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National archives and records - the legal and policy implications for the UK

National archives and records - the legal and policy implications for the UK
National archives and records - the legal and policy implications for the UK
Public Sector Information (PSI) is a strategic resource without which government could not function. It feeds directly into policy formation and growing volumes of personal and cultural information are in constant demand, fulfilling a wide variety of personal and business needs. Whereas traditional conduits for the supply and publication of such material were confined to the printed page and broadcast media, digitisation has opened up substantial new means for delivering access to these resources. This ‘access revolution’ has itself created a new array of issues about what types of material should be captured to form the national archive and what intellectual property rights apply. One important aspect is the less discussed issue of policy for the maintenance and development of the public archive. Mass digitisation of the public record requires investment and secure maintenance if the archive is to be sustained. So what kind of regulatory structure needs to be established to facilitate this? Moreover, how far should private sector participation and expertise be utilised? On what basis should proprietary and user rights be granted where such collaborations take place? Finally, what message comes out of this as regards regulatory reform for libraries and archives?
national archive, intellectual property rights, library privilege, born digital, digital britain, s.42 CDPA 1988
1753-6235
43-69
Saxby, Stephen
c8e98809-84e7-46c2-a775-27c98444c5f0
Saxby, Stephen
c8e98809-84e7-46c2-a775-27c98444c5f0

Saxby, Stephen (2010) National archives and records - the legal and policy implications for the UK. International Journal of Private Law, 3 (1/2), 43-69. (doi:10.1504/IJPL.2010.029602).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Public Sector Information (PSI) is a strategic resource without which government could not function. It feeds directly into policy formation and growing volumes of personal and cultural information are in constant demand, fulfilling a wide variety of personal and business needs. Whereas traditional conduits for the supply and publication of such material were confined to the printed page and broadcast media, digitisation has opened up substantial new means for delivering access to these resources. This ‘access revolution’ has itself created a new array of issues about what types of material should be captured to form the national archive and what intellectual property rights apply. One important aspect is the less discussed issue of policy for the maintenance and development of the public archive. Mass digitisation of the public record requires investment and secure maintenance if the archive is to be sustained. So what kind of regulatory structure needs to be established to facilitate this? Moreover, how far should private sector participation and expertise be utilised? On what basis should proprietary and user rights be granted where such collaborations take place? Finally, what message comes out of this as regards regulatory reform for libraries and archives?

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National_archives_paper_12.11.09.pdf - Author's Original
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Submitted date: June 2009
Published date: January 2010
Keywords: national archive, intellectual property rights, library privilege, born digital, digital britain, s.42 CDPA 1988
Organisations: Law

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 72822
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72822
ISSN: 1753-6235
PURE UUID: 90ac1f3a-58f4-4813-87a5-a4bf33c6a9eb

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Feb 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 21:42

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