Forum for Archives and Records Management Education and Research

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Forum for Archives and Records Management Education and Research
for the UK and Ireland (FARMER)
In association with
Network of Archival Educators and Trainers (North Western Europe)
(NAET)
"Questions of trust? Archives, records and identities"
An international conference, Wolfson College, Oxford, UK
July 5-6th 2010
Call for Papers
As we enter the second decade of the 21st century, the digital world is ever more the
place in which many of our lives are lived and recorded. The transition to this new
world and new way of working has brought many new questions for all those
interested in archives and records, as well as reformulating and suggesting reimagining many traditional ones. Chief amongst these questions are those which
relate to trust (of records, of governments and organisations, of systems) and to
identity/identities and the way in which archives and records might support the
construction, articulation and demonstration of those identities. In recent years there
has been a growing recognition of the political nature of archives and records, and of
archives and records management. Questions of trust and identity sit at the heart of
these political concerns and processes. This conference will consider the implications
of these questions for professional education, research and practice.
The conference will bring together an international group of those active in archives
and records management education and research, as well as interested practitioners.
Moreover the conference sets out to be actively transdisciplinary in its outlook and
will encourage contributions from many related and relevant disciplines including
library and information science, museology, cultural heritage, history, anthropology,
public policy and governance, business management, information systems
development and design, etc.
Conference Themes
Amongst the themes contributors might wish to consider are:

Can records and archives be trusted? What might ‘trust’ mean in this context?
Are there archives, information and records management systems which can ensure
the ‘trustworthiness’ of archives and records? How does trust relate to authenticity,
integrity, completeness or other (supposed) qualities of archives and records?

Does (or how might) access to archives and records, particularly in a digital
world, support levels of trust in governments, commercial organisations,
communities, etc?

Are the present crises of confidence and public trust in major governmental and
financial institutions mitigated or made worse by legislation specifying public access
to information?

Many claims are made about the different ways in which communities and
shared identifications are constructed around (upon) histories, heritages and archives.
How are these identities constructed and shared and how do these processes engage
with records, archives, and other heritage materials? What role is played in the
construction of collective and community memories by the question of ‘trust’ in these
heritage materials, and in the authority of those who hold them?

What are the implications, including questions of trust and identity for virtual
communities forming around, sharing and engaging with heritage materials online
when social and participatory technologies are used?

What does the concept of identity mean within digital and virtual environments?
What are the implications for the security and trustworthiness of records in this
context?
Papers and session proposals:
The organisers hope that many of the papers from the conference will be published in
an international journal and are in negotiation with publishers and editors about this.
Further details will follow in due course. The language of the conference will be
English.
The conference organisers encourage proposals for individual papers as well as for
panels. Paper submissions should include a short abstract (300-500 words) plus a
brief CV and contact details for the proposer. Panel submissions (maximum of 3
speakers plus chair) should include a brief overview of the theme of the panel, short
abstracts (300-500 words) for each of the proposed papers, and a brief CV and contact
details for each of the chair and panel members.
A conference website will established shortly but meanwhile further information can
be found at https://www.ucl.ac.uk/infostudies/research/icarus/farmerconference2010/
Important dates:
Please submit individual paper or panel proposals via email (with ‘FARMER
Conference Proposal’ in the subject line) by 30 September 2009 to a.flinn@ucl.ac.uk.
Proposals will reviewed by the organising committee with final decisions being made
before the end of the year.
In order to better facilitate discussion and exchange at the conference, papers will be
made available to delegates in advance. Participants will therefore be asked to agree
to submit a full version of their paper by 31 May 2010.
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