Disaster recovery means the readiness to recover records after the disaster has struck. The planning for such an eventuality is part of disaster mitigation, but carrying it out is part of disaster recovery.
Protecting Vital Records from Disaster
Sampling Case Records
In my last blog post, I discussed case files—often voluminous records that contain sensitive, personal information about individuals. Archivists have several appraisal options to consider when reviewing case files:
Retain all records permanently.
Retain only key documents from the files.
Take a sample or selection of the records.
Take an example of the records.
Refuse to accept the records.
Destroy all records.
Handling Case Files in the Archives
Considerations Used to Appraise Archival Records
What is the value of the information contained in archival materials? To determine this, archivists concentrate on the circumstances of creation.
The focus is on identifying the role and significance of the records creator and the position that the records creator held within the organization. The records of a high-level person in an unimportant function may be less critical than lower-level records documenting a vital function. Archivists consider the creator’s position in the organization, the unit activities, and the record function.
Managing Electronic Records in Archives
How Electronic Records and Physical Records Differ
Archival Description and Cataloging
Archival description, primarily, is a way to bring order to the chaos of unprocessed records of enduring value.
Description is not just what archivists do to an individual collection. Description begins when the collection first comes into a repository—when archivists accession collections into a repository’s recordkeeping system. Archival description is incremental and progressive, and proceeds in a continuum. As archivists work further on a collection, they can provide more detailed and comprehensive information. Archivists are also able to provide a broader range of access points, both local and remote.
Change and Continuity with Analog and Digital Records
Two major events affecting archives and records management have occurred. The basic principles, while still valid, need to be adapted to the contemporary information environment. The world in which archival procedures implement those principles has changed.
Technology has complicated the processes for creating and managing records, and the environment in which archival management takes place has changed as well.
Providing Access to Archival Collections
Archivists have always cataloged their collections. In the past, repositories had card catalogs and catalog level descriptions in published repository guides.
Some catalogs followed library rules of the time, and some followed idiosyncratic styles. The one-of-a-kind nature of archival materials guided the descriptive tools—such as finding aids, registers, or inventories—created to provide access to them.









