Record keeping and preservation in a crisis - Statement by ICA, ICIC, ARMA, CODATA, DPC, RDA, UNESCO MoW, WDS

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08 May 2020
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From: HERTERICH Patricia
<***@***.***>
Date: May 8, 2020 at 6:15:25 AM EDT
To: "***@***.***" <***@***.***>
Subject: Record keeping and preservation in a crisis
Reply-To: Research Data Management discussion list <***@***.***>
Dear colleagues,
You might be interested in the joint statement by the DPC, International Council on Archives, International Council of Information Commissioners, ARMA, CODATA, Research Data Alliance, UNESCO and the World Data System below. Translations in French and Spanish are available on the webpage at https://www.dpconline.org/news/the-duty-to-document-covid
Please share this message with senior executives in your institutions, professional bodies and opinion formers within your own domain as well as any other relevant channels.
With best wishes,
Patricia
Patricia Herterich
Research Data Specialist
Digital Curation Centre
University of Edinburgh
Pronouns: she/her
Email : ***@***.***
Twitter: @pherterich

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4542-9906
Currently working remotely – stay healthy and safe!
------
https://www.dpconline.org/news/the-duty-to-document-covid
COVID-19: The duty to document does not cease in a crisis, it becomes more essential.
We, the signatories of this statement, call on governments, businesses, and research institutions around the world to document their decisions and transactions now and for the future.
Building on the UNESCO communique ‘Turning the threat of COVID-19 into an opportunity for greater support to documentary heritage’ and reinforcing the call that decision-makers in the public and private sectors recognise the value of records management and archives, the statement has three calls to action:
Decisions must be documented
Sound records management is more important than ever with governments taking unprecedented steps to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.
Important decisions are being made by governments involving huge interventions in markets, healthcare and the daily lives of billions of people as they seek to secure the social, economic and cultural wellbeing of their populations and uphold the rule of law.
The pandemic is showing the benefits of access to large and small scale data to inform decision-making, but this does not reduce the need to contextualise records (i.e. paper documents, data, algorithms, code, audio-visual), nor does it exempt governments from documenting their data analysis processes or capturing critical information.
It is essential that the basis of those decisions, the decisions themselves and the senior decision-makers involved are thoroughly documented in order for governments to remain accountable both during and after the emergency and for future generations to be able to learn from our actions.
In these current circumstances, records may be at risk as new ways of working are rapidly adopted without the usual processes and infrastructure.
Urgent steps should be taken to address recordkeeping in ephemeral technologies that have to be deployed rapidly.
Records and data should be secured and preserved in all sectors
The duty to document does not only rest with governments, but also with commercial, research and educational institutions.
The impacts of the pandemic will be far reaching, and all organisations need to be cognisant of the importance of proper data and records management. Commercial entities will need essential records to be maintained for the continuity of operations, to evidence rights and entitlements, but also to be able to apply for government subsidies.
Research and educational institutions, especially those involved in tracing the disease, mapping and analysing the pathogen’s genome to develop vaccines, must ensure that their records and data are accurate and properly maintained.
The existence of proper documentation practices will enable not only business continuity, research and innovation, but also the evidence of how this crisis was managed for future generations. Archives are the custodians of the 1918 influenza pandemic records, which are being studied by scientists around the world and these institutions will eventually be the stewards for records related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The economic and societal impact of the current pandemic needs to be evidenced, not only to prevent and/or anticipate similar events but to understand the effect this event will have on current and future generations.
The security, preservation and access to digital content should be facilitated during the shutdown
The ability to study the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to prevent other such events, requires the existence of records management services and archives, otherwise records and data will not be generated and captured in ways that will enable their preservation and access, now or in the future. Records and archives are more than paper documents marked ‘official record’ – records and recordkeepers deal with increasingly complex digital materials such as algorithms and rough or raw data.
As the economic impact of COVID-19 is felt around the world, it will also be critical to secure, capture and preserve the records of defunct companies and/or private entities. This way, the social, cultural and even economic significance of former undertakings can live on.
Just as it is essential to have global agreements on reporting standards, specifications and definitions (as in the Sendai Framework), so it is necessary for archives to be recognised and resourced as the custodians of the raw data that underpins composite data or reported information. The duty to document this information does not cease in a crisis, it becomes more essential than ever.
ICA, ICIC, ARMA, CODATA, DPC, RDA, UNESCO MoW, WDS
May 2020
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
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  • Natalie Harrower's picture

    Author: Natalie Harrower

    Date: 11 May, 2020

    Thanks for this Claire - I managed to squeeze a reference to this into s 3.2.3 of the 3rd release, but it might need revisiting.
    Best
    Natalie
    _______
    Read our statement on 'Playing Our Part during COVID-19'
    _________________
    Dr. Natalie Harrower
    Director, Digital Repository of Ireland
    Royal Irish Academy
    ***@***.*** | @natalieharrower
    www.dri.ie | @dri_ireland
    European Commission FAIR data expert group
    European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) FAIR working group
    On 8 May 2020, at 20:11, caustin via RDA-COVID19 <***@***.***-groups.org> wrote:
    From: HERTERICH Patricia
    <***@***.***>
    Date: May 8, 2020 at 6:15:25 AM EDT
    To: "***@***.***" <***@***.***>
    Subject: Record keeping and preservation in a crisis
    Reply-To: Research Data Management discussion list <***@***.***>
    Dear colleagues,
    You might be interested in the joint statement by the DPC, International Council on Archives, International Council of Information Commissioners, ARMA, CODATA, Research Data Alliance, UNESCO and the World Data System below. Translations in French and Spanish are available on the webpage at https://www.dpconline.org/news/the-duty-to-document-covid
    Please share this message with senior executives in your institutions, professional bodies and opinion formers within your own domain as well as any other relevant channels.
    With best wishes,
    Patricia
    Patricia Herterich
    Research Data Specialist
    Digital Curation Centre
    University of Edinburgh
    Pronouns: she/her
    Email : ***@***.***
    Twitter: @pherterich

    https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4542-9906
    Currently working remotely – stay healthy and safe!
    ------
    https://www.dpconline.org/news/the-duty-to-document-covid
    COVID-19: The duty to document does not cease in a crisis, it becomes more essential.
    We, the signatories of this statement, call on governments, businesses, and research institutions around the world to document their decisions and transactions now and for the future.
    Building on the UNESCO communique ‘Turning the threat of COVID-19 into an opportunity for greater support to documentary heritage’ and reinforcing the call that decision-makers in the public and private sectors recognise the value of records management and archives, the statement has three calls to action:
    Decisions must be documented
    Sound records management is more important than ever with governments taking unprecedented steps to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Important decisions are being made by governments involving huge interventions in markets, healthcare and the daily lives of billions of people as they seek to secure the social, economic and cultural wellbeing of their populations and uphold the rule of law.
    The pandemic is showing the benefits of access to large and small scale data to inform decision-making, but this does not reduce the need to contextualise records (i.e. paper documents, data, algorithms, code, audio-visual), nor does it exempt governments from documenting their data analysis processes or capturing critical information.
    It is essential that the basis of those decisions, the decisions themselves and the senior decision-makers involved are thoroughly documented in order for governments to remain accountable both during and after the emergency and for future generations to be able to learn from our actions.
    In these current circumstances, records may be at risk as new ways of working are rapidly adopted without the usual processes and infrastructure.
    Urgent steps should be taken to address recordkeeping in ephemeral technologies that have to be deployed rapidly.
    Records and data should be secured and preserved in all sectors
    The duty to document does not only rest with governments, but also with commercial, research and educational institutions.
    The impacts of the pandemic will be far reaching, and all organisations need to be cognisant of the importance of proper data and records management. Commercial entities will need essential records to be maintained for the continuity of operations, to evidence rights and entitlements, but also to be able to apply for government subsidies.
    Research and educational institutions, especially those involved in tracing the disease, mapping and analysing the pathogen’s genome to develop vaccines, must ensure that their records and data are accurate and properly maintained.
    The existence of proper documentation practices will enable not only business continuity, research and innovation, but also the evidence of how this crisis was managed for future generations. Archives are the custodians of the 1918 influenza pandemic records, which are being studied by scientists around the world and these institutions will eventually be the stewards for records related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    The economic and societal impact of the current pandemic needs to be evidenced, not only to prevent and/or anticipate similar events but to understand the effect this event will have on current and future generations.
    The security, preservation and access to digital content should be facilitated during the shutdown
    The ability to study the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to prevent other such events, requires the existence of records management services and archives, otherwise records and data will not be generated and captured in ways that will enable their preservation and access, now or in the future. Records and archives are more than paper documents marked ‘official record’ – records and recordkeepers deal with increasingly complex digital materials such as algorithms and rough or raw data.
    As the economic impact of COVID-19 is felt around the world, it will also be critical to secure, capture and preserve the records of defunct companies and/or private entities. This way, the social, cultural and even economic significance of former undertakings can live on.
    Just as it is essential to have global agreements on reporting standards, specifications and definitions (as in the Sendai Framework), so it is necessary for archives to be recognised and resourced as the custodians of the raw data that underpins composite data or reported information. The duty to document this information does not cease in a crisis, it becomes more essential than ever.
    ICA, ICIC, ARMA, CODATA, DPC, RDA, UNESCO MoW, WDS
    May 2020
    The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
    ________________________________
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