the course of their work.(2)

     Professional judgments regarding the long-term value of records
should not be influenced by the presence of access restrictions.  The
Society of American Archivists recognizes that access must be restricted
to some records with archival value to protect personal privacy, national
security, identities of informants, trade secrets, and information
obtained in confidence. The presence of private, confidential, or
restricted information is not a reason to destroy records. Archivists are
professionally competent to meet the challenges presented by the existence
of private, confidential, or sensitive information in the archival
materials they administer, and accept the responsibility to administer
access restrictions as an integral part of professional work.
Professional archivists also accept the responsibility to consult widely
with the research community when determining the long-term value of
records.

     3. Preserving electronic records and providing continuing
access to them will require significant changes in recordkeeping policies
and practices and an enhanced role for archivists in designing
recordkeeping systems, appraising records, and setting standards for retention
 and
preservation of records.

     Electronic records pose significant challenges to the archival
profession. The PROFS litigation is only one of many examples that
illustrate the need for new methods and approaches to the long-term
preservation of electronic records.  The effective management of
electronic records requires a clear definition of what is a record and
what is not, a mechanism to segregate records from other types of
information, and administrative procedures and technical means to manage
records over time.  Recordkeeping systems must be designed to make
appropriate distinctions between records and non-record material so that
such distinctions are made systematically, consistently, and as
automatically as possible.  Defendants in the PROFS litigation are now
attempting to segregate records from other types of information after the
fact from materials stored indiscriminately on back-up tapes and hard
drives.  This process is time consuming, labor intensive, and very costly.

     To reduce the risk of legal actions, loss of valuable records, and
expensive recovery procedures, recordkeeping requirements must be
identified so that systems can segregate records from non-record material
automatically.  Organizations must then take appropriate measures to
ensure that records with continuing value are not corrupted inadvertently,
or intentionally deleted, lost through system failure, or rendered
inaccessible from hardware or software obsolescence.  Professional
archivists can provide advice that would allow for the creation of systems
able to:

     1) segregate automatically records from other forms of
        information,
     2) maintain the integrity and authenticity of records,
     3) ensure the accessibility of records over time,
     4) protect their confidentiality,
     5) ensure appropriate flow of records in relation to
        administrative processes,
     6) maintain proper documentation of systems, records, and
        transactions, and
     7) administer the regular and orderly disposition of records
        with no continuing value.

     Archivists can provide advice on storage media for short-term and
long-term preservation, on retrieval systems, and on proper procedures of
control, audit, and review of recordkeeping practices.

     Archives must expand their capabilities to advise others in the
maintenance and preservation of electronic records, and archival
institutions must make an active effort to acquire, preserve, and provide
access to electronic records when the originating organization or
individual is unable or unwilling to preserve records with long-term
value.

     The Society of American Archivists believes that meeting the
challenges presented by the widespread use of electronic records systems
will require significant changes in archival practices and in the
relationship between archivists, their parent institutions, and allied
professions.


     In the Society of American Archivist's Strategic Plan, Goal Three
states that the SAA will position itself to lead the archival profession
and represent the interests of the profession in shaping policies and
accepted practices for identifying, preserving, and using electronic
records." To achieve that goal, Society of American Archivists is
developing guidelines and services aimed at preparing archivists to meet
this challenge.

     In 1993, Society of American Archivists Council endorsed curriculum
guidelines for automated records and techniques which recommend that all
professional archivists are exposed to the basic concepts of electronic
recordkeeping and automation in archives by the year 2000.  In 1994,
Society of American Archivists established an Electronic Records
Strategies Task Force to provide further guidance to the profession on
electronic records issues.

     Not withstanding the many initiatives that the Society has taken, is
taking, and will continue to take, the challenges presented by the ever
increasing use of new information technologies and by the rapidity with
which they change are too formidable to be dealt with in isolation. A
larger collective effort is needed to ensure that individuals and
organizations acting on behalf of society remain accountable for their
actions and that future generations will be able to look to the records of
the past for inspiration, warning, guidance, or simply to reflect on the
past.

     The Society of American Archivists reaffirms the ultimate importance
of creating and maintaining reliable and authentic records for
administrative and historical accountability. The Society of American
Archivists seeks support, cooperation, assistance, and advice in this
endeavor from allied professions and everyone who are concerned about
preservation of the historical record in the information age.

     ENDNOTES

     (1) (Scott Armstrong, et al, plaintiffs v. Executive Office of the
President, et al, defendants; Scott Armstrong, et al, appellees v. George
Bush, et al, appellants; and American Historical Association, et al,
plaintiffs v. Trudy Peterson, Acting Archivist of the United States,
defendant.  All three cases refer to information in the PROFS electronic
mail system in use in the White House.)

     (2) SAA Code of Ethics

--
Carl Kadie -- I do not represent any organization; this is just me.
 = Email: kadie@cs.uiuc.edu =
 = URL:   <ftp://ftp.cs.uiuc.edu/pub/kadie/>

