ARHIVSKI VJESNIK 43. (ZAGREB, 2000.)

Strana - 17

Theo H. P.M. Tliomassen, Arhivisti i records managen: ista struka, različite odgovornosti, Arh. vjesn., god. 43 (2000), str. 7-18 Summary ARCHIVISTS AND RECORDS MANAGERS: SAME PROFESSION, DIFFERENT RESPONSIBILITIES The information revolution is transforming the two domains of archives and re­cords management and it is integrating them into one domain. In this process, archi­vists and records managers are challenged to redefine their occupations as well as th­eir mutual relations. In our old profession, current and semi-current or active re­cords were neatly separated from non current or non-active records. The antago­nism was most heavily stressed by Schellenberg, who even invented two different terms: records and archives. Electronic records finally put an end to the concept of the archival world as a re­fuge for the non-current. The ephemeral character of digital information became a hot issue. The digital longevity problem did away with the archivists' reactive attitu­de of just waiting until electronic records would arrive at their last resting place. Electronic records appeared not to be inclined to rest at any moment in their lifetime. The short duration of life of computer hardware and software and the loose bond in a digital context between data and context information urgently invited archivists to interfere in the life cycle at a very early stage. They had to adopt a pro-active instead of a reactive attitude, and shift their attention to the records creating process, to re­cord-keeping and to records management. On the other side electronic records rai­sed the interest of records managers in modern concepts of archival science. In to­day's archival practice integration is not a free option anymore. Of course, this integrated view on the archival domain does affect the outlook of the occupations involved. These occupations arc not considered anymore as a set of activities (i.e.: filing and classing on the one hand and arrangement and descript­ion on the other) but as the functions of records and archives management themsel­ves, the records management function and the archival function. The analysis of mo­dern records management and archival functions makes clear, that records manage­ment and archives management are not separate domains anymore, nor merely sta­ges in prolongation of each other. They are related functions in an integrated pro­cess. Archival work is integrating and so is archival science. Again Information and Communication Technology is the agent of change. On the one hand, electronic re­cords arc records just as non electronic records. Consequently, problems in the field of electronic records arc problems to be dealt with by archival science. On the other hand, the veiy existence of electronic records also brings about the need for all major concepts of archival science and archival methodology to be redefined. More than ever before, archival science has become the basis not only for archival practice, but 17

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