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Respect for Authority: Authority Control, Context Control, and Archival Description
Barnes and Noble
Respect for Authority: Authority Control, Context Control, and Archival Description
Current price: $66.99


Barnes and Noble
Respect for Authority: Authority Control, Context Control, and Archival Description
Current price: $66.99
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Groundbreaking ideas in archival description and control
Archival authority control is an often ambiguous label that embraces a potentially wide scope. In this active and quickly-evolving field, new methods of clarification are essential for successful archive management. The articles in
Respect for Authority: Authority Control, Context Control, and Archival Description
offer an innovative approach by marking and exploring a clear distinction between conventional archival authority files and the broader concept of context control.
Intended to not only answer important questions but raise worthy new ones as well,
reveals striking new perspectives in managing archival description more effectively. The engaging essays in this collection tackle key issues of archive authority control and offer sound proposals for advancing a new course. Comprehensive in its approach, this text takes an in-depth look at both the International Standard for Archival Authority Records (ISAAR) and the American standard, Describing Archives: a Content Standard (DACS) and considers the place of authority control in these two standards for archival description. In addition, contributors offer practical answers to the thorny issue of identifying the boundaries of a records-creating entity and present criteria for determining when a new entity is established. International in scope, this book presents groundbreaking case studies by archive professionals from Canada, the United States, Italy, and Australia that document the successes of different institutional applications that describe the records-creator first and then link this description to that of the records themselves.
also includes expert discussions of:
the role of standards
the nature of archives and their relationships with their creators
resources necessary to fully document contextualized content
the power of provenance
possibilities available through a trinity of descriptive entitiesrecords, agents, and functions
the potential of "provenance rediscovery" in American repositories
postmodern archive theory, multiple provenance, and the reconceptualization of archive context
using ISAAR to document records-creating environments
challenges inherent in implementing series-based systems of arrangement and description
the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and the Archival Resource Catalog (ARC)
digitizing and publishing registers and the development of the Online Heritage Resource Manager (OHRM)
and many more!
Ideal for archive professionals, manuscript librarians, students, and researchers of archival administration,
not only resolves important questions revealed by these new trends but opens new discussions of a major shift in descriptive practice.
Archival authority control is an often ambiguous label that embraces a potentially wide scope. In this active and quickly-evolving field, new methods of clarification are essential for successful archive management. The articles in
Respect for Authority: Authority Control, Context Control, and Archival Description
offer an innovative approach by marking and exploring a clear distinction between conventional archival authority files and the broader concept of context control.
Intended to not only answer important questions but raise worthy new ones as well,
reveals striking new perspectives in managing archival description more effectively. The engaging essays in this collection tackle key issues of archive authority control and offer sound proposals for advancing a new course. Comprehensive in its approach, this text takes an in-depth look at both the International Standard for Archival Authority Records (ISAAR) and the American standard, Describing Archives: a Content Standard (DACS) and considers the place of authority control in these two standards for archival description. In addition, contributors offer practical answers to the thorny issue of identifying the boundaries of a records-creating entity and present criteria for determining when a new entity is established. International in scope, this book presents groundbreaking case studies by archive professionals from Canada, the United States, Italy, and Australia that document the successes of different institutional applications that describe the records-creator first and then link this description to that of the records themselves.
also includes expert discussions of:
the role of standards
the nature of archives and their relationships with their creators
resources necessary to fully document contextualized content
the power of provenance
possibilities available through a trinity of descriptive entitiesrecords, agents, and functions
the potential of "provenance rediscovery" in American repositories
postmodern archive theory, multiple provenance, and the reconceptualization of archive context
using ISAAR to document records-creating environments
challenges inherent in implementing series-based systems of arrangement and description
the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and the Archival Resource Catalog (ARC)
digitizing and publishing registers and the development of the Online Heritage Resource Manager (OHRM)
and many more!
Ideal for archive professionals, manuscript librarians, students, and researchers of archival administration,
not only resolves important questions revealed by these new trends but opens new discussions of a major shift in descriptive practice.