Original order

Original order is a concept in archival theory that a group of records should be maintained in the same order as they were placed by the record's creator. Along with provenance, original order is a core tenet of the archival concept of respect des fonds. By keeping records in their original order, additional contextual information about the record's creator and the environment of their creation is preserved.

Principle

Though assuredly a feature of earlier archival practice, the first noteworthy articulation of the practice of original order was presented in the Manual for the Arrangement and Description of Archives (also known as The Dutch Manual) in 1898, where, in the chapter on the arrangement of archival documents, point #16 stats: "The system of arrangement must be based on the original organization of the archival collection, which in the main corresponds to the organization of the administrative body that produced it."

The Society of American Archivists Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology calls original order a "fundamental principle of archives" and posits two primary purposes: preserving "relationships and evidential significance" of records and facilitating use of the records by maintaining "the record creator's mechanisms to access.".[1] The SAA definition qualifies that original order is not necessarily the order of the records upon their delivery to an archive, noting that the original order may need to be created by the archivist.[2]

Critique

The principle of original order has been critiqued by many archivists. T. R. Schellenberg argued that the principle emerged from countries with a registry system of archival custodianship, in which registrars played an important role as intermediary between the agency or institution creating records and the archive that acquired and preserved them. The imposition of order by these registrars ensured records were logically and consistently organized prior to their delivery to the archive. For Schellenberg, writing in the 1960s, this registrar function no longer existed and records instead often were delivered to an archive absent any coherent or comprehensible system of organization. Per Schellenberg:

...in most modern filing systems, the original order given record items contributes little to an understanding of organic activity, and an archivist should therefore preserve the order only if it is useful... Methods of filing are unimportant to an archivist, except from the point of view of their utility in making records accessible."[3]

Other critics have noted that even the restoration of a presumed original order can risk erasing evidence of the management of a group of records after their original creation and organization.[4] As well, the shifting, malleable nature of large organizations, in which groups of records can pass though multiple custodians prior to their transfer to an archive, makes even identifying an original order difficult.[5]

Another criticism of original order is that it prioritizes the system of arrangement of records creators over an arrangement that best suits future users and researchers. This "usability" critique "acknowledges the evidential superiority of documents over filing systems by placing primary emphasis on access to documents.".[6] Use of an archival collection and ongoing processing or rearrangement may also impact ideas of what constitutes "original" order and what contextual information is prioritized for preservation, as Heather MacNeil details in recounting the ongoing "custodial intervention" of one collection.[7]

References

  1. "Original Order". Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology. Society of American Archivists.
  2. "Glossary of Archival and Records Terminology". Restoration of Original Order. Society of American Archivists.
  3. Schellenberg, T.R. (1965). The Management of Archives. Washington D.C.: Nation Archives and Records Administration. p. 95.
  4. Barr, Deborah (1989). "Protecting Provenance: Response to the Report of the Working Group on Description at the Fonds Level". Archivaria. 28: 141–145.
  5. Duchein, Michael (1983). "Theoretical Principles and Practical Problems of Respect des fonds in Archival Science". Archivaria. 16.
  6. Boles, Frank (1982). "Disrespecting Original Order" (PDF). The American Archivist. 45 (1): 31.
  7. MacNeil, Heather (Fall 2008). "Archivalterity: Rethinking Original Order". Archivaria. 66.
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