On the crest of a wave: transforming the archival future

  • Laura Millar Editorial and Archival Services, Roberts Creek, Canada
Keywords: Archives, technology, future, profession, advocacy

Abstract

The profession of digital archivist is crystallising, fundamentally challenging traditional archival roles. The very nature of digital records also challenges the sustainability of archival systems and collections. Records that used to stay stable for decades in an analogue world now risk being lost or damaged within moments of creation. How should archivists react to these changes? Archivists have to lift ourselves out of our analogue environment and focus more effort on forging a new path, to reposition archives, archival institutions and archival practitioners more strategically for the future. To do this, archivists must resist the temptation to think that we and we alone – as people, as archivists or as today’s archivists as opposed to yesterday’s archivists – can come up with the ultimate solution to the world’s recordkeeping problems. Archivists must keep innovating, absolutely. But we also need to be agile and flexible, remembering that anything we come up with today will be superseded at some point in the future – increasingly, in the very near future. Archivists need to forge links with archives, systems and people in order to come up with approaches to records and archives care that remain usable now and flexible well into the future.

Published
2017-06-25
How to Cite
Millar L. (2017) “On the crest of a wave: transforming the archival future”, Archives & Manuscripts, 45(2), pp. 59-76. doi: 10.1080/01576895.2017.1328696.
Section
Articles