This
is from the U.S. National Archives, but provides helpful guidelines that apply
to all archivists:
THE
ARCHIVISTS CODE
The Archivist has a moral obligation to society
to take every possible measure to ensure the preservation of valuable records,
not only those of the past but those of his own times, and with equal zeal.
The Archivist in appraising records for
retention or disposal acts as the agent of future generations. The wisdom and
impartiality he applies to this task measure his professionalism, for he must
be as diligent in disposing of records that have no significant or lasting
value as in retaining those that do.
The Archivist must protect the integrity of
records in his custody. He must guard them against defacement, alteration, or
theft; he must protect them against physical damage by fire or excessive
exposure to light, dampness, and dryness' and he must ensure that their
evidentiary value is not impaired in the normal course of rehabilitation,
arrangement, and use.
The Archivist should endeavor to promote access
to records to the fullest extent consistent with the public interest, but he
should carefully observe any proper restrictions on the use of the records. He
should work unremittingly for the increase and diffusion of knowledge, making
his documentary holdings freely known to prospective users through published
aids and personal consultation.
The Archivist should respond courteously and
with a spirit of helpfulness to reference requests. He should not place
unnecessary obstacles in the way of researchers but should do whatever he can
to save their time and ease their work. He should not idly discuss the work
and findings of one researcher with another; but where duplication of research
effort is apparent, he may properly inform another researcher.
The Archivist should not profit from any
commercial exploitation of the records in his custody, nor should he withhold
from others any information he has gained as a result of his professional
duties -- either in order to carry out private professional research or to aid
one researcher at the expense of another. He should, however, take every
legitimate advantage of his situation to develop his professional interests in
historical and archival research.
The Archivist should freely pass on to his
professional colleagues the results of his own or his organization's research
that add to the body of archival and historical knowledge. He should leave to
his successors a true account of the records in his custody and of their
organization and arrangement.
Wayne C. Glover
Archivist of the United States, 1948-1965
Reissued by the U.S. National Archives and
Records Administration, April, 1985
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