posted on 2021-02-09, 13:49authored byJames Lappin, Tom Jackson, Graham Matthews, Clare Ravenwood
Two rival records management models emerged during the 1990s. Duranti’s model
involved moving records out of business applications into a repository which has a
structure/schema optimised for recordkeeping. Bearman’s model involved intervening in business applications to ensure that their functionality and structure/schema
are optimised for record keeping. In 2013 the US National Archives and Records
Administration began asking Federal agencies to schedule important email accounts
for permanent preservation. This approach cannot be mapped to either Duranti or
Bearman’s model. A third records management model has therefore emerged, a
model in which records are managed in place within business applications even
where those applications have a sub-optimal structure/schema. This model can also
be seen in the records retention features of the Microsoft 365 cloud suite. This paper
asks whether there are any circumstances in which the in-place model could be preferable to Duranti and Bearman’s models. It explores the question by examining the
evolution of archival theory on the organisation of records. The main perspectives
deployed are those of realism and of records continuum theory. The paper characterises the frst two decades of this century as an era of partial automation, during which organisations have had a general capability to automate the assignment of
business correspondence to a sub-optimal structure/schema (that of their email system and/or other messaging system) but not to an optimal structure/schema. In such
an era any insistence on optimising the structure/schema within which correspondence is managed may paradoxically result in a reduction in recordkeeping efciency
and reliability.
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Springer under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/