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Recordkeeping Informatics for A Networked Age
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
The focus of this book becomes more relevant to governance every day as rational and scientific thought flounders under the weight of post-truth politics and a welter of 'alternative facts'. The authors of this book as practitioners and as academics have witnessed and analysed the way changing technologies and the expanding continuum of recorded information have contributed to the disruption of normality in governance. Over time they have developed ideas about the relationship between social functioning, informatics, and the ethics of recordkeeping practices, and in this book they use their thinking about archival practices to present a new teamwork and Internet-based business application approach that can help a recordkeeping mind to develop and help usher in a new era of cyber-maturity.
Author Biography
Dr Joanne Evans is an ARC Future Fellow in the Faculty of IT at Monash University. She is co-ordinator of the Records Continuum Research Group and her research relates to the design and development of recordkeeping and archiving systems, with particular emphasis on participatory recordkeeping models, interoperability and sustainability. Gillian Oliver is Associate Professor of Information Management and Director of the Centre for Organisational and Social Informatics at Monash University. Previous academic and practice roles were in information management in the United Kingdom, Germany and New Zealand. Barbara Reed has been a consultant in the fields of records, archives and information management since 1985. She is active in professional arenas, including the teaching and training environments. She has played a major role in the development of Australian and International standards for records management, digitisation, recordkeeping metadata and others Frank Upward worked as an archivist, records manager, and information manager before accepting a position at Monash University where he designed and taught in a wide range of courses. He is best known internationally for his records continuum model and his collaborative work with Sue McKemmish.
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