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Policy on digital records preservation

Printable version | Purpose | Scope | Definitions | Policy | Responsibilities | References

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Printable version

There is a PDF version of this policy for printing.

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Purpose

The purpose of this policy is to establish a set of principles underpinning the New South Wales Government's approach to the preservation of digital records.

Digital State records must be properly preserved so that they survive in authentic and accessible forms over the whole of their existence - from a few years, or the lifetime of an individual or asset - or forever, in the case of digital State archives.

If digital records are not preserved, there is a risk that Government will lose essential evidence of its business, that citizens will not be able to access records documenting rights and legal obligations and that there will be a significant gap in the body of records documenting the society and communities of NSW in the State's archives.

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Scope

This policy applies to all digital records preservation activities conducted either by State Records or by New South Wales public offices, including:

Digital State records and archives may include:

This policy operates in conjunction with other recordkeeping policies, standards and guidance for the NSW public sector.

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Definitions

Digital record:

A digital record is digital information, captured at a specific point in time that is kept as evidence of business activity. Digital records means 'born digital' records such as emails, web pages, digital photographs, digital audio files, GIS files or database records, as well as scanned versions of paper records that have been digitised in business processes.

ODF (Open document format):

an open, XML based document file format for office applications that create and edit documents containing text, spreadsheets, charts and graphical elements [1]

Recordkeeping metadata:

data that describes the context, content and structure of records and their management through time [2]

State archive:

a State record that the State Records Authority of New South Wales has control of under the State Records Act 1998. (State Records Act 1998 section 3(1))

State record:

any record, made and kept, or received and kept, by any person in the course of the exercise of official functions in a public office, or for any purpose of a public office, or for the use of a public office. (State Records Act 1998 section 3(1))

Temporary value records:

records with no archival value that are destroyed after approved retention periods.

Xena (XML Electronic Normalising of Archives)

this is the National Archives of Australia’s software for converting digital records from their original format into preservation formats. XENA, and the plugin architecture being developed for it are available as open source software. The National Archives has also developed open source software for recording the digital preservation process (Digital Preservation Recorder or DPR) and for providing access to digital archives (Quest).

XML (eXtensible Markup Language):

a specification developed by the W3C. XML is a pared-down version of SGML, designed especially for Web documents. It allows designers to create their own customized tags, enabling the definition, transmission, validation, and interpretation of data between applications and between organisations [3]


Top of Policy on digital records preservation Policy

1. Digital State records should be migrated forward as technologies change.

2. The content and essential characteristics of digital State records must remain unchanged through preservation processes.

3. Digital State records must be preserved in context.

4. Digital State records must be secure and tracked throughout the preservation process.

5. Digital records preservation programs should be flexible.

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Responsibilities

The preservation of digital State records is a shared responsibility; both State Records and public offices have a role to play in ensuring that digital records of Government remain authentic, accessible and useable over time.

The chief executive of each public office has a duty to ensure that:

The nominated senior officer responsible for records management in a public office should ensure that:

State Records has a responsibility to:

Top of Policy on digital records preservation References

INterPARES Preserver Guidelines Preserving Digital Records: Guidelines for organizations, 2007. http://www.interpares.org/ip2/display_file.cfm?doc=ip2(pub)preserver_guidelines_booklet.pdf National Archives of Australia, An Approach to the Preservation of Digital Records, 2002. http://www.naa.gov.au/recordkeeping/er/digital_preservation/Green_Paper.pdf NSW Department of Commerce, People First - A new direction for ICT in NSW July 2006. http://www.gcio.nsw.gov.au/ict-strategic-plan

OASIS ODF Adoption Technical Committee, Open by Design: The advantages of the Open Document Format (ODF) An OASIS White Paper, December 2006

State Records, Digital records preservation in the NSW public sector: A discussion paper , 2007.

Top of Policy on digital records preservation Footnotes

[1] OASIS ODF Adoption Technical Committee, Open by Design: The advantages of the Open Document Format (ODF) An OASIS White Paper, December 2006.

[2] AS ISO 15489-2002 Records Management, Part 1 Clause 3.12

[3] Webopedia, accessed 10 May 2007 http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/X/XML.html

© State of New South Wales through the State Records Authority, 2007.
First published Dec 2007
This work may be freely reproduced and distributed for most purposes, however some restrictions apply. See our copyright notice or contact us.
ISBN 978-0-9757845-7-0

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