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TOOLKIT
INTRODUCTION
THE NEED FOR A RECORDKEEPING FOR GOOD GOVERNANCE
TOOLKIT
The Pacific Regional Branch
of the International Council on Archives (PARBICA) recognised
at its conference in
Nadi
,
Fiji
in 2005, that good recordkeeping underpins public sector efficiency and
accountability. By improving recordkeeping practices, governments will
become more efficient in their everyday activities and be able to be more
accountable for their actions.
In response, PARBICA is developing this
Toolkit as a series of resources that promote a common approach to best
practice recordkeeping across the Pacific and in alignment with
international best practices. Although cultures and administrative laws
and traditions throughout the Pacific region vary from place to place,
there is also a great deal of similarity in the ways in which governments
function today. By identifying those similarities through research and
consultation, and combining that knowledge with expertise in modern
approaches to recordkeeping, the tools will be designed in such a way that
they will be able to be adapted or customised to suit the particular
requirements of any country.
The Toolkit will assist Pacific governments to meet their legal
obligations and help protect the rights and entitlements of the citizens
of these countries and territories.
WHAT THE TOOLKIT WILL PROVIDE
The Recordkeeping for Good
Governance Toolkit (the Toolkit) has been produced by PARBICA for Pacific
archivists to better equip government agencies across the Pacific to
improve the state of recordkeeping within their administrations.
Given the Toolkit is modular in nature, this
introduction cannot provide a complete summation of what the Toolkit will
finally include. Funding has already been secured from the
Australian Government’s AusAID program for Stage One of the project.
This stage will develop:
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a brochure (and
possibly a poster) aimed at permanent secretaries, chief executive
officers and other departmental heads that explains their
responsibilities in relation to recordkeeping, and highlights the
benefits of ensuring that those responsibilities are met
-
a checklist to help an
organisation ascertain whether it has in place the things it needs to
manage records well
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guidelines for
Pacific
Island
archivists and records managers on how to identify, document,
communicate and fulfil public sector recordkeeping requirements
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PowerPoint slides that
will help our members introduce and explain these products in their
own countries.
The PARBICA Bureau, assisted by the National
Archives of Australia (NAA), has accepted responsibility for maintaining,
distributing and updating the modules of the Toolkit for as long as they
are needed and remain useful.
It is envisaged that over time the Toolkit will grow to include
further guidelines for Pacific archivists and records managers on how to:
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further
identify, document, communicate and fulfil public sector recordkeeping
requirements in each jurisdiction
-
provide
information on records classification, disposal, storage and disaster
prevention and recovery
-
provide
training to staff, including training packages related to Toolkit
modules
-
develop
assessment checklists and frameworks (including information on
managing emails, access guidelines, auditor checklists etc).
The Toolkit has been produced through a collaborative process with input
from a variety of archivists from across the Pacific. The PARBICA Bureau
would like to acknowledge the assistance of these archivists, who are
listed on page 12. However, PARBICA does not want the collaboration to end
here. Stage One of the
Toolkit was overseen by our Reference Group and the PARBICA Bureau, and
there continue to be opportunities for other PARBICA members and
archivists to become involved.
PARBICA is committed to continuing to add to the Toolkit so that we can
develop world-class tools for good recordkeeping that are relevant to our
Pacific environment. The PARBICA Bureau welcomes comments and suggestions
from any interested party. If you would like to provide feedback or
suggest areas or topics that PARBICA should cover in future parts of the
Toolkit, please contact the PARBICA Secretary-General. Contact details can
be found on the PARBICA website at: <http://www.parbica.org/bureau1.htm>.
TOWARDS GOOD GOVERNANCE AND GOOD RECORDKEEPING
Organisations and
government agencies can considerably reduce the effort required to work
towards good governance and good recordkeeping if a leader such as a chief
executive officer, director-general or agency head provides motivation and
support.
Leaders are responsible for protecting their organisation’s,
government’s and the public’s interests. One way of doing this is to
make sure that the organisation is practicing the principles of good
governance.
Governance is the way in which an organisation arranges its processes and
structures so that it can make decisions, carry out its work and monitor
its progress. Good governance means making sure the office or agency is
organised and does its work in a way that it efficient and accountable,
and complies with relevant laws and regulations.
The brochure which accompanies the Toolkit is aimed at the leaders of
government agencies to help them understand the importance of good
recordkeeping and good governance. The brochure points out to leaders that
protecting the government’s and the community’s interests in an
efficient way is an important aspect of their role within government and
their organisations. Contact PARBICA if you require copies of the
brochure.
Efficiency
Keeping good records helps
an organisation or government agency to organise information about its
actions and decisions. This can make it easier to find the information
when it is needed, which will help the organisation or government agency
to work more efficiently.
Protecting the government’s interests
Keeping
good records helps to protect the government by proving what actions it
has taken. If records are not maintained to back up what has happened,
other people—including a court or an auditor—may not believe the
government’s position if someone else claims that something different
happened.
Protecting the community’s interests
Keeping good records helps
to protect the whole community by protecting the information that the
government has about other people. Governments should always act for the
benefit of their citizens, but if they do not keep and use information
carefully, they can actually cause harm to the people they are supposed to
help.
WHAT IS A RECORD?
The International Standard on Records Management defines a record as:
Information created, received, and maintained as
evidence and information by an organisation or person, in pursuance of
legal obligations or in the transaction of business.
Organisations should create records whenever they carry out their
business.
Let us use an example to
illustrate this. To apply for a fishing licence, fishers may need to
complete an application form, which results in a record being created. To
complete the licence application process, they may have to pay a fee.
The fishers would then
expect a government official to supply them with a document, such as a
receipt or the licence, showing that they had paid the money. This becomes
the proof that the transaction took place, and enables them to go fishing.
The government official would also need to document the processes that
took place—and this would become the official government record of the
transaction.
After a record has been
created, it is then stored or maintained so that it can be easily found
when it is needed again. For example, if fishers need to produce their
fishing licences for some reason, but their licences have been lost, they
would expect to be able to get a copy of each licence from the government.
The government should then be able to quickly find the original
application form and a record that the licence had already been paid for,
so that a copy of the licence could be supplied.
WHAT IS RECORDKEEPING?
Recordkeeping is the
processes and systems an organisation uses to make sure that records can
be found quickly and easily and that they are preserved for as long as
they are needed.
Creating records
Organisations need to have
processes in place to make sure that records are created. A procedure
might be in place for when a person wants to apply for a fishing licence.
The fisher may need to complete an application form and take it to the
government for processing. When the fisher completes the form, a record is
created. Organisations can have tools like forms, or rules that make sure
staff put documents in files, to make sure that records about their
activities are created.
Controlling records
Organisations need to have
systems for controlling their records so that they can be managed
efficiently and found again when they are needed. When the fisher hands
the completed application form to the government department, there might
be a procedure to help the government clerk know what to do with the
completed application form. For example, the record might need to be
placed into a particular file. The naming of that file might be controlled
by a system which is a list of words that are appropriate to use. The list
of words might include other types of licences that are issued by the
government, such as driving, hunting and shopkeeper licences. So an
appropriate name to call the file where the fishing licence is kept might
be Licences—Fishing. If the government also processes driving licences,
that file might be called Licences—Driving. If there was ever a need to
find the original fishing application form, then the file titling system
makes it obvious which file the application should be in: it will be in
the file called Licenses—Fishing, and not the file called
Licenses—Driving.
Using records
Organisations need to have
rules about how their records are used so that it can find the records
when they are needed, and also to make sure that only people who are
allowed to see government information have access to the files. A
department might have a rule which all staff must follow that says all
files must be kept in a file registry, and not in a staff member’s
office. When staff need to see a file, there might be a procedure about
how the registry clerk keeps track of who has the file. For example, the
registry clerk might need to record the date, file name and number and who
the file has been given to into a list, book, register or computer
program.
Disposing of records
Organisations need to
follow rules about how long they keep their records, so that files are
kept for as long as they are needed by the department, the government or
the public. There may be a legal requirement to keep certain records for a
period of time. There are also records that are very important or have
significant historical value. When records are no longer needed for legal
reasons or business needs, then a decision might need to be made what to
do with them. If they are important records, they may need to be
transferred to an archive for further safe-keeping and preservation. If
they are not important, then the decision will need to be made whether or
not to destroy them. Having a system in place to know how long records
need to be kept for legal or business requirements is very important for
good governance and accountability.
WHAT IS AN ARCHIVE?
When records are no longer
required to be kept by an organisation or government department for
everyday operations, one option is to destroy them. However, those records
that have historical research value should be transferred to an archive.
The word ‘archive’
means a record that has been selected for preservation because of its
value as long-term evidence of an organisation’s actions and decisions.
‘Archive’ can also mean the place where records that have long-term
value are kept.
WHAT IS THE ROLE OF AN ARCHIVIST?
The archivist is a
professional who assesses, collects, organises, preserves, maintains
control over, and provides access to information or records that have been
determined to have long-term value.
Archivists have an
important role to work with organisations to ensure that valuable records
are preserved for future use. They should be involved in deciding what
value records have and how long they need to be kept. Archivists can also
advise government departments and other organisations on the best way to
manage records so that they are:
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created when they are needed
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stored correctly so that they are protected from
damage and misuse
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easily found when they are needed
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preserved for as long as they are needed.
WHY SHOULD ARCHIVISTS
CARE
ABOUT THE STATE OF
RECORDKEEPING
?
Some people may feel that
it is not the archivist’s job to worry about the state of recordkeeping
within their government administrations, because this is the role of
records managers and registry staff. There are a number of reasons why
archivists should look closely at what is happening in their government
administrations.
In some countries, the
government’s Archives Act may require the archivist to be involved in
recordkeeping, by advising governments on how to manage records or
selecting records for long-term preservation. This gives archivists an
important role in ensuring that governments retain the records that they
need to do their work efficiently and to account for their decisions and
actions.
Because archivists have
experience in making decisions about which records must be kept for
historical research, they also understand the business that the records
document and the processes used to create them. Archivists are able to use
these skills to help governments create better records in the first
place—because they understand what systems create good records.
Archivists also have an
interest in making sure that records are well kept because good records
make good archives. If a government department lets its records be damaged
because they are stored badly, those records will still be damaged when
they are transferred to the archives. If a department does not have a good
system for titling its files, it will be hard for the department to find
the files that it wants. It will also be hard for the archives to find the
right files, because the file titles will not provide good information
about what is inside them. By being involved in government recordkeeping,
archivists can help to make sure that records are well kept, both now and
in the future.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The PARBICA Bureau
acknowledges the assistance of the following people who participated in
the Toolkit workshop which was held in
Brisbane
,
Australia
on 19 and
20 July 2007
:
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Cheryl
Stanborough
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Yap
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Mila
Tulimanu
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Tuvalu
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Albert
Tu’ivanuavou Vaea
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Tonga
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Amela
Silipa
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Samoa
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Tukul
Kaiku
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Papua
New Guinea
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Jacob
Hevelawa
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Papua
New Guinea
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Naomi
Ngirakamerang
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Palau
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Evelyn
Wareham
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New
Zealand
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Semiti
Ravatu
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Fiji
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Opeta
Nau Alefaio
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Fiji
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Mere
Veitayaki
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Fiji
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Mark Semmler
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Australia
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Dani
Wickman
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Australia
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