- University of Amsterdam, Humanities, Faculty Memberadd
- Geert-Jan van Bussel is a certified archivist and holds a Ph.D. in information and archival studies. He is Assistant ... moreGeert-Jan van Bussel is a certified archivist and holds a Ph.D. in information and archival studies. He is Assistant Professor (Digital Archiving & Compliance) at [1] the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences and [2] the University of Amsterdam. He is director of an international consultancy on enterprise information management, digital archiving and governance and member of the board of several ICT companies.edit
Archives are, more than ever, organizational and technological constructs, based on organizational demands, desires, and considerations influencing configuration, management, appraisal, and preservation. For that reason, they are, more... more
Archives are, more than ever, organizational and technological constructs, based on organizational demands, desires, and considerations influencing configuration, management, appraisal, and preservation. For that reason, they are, more than ever, distortions of reality, offering biased (and/or manipulated) images of the past and present an extremely simplified mirror of social reality. The information objects within that archive are (again: more than ever), fragile, manipulable, of disputable provenance, doubtful context, and uncertain quality. Their authenticity is in jeopardy.
The “Allure of Digital Archives” will be more about finding knowledge about the archive as a whole than about finding knowledge hidden in the information objects that are its constituents. It will be about determining the value of a digital archive as a “trusted” resource for historical research. To be successful in that endeavour, it will be necessary to assess the possibility to “reconstruct the past” of the digital archive. That assessment would allow historians to understand quality, provenance, context, content, and accessibility of the digital archive, not only in its design stage but also in its life cycle.
In this chapter, I present the theoretical framework of the “Archive–as–Is” as an instrument for such an assessment. It is possible for historians to use this framework as a declarative model for the way archives have been designed, configured, managed, and maintained. It will allow historians to understand why archives are as they are, and why records are part of it (or not). Using the framework, historians can determine the research value of a digital archive as a historical resource.
The “Allure of Digital Archives” will be more about finding knowledge about the archive as a whole than about finding knowledge hidden in the information objects that are its constituents. It will be about determining the value of a digital archive as a “trusted” resource for historical research. To be successful in that endeavour, it will be necessary to assess the possibility to “reconstruct the past” of the digital archive. That assessment would allow historians to understand quality, provenance, context, content, and accessibility of the digital archive, not only in its design stage but also in its life cycle.
In this chapter, I present the theoretical framework of the “Archive–as–Is” as an instrument for such an assessment. It is possible for historians to use this framework as a declarative model for the way archives have been designed, configured, managed, and maintained. It will allow historians to understand why archives are as they are, and why records are part of it (or not). Using the framework, historians can determine the research value of a digital archive as a historical resource.
Research Interests:
Este trabajo tiene como objetivo encontrar una base teórica viable para la gestión de la información empresarial (EIM) en un Mundo 2.0. El entorno “Archive-as- Is” es una teoría archivística dirigida a la organización. Es un modelo para... more
Este trabajo tiene como objetivo encontrar una base teórica viable para la gestión de la información empresarial (EIM) en un Mundo 2.0. El entorno “Archive-as- Is” es una teoría archivística dirigida a la organización. Es un modelo para entender el archivo “tal cual”, cómo se diseñó, construyó, procesó, manipuló y administró, y cómo “creció” para constituir el archivo que la organización que lo generó quería que fuera. Desde el momento de su creación, los archivos son distorsiones de la realidad, solo presentan imágenes sesgadas del pasado debido a la forma en que las organizaciones (y las personas) se “comportan”. La contextualización (de los archiveros) será crucial para “corregir” la distorsión. El desafío es garantizar que el archivo se pueda utilizar como un recurso “confiable” y se administre de tal manera que una organización pueda sobrevivir a los desafíos de Mundo 2.0. El marco de actuación del “Archive-as-Is” podría utilizarse para conseguirlo.
This paper has the objective of finding a viable theoretical foundation for Enterprise Information Management (EIM) in World 2.0. The framework of the “Archive-as-Is” is an organization-oriented archival theory. The framework is a declarative model for understanding the archive “as is”, how it has been designed, constructed, processed, manipulated, and managed, and how it has “grown” to be the archive that the organization that generated it, wanted it to be. From the mo-ment of their creation, archives are distortions of reality, only presenting biased images of the past due to the way organizations (and the people) “behave”. Contextualizing (by archivists) will be crucial to “correct” that distortion as much as is possible. The challenge in World 2.0 is to ensure that the organizational archive can be used as a “trusted” resource and be managed in such a way that an organization can survive the challenges of World 2.0. The theoretical framework of the “Archive-as-Is” may be the model that could be used to realize just that.
This paper has the objective of finding a viable theoretical foundation for Enterprise Information Management (EIM) in World 2.0. The framework of the “Archive-as-Is” is an organization-oriented archival theory. The framework is a declarative model for understanding the archive “as is”, how it has been designed, constructed, processed, manipulated, and managed, and how it has “grown” to be the archive that the organization that generated it, wanted it to be. From the mo-ment of their creation, archives are distortions of reality, only presenting biased images of the past due to the way organizations (and the people) “behave”. Contextualizing (by archivists) will be crucial to “correct” that distortion as much as is possible. The challenge in World 2.0 is to ensure that the organizational archive can be used as a “trusted” resource and be managed in such a way that an organization can survive the challenges of World 2.0. The theoretical framework of the “Archive-as-Is” may be the model that could be used to realize just that.
Research Interests:
The abundance of (structured and unstructured) information objects leads to organizational challenges. To facilitate fail-proof information management guaranteeing accountability, compliance, and security is by no means new. Until a few... more
The abundance of (structured and unstructured) information objects leads to organizational challenges. To facilitate fail-proof information management guaranteeing accountability, compliance, and security is by no means new. Until a few years ago, organizations captured and controlled information objects in an infrastructure that did not cross the borders of the organizational structure. If accountability, compliance, security, or other business-related issues arose, there was a single ‘point of control’ defined. That ‘point of control’ became diffused with the ongoing integration of business processes between different organizations, stimulated by sharing information objects through (for instance) social media and the breakthrough of supply chain and ERP systems causing information integration. As it became common practice to share information objects between different parties, it could become difficult to ascertain which of the integrated process owners was responsible for accountability, compliance, security, or information accessibility. It is proving challenging for traditional ways, methods and technologies to achieve the expected information quality, compliance and information governance. Guaranteeing an accountable, compliant, transparent, and effectively performing organization in a dynamically changing ICT environment, recognizing both structured and unstructured information objects, is problematic. EIM’s focus is changing to incorporate unstructured information objects, but lacks the theoretical foundation to do so effectively. The key for such a theoretical foundation for EIM may be ‘the archive’ . For defining business strategies, Smith and Steadman (1981) already acknowledged organizational archives as crucial resources. They are very important for organizational accountability, business process performance, and reaching business objectives. For EIM to find a theoretical foundation based on records and archives, only archival science seems to offer applicable, encompassing theoretical frameworks.
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In this part, I will extensively discuss the theoretical framework of the ‘Archive-as-Is’. I developed the theory as a pragmatic view on archives and records, their genesis, construction, use, and continuous management. The... more
In this part, I will extensively discuss the theoretical framework of the ‘Archive-as-Is’. I developed the theory as a pragmatic view on archives and records, their genesis, construction, use, and continuous management. The ‘Archive-as-Is’ is a declarative model for understanding the archive of an organization (or organizational chain), how it has been designed, created, processed, manipulated, and managed as a valuable business resource. This framework explains how the archive has ‘grown’ to be the archive that the organization or the person that generated it, wants it to be (in short: the ‘Archive-as-Is’). An overview of the conceptual background of the theoretical framework will follow this introduction. After that I will elaborate on the assumptions on which the theoretical framework is based, followed with a graphical model of the framework. The next part will be an in-depth discussion of all components of the framework. This part of the article will be concluded with several concluding remarks, and remarks about further research
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More than 80 % of all information in an organization is unstructured, created by knowledge workers engaged in peer-to-peer networks of expertise to share knowledge across organizational boundaries. Enterprise Information Systems (EIS) do... more
More than 80 % of all information in an organization is unstructured, created by knowledge workers engaged in peer-to-peer networks of expertise to share knowledge across organizational boundaries. Enterprise Information Systems (EIS) do not integrate unstructured information. At best, they integrate links to unstructured information connected with
structured information in their databases. The amount of unstructured information is rising quickly. Ensuring the quality of this unstructured information is difficult. It is often inaccessible, unavailable, incomplete, irrelevant, untimely, inaccurate, and/or incomprehensible. It becomes problematic to reconstruct what has happened in organizations. When used for organizational policies, decisions, products, actions and transactions, structured and unstructured information are called records. They are an entity of information, consisting out of an information object (structured or unstructured) and its metadata. They are important for organizational accountability and business process performance, for without them reconstruction of past happenings and meaningful production become an impossibility. Organization-wide management of
records is not a common functionality for EIS, resulting in [1] a fragmentation in the management of records, where structured and unstructured information objects are stored in a variety of systems, unconnected with their metadata; [2] a fragmentation in metadata management, leading to a loss of contextuality because metadata are separated from their information objects; and [3] a declining quality or records, because their provenance, integrity, and preservation are in peril. Organizational accountability is based on records and their context to reconstruct the past. Because records are not controlled by EIS, they can only marginally be used for accountability. The challenge for organizational accountability is to generate trusted records, fixed and contextual information objects inseparately linked with metadata that capture context
to regain evidential value and to allow for the reconstruction of the past. The research question of this paper is how to capture records and their context within EIS to regain the evidential value of records to allow for a more robust organizational accountability. To find an answer, we need to pay attention to the concept of context, on how to capture context in metadata, and how to embed and manage records in EIS.
structured information in their databases. The amount of unstructured information is rising quickly. Ensuring the quality of this unstructured information is difficult. It is often inaccessible, unavailable, incomplete, irrelevant, untimely, inaccurate, and/or incomprehensible. It becomes problematic to reconstruct what has happened in organizations. When used for organizational policies, decisions, products, actions and transactions, structured and unstructured information are called records. They are an entity of information, consisting out of an information object (structured or unstructured) and its metadata. They are important for organizational accountability and business process performance, for without them reconstruction of past happenings and meaningful production become an impossibility. Organization-wide management of
records is not a common functionality for EIS, resulting in [1] a fragmentation in the management of records, where structured and unstructured information objects are stored in a variety of systems, unconnected with their metadata; [2] a fragmentation in metadata management, leading to a loss of contextuality because metadata are separated from their information objects; and [3] a declining quality or records, because their provenance, integrity, and preservation are in peril. Organizational accountability is based on records and their context to reconstruct the past. Because records are not controlled by EIS, they can only marginally be used for accountability. The challenge for organizational accountability is to generate trusted records, fixed and contextual information objects inseparately linked with metadata that capture context
to regain evidential value and to allow for the reconstruction of the past. The research question of this paper is how to capture records and their context within EIS to regain the evidential value of records to allow for a more robust organizational accountability. To find an answer, we need to pay attention to the concept of context, on how to capture context in metadata, and how to embed and manage records in EIS.
Research Interests:
This paper is resulting from a research project at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, in which the fields of organization, information and archival studies have been integrated. We argue that the archivistic concept of the record... more
This paper is resulting from a research project at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, in which the fields of organization, information and archival studies have been integrated. We argue that the archivistic concept of the record keeping system, in information-intensive organizations, can be used as an instrument for improving the performance of the document-flow in a business process, and, as a result, on the process. Archival documents must not only contain the information related to the result of an activity, but also information both on the circumstances of their creation and organization and business processes. We think this can be realized by using a record keeping system, with as essential elements: context, quality, appraisal, warehousing and logistics. The instrument we have developed as a translation of the conceptual model is the process-specific archival document-file, a meta-file that, after translation, operates as an engine managing document management. The approach that was developed was tested in a case-study in the city of Veldhoven. From the case-study, it became clear that our approach leads to considerable improvements in the flow of documents and thus in the primary processes supported by these documents.
Research Interests:
De informatiehuishouding van een organisatie kent twee functies, de informatie- en de verantwoordingsfunctie. Met behulp van enkele ‘real-life’ casussen tonen we het belang van deze functies aan voor het bereiken van performance van... more
De informatiehuishouding van een organisatie kent twee functies, de informatie- en de verantwoordingsfunctie. Met behulp van enkele ‘real-life’ casussen tonen we het belang van deze functies aan voor het bereiken van performance van bedrijfsprocessen. In deze casussen wordt duidelijk dat om deze functies te kunnen realiseren een ‘organizational memory’ nodig is. Om de kwaliteit van dit ‘memory’ te waarborgen is, zo zullen wij laten zien, content auditing essentieel.
The world is changing rapidly. It is becoming an increasingly information-rich and information-dependent platform. Information is easily and (mostly) automatically recorded and stored to be accessed and retrieved on a later date. ICTs... more
The world is changing rapidly. It is becoming an increasingly information-rich and information-dependent platform. Information is easily and (mostly) automatically recorded and stored to be accessed and retrieved on a later date. ICTs contribute to a (seemingly) inescapable loss of privacy, because this information is processed without knowledge or consent from individual people. Companies are building new ecosystems online, and are building online shops, communities, user groups, and other ways to promote their products. The economy is developing into a digitized economy. All boundaries between the virtual and the real worlds are blurring. The digital universe is expanding in unprecedented ways. But there is so much information generated, stored, and used, that its accessibility is in jeopardy, because the possibilities to identify information are becoming more difficult. To protect privacy and to enhance accessibility, the global legal frameworks are expanding, creating problems in implementing compliance frameworks for public and private organizations alike. Organizational accountability is dependent on accessible information. Public expectations do want objectives as transparency, privacy, due process, compliance, and security of organizational information implemented within legal frameworks. Not meeting those objectives is extremely 'bad for business'. For realizing information access, archiving is extremely important. Archiving is managing information over time using the 'information value chain' to guarantee the four dimensions of information (quality, context, relevance, and survival). It is quite surprising that there is almost no research done about the relationship between information accessibility, archiving, and the public demand for organizational accountability. For eGovernment to succeed, those three subjects are of vital importance .
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The external expectations of organizational accountability force organizational leaders to find solutions and answers in organizational (and information) governance to assuage the feelings of doubt and unease about the behaviour of the... more
The external expectations of organizational accountability force organizational leaders to find solutions and answers in organizational (and information) governance to assuage the feelings of doubt and unease about the behaviour of the organization and its employees that continuously seem to be expressed in the organizational environment.
Organizational leaders have to align the interests of their share– and stakeholders in finding a balance between performance and accountability, individual and collective ethical approaches, and business ethics based on compliance, based on integrity, or both. They have to integrate accountability in organizational governance based on a strategy that defines boundaries for rules and routines. They need to define authority structures and find ways to control the behaviour of their employees, without being very restrictive and coercive. They have to implement accountability structures in organizational interactions that are extremely complex, nonlinear, and dynamic, in which (mostly informal) relational networks of employees traverse formal structures.
Formal processes, rules, and regulations, used for control and compliance, cannot handle such environments, continuously in ‘social flux’, unpredictable, unstable, and (largely) unmanageable. It is a challenging task that asks exceptional management skills from organizational leaders. The external expectations of accountability cannot be neglected, even if it is not always clear what is exactly meant with that concept.
Why is this (very old) concept still of importance for modern organizations?
In this book, organizational governance, information governance, and accountability are the core subjects, just like the relationship between them. A framework is presented of twelve manifestations of organizational accountability the every organization had to deal with. An approach is introduced for strategically govern organizational accountability with three components: behaviour, accountability, and external assessments.
The core propositions in this book are that without paying strategic attention to the behaviour of employees and managers and to information governance and management, it will be extremely difficult for organizational leaders to find a balance between the two objectives of organizational governance: performance and accountability.
Organizational leaders have to align the interests of their share– and stakeholders in finding a balance between performance and accountability, individual and collective ethical approaches, and business ethics based on compliance, based on integrity, or both. They have to integrate accountability in organizational governance based on a strategy that defines boundaries for rules and routines. They need to define authority structures and find ways to control the behaviour of their employees, without being very restrictive and coercive. They have to implement accountability structures in organizational interactions that are extremely complex, nonlinear, and dynamic, in which (mostly informal) relational networks of employees traverse formal structures.
Formal processes, rules, and regulations, used for control and compliance, cannot handle such environments, continuously in ‘social flux’, unpredictable, unstable, and (largely) unmanageable. It is a challenging task that asks exceptional management skills from organizational leaders. The external expectations of accountability cannot be neglected, even if it is not always clear what is exactly meant with that concept.
Why is this (very old) concept still of importance for modern organizations?
In this book, organizational governance, information governance, and accountability are the core subjects, just like the relationship between them. A framework is presented of twelve manifestations of organizational accountability the every organization had to deal with. An approach is introduced for strategically govern organizational accountability with three components: behaviour, accountability, and external assessments.
The core propositions in this book are that without paying strategic attention to the behaviour of employees and managers and to information governance and management, it will be extremely difficult for organizational leaders to find a balance between the two objectives of organizational governance: performance and accountability.
Research Interests:
In 2017, I introduced a new theoretical framework in Archival Science, that of the ‘Archive–as–Is’. This framework proposes a theoretical foundation for Enterprise Information Management (EIM) in World 2.0, the virtual, interactive, and... more
In 2017, I introduced a new theoretical framework in Archival Science, that of the ‘Archive–as–Is’. This framework proposes a theoretical foundation for Enterprise Information Management (EIM) in World 2.0, the virtual, interactive, and hyper connected platform that is developing around us. This framework should allow EIM to end the existing ‘information chaos’, to computerize information management, to improve the organizational ability to reach business objectives, and to define business strategies. The concepts of records and archives are crucial for those endeavours. The framework of the ‘Archive–as–Is’ is an organization–oriented archival theory, consisting of five components, namely: [1] four dimensions of information, [2] two archival principles, [3] five requirements of information accessibility, [4] the information value chain; and [5] organizational behaviour. In this paper, the subject of research is component 5 of the framework: organizational behaviour. Behaviour of employees (including archivists) is one of the most complicated aspects within organizations when creating, processing, managing, and preserving information, records, and archives. There is an almost universal ‘sound of silence’ in scholarly literature from archival and information studies although this subject and its effects on information management are studied extensively in many other disciplines, like psychology, sociology, anthropology, and organization science. In this paper, I want to study how and why employees behave as they do when they are working with records and archives and how EIM is influenced by this behaviour.