
- 240 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Do Archives Have Value?
About this book
This book will explore ways of establishing value and measuring in the archives and specials collections.
There is a vast literature about ways of measuring value for cultural heritage assets as a whole, particularly museums and visitor attractions, but archives and special collections in libraries have largely been overlooked. They have been very poor at garnering statistical data and devising ways of measuring the impact of what they do, unlike museums and visitor attractions with their much heavier footfall.
Do Archives Have Value? discusses the various valuation methods available, including contingent valuation, willingness to pay and value chain, and assesses their suitability for use by archives and special collections. The book also assesses the impact of the transition to the digital in archival holdings, which will transform their character and will almost certainly cost more. The discussion will be set in the context of changing societal expectations of the archive in the wake of numerous scandals where records to address grievances must be kept irrespective of cost.
Value is explored in a range of different cultural and organizational contexts with case studies from a range of countries, including Australia, China, Japan, Malawi, Kenya, Russia and Thailand. There are contributions from Nancy Bell, Head of Conservation at The National Archives, Louise Craven, one of the leading UK archival scholars, Paul Lihoma, National Archivist of Malawi, Helen Morgan from the University of Melbourne, Pak Te Lee of the University of Hong Kong and Richard Wato from the National Archives of Kenya.
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Information
Table of contents
- Title page Do Archives Have Value?
- Contents
- CHAPTER 1 Valuing oral and written texts in Malawi
- CHAPTER 2 Building an evidenced-based culture for documentary heritage collections
- CHAPTER 3 Value in fragments: an Australian perspective on re-contextualisation
- CHAPTER 4 Trusting the records: the Hillsborough football disaster 1989 and the work of the Independent Panel 2010–12
- CHAPTER 5 Sharing history: coupling the archives and history compilation in Japan
- CHAPTER 6 Memories of the future: archives in India
- CHAPTER 7 Business archives in Hong Kong: an overview
- CHAPTER 8 The search for Ithaca? The value of personal memory in the archive of the digital age
- CHAPTER 9 The commercialisation of archives: the impact of online family history sites in the UK
- CHAPTER 10 A search for truthiness: archival research in a post-truth world
- Index