Appraisal Criteria for Archival
Records
The Arizona State Archives
is legally mandated to collect and preserve the history of Arizona and
its government. The number of archival records is very small, typically
two to five percent of the whole of an agency's records.
State Archives and Records
Management Division staff work with state agencies and local governments
to identify those records with sufficient value to warrant the resources
necessary to preserve them in perpetuity and document those appraisal
decisions on a records retention schedule. Archivists use their knowledge
of Arizona history and their familiarity with other records in the Archives
when appraising records. They look for records that add to, complement,
or fill gaps in the existing records that document Arizona history.
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Statement
of Archival Value
Users
Creator/Office of Origin
Evidence of Programs or Functions (Functional Value)
Content(Informational Value)
Preservation of Individuals’ Rights and Entitlements
Completeness
Relationship to Other Records
Age of the Records
Format
General Statement of Archival Value
The Arizona State Archives identifies, collects, preserves, and provides
access to records in all formats of Arizona state and local governments
and of public officials and other individuals. Archival records remain useful
for the Legislature, state agencies, and the general public because those
records make government accountable to its citizens; provide evidence about
public policies and programs; and protect or verify individuals’ rights
and entitlements. Archival records provide information about the important
people, issues, places, and events that make up the story of Arizona’s history.
Brief Statement Targeted for the General Public
The Arizona State Archives identifies, collects, preserves and provides
access to all formats of state and local government records and historical
materials for the purposes of retaining evidence about public policies and
programs, providing protection or verification of individuals’ rights, and
maintaining information about noteworthy people, issues, places, and events
that make up the story of Arizona’s history.
Brief Statement Targeted to the Government Officials
The Arizona State Archives identifies, collects, preserves and provides
access to all formats of state and local government records of Arizona,
for the purposes of retaining evidence about public policies and programs,
providing protection or verification of individuals’ rights, and maintaining
information about noteworthy people, issues, places, and events that make
up the story of Arizona’s history.
Criteria
Archivists use the following criteria in combination to distinguish those
records which have lasting value. Agency staff who have questions about
which records are archival should flag such records for review by the
Archives before they are destroyed, even if the destruction is authorized
on a retention schedule.
The Archives collects records that retain value for its users, the Legislature,
state and local agencies, and the general public. The Archives looks for
types of records that are supported by existing patterns of use.
The Archives collects the records of state and local government in Arizona.
Every agency, large and small, creates records which document policies
and programs, and those records are valuable to the Archives.
In addition to public records, the Archives also collects the personal
papers of public officials and of other individuals or groups if they
contain significant information relating to Arizona government, public
policies and programs, or the history of Arizona.
To ensure that archival records are authentic and reliable, the content
of the records should not have deteriorated through fraudulent change
or loss. Changes made by the record creator (or the creator’s agent) should
be documented so that such changes are readily apparent. Note, however,
that there is no requirement that records be accurate; in some instances,
it is important to preserve inaccurate records to document that information
used to make decisions or to prove fraud.
Records of questionable origin are of questionable archival value. The
Archives seeks to collect the original records of the agency which created
them or its successor; it generally does not collect copies of an agency’s
records held by another agency.
Simple association with a notable individual – a mention, a signature
– does not, alone, make a record archival.
The Archives collects records which document the principal responsibilities
of the agency or office and that explain programs that help agencies accomplish
their missions by documenting the decision making process are likely to
be archival. In particular, the Archives seeks to acquire and preserve
those records that document the agency’s organization, that provide continuity
between changes in office, and that demonstrate government accountability.
Administrative records relating to an agency’s day-to-day operations
are generally not preserved in the Archives. These records include general
memoranda, human resources files, facilities files, routine activity reports,
and similar records.
Because agencies' policies and programs affect constituents, correspondence
and other records documenting public concerns and opinions regarding controversial
or divisive policies or programs often warrant archival preservation.
Some records retain their value over time because they contain information
about topics that help define the history and character of the state.
Records relating to water, agriculture, mining, tourism, urban growth,
environmental quality, multiculturalism, and the economy – among other
topics – will continue to have archival value. As time passes, new topics
will take on archival value.
Records that provide substantial, unique information and background relating
to a newsworthy event are often candidates for the Archives.
The Archives collects many records that document individuals' enduring
rights or benefits under government programs. Examples include, but are
not limited to, rights of citizenship, civil status (birth, death, marriage,
and divorce), and ownership of real property. The Archives generally does
not collect records that detail temporary benefits individuals have received
from government programs, such as welfare or public health.
The Archives typically collects an entire record series rather than trying
to identify individual files of historical value. (A record series is
a group of identical or related records which are normally used and filed
as a unit).
In rare circumstances, the Archives may collect sample records from a
large series of limited value to document a process or function performed
by the agency. Neither the frequency of use nor the size of an individual
file necessarily indicate archival value, but use and size may serve as
useful flags for more careful appraisal.
The Archives prefers to collect originals, rather than copies, because
it is easier to demonstrate the authenticity and reliability of original
records.
Records that contain detailed information may be added to the Archives,
in addition to summary reports, if other methods of analysis may yield
findings significantly different from those in the summary.
A record series is generally not acquired for the Archives if the information
contained in those records is routinely repeated in another series that
the Archives already collects.
The Archives collects records in all formats, including – but not limited
to – papers, photographs, and video and audio recordings. The Archives
also collects text, images, and sounds in electronic format.
Format occasionally makes records more valuable because it increases
their usefulness. A record series in paper may not be collected in paper
format because analysis is impractical. However, that series might be
collected if it is in electronic format because use of a computer makes
complex analysis practical.
Archives are not collections of nostalgia and historical curiosities.
Age alone does not justify preservation.
The Archives seeks to evaluate
all records from the Territorial Period before disposal. These records
were often labeled with terms that today would suggest the records are
not archival. Closer examination of those records’ content may reveal
that the description is inaccurate and that the records should be retained
permanently. |