Records life-cycle
[Image:Records Life Cycle.svg|thumb|360px|Records life-cycle consisting three stages: creation, maintenance, and disposition of the record.]
Records life-cycle in records management refers to the following stages of a records "life span": from its creation to its preservation or disposal. While various models of the records life-cycle exist, they all feature creation or receipt, use, and disposition.
Overview
The records management phase of the records life-cycle consists of:- creation
- classification
- maintenance
- disposition
This is then followed by a second, archival phase consisting of:
- the selection or acquisition of the records by an archives
- a description of the records in inventories, finding aids and the like
- the preservation of the records or, perhaps, the information in the records
Continuum model
In the 1930s Emmett Leahy of the United States National Archives had a central role in developing a program to define the records life-cycle from creation and use through eventual destruction or archiving. Richard Berner of the University of Washington proposed a single records management-archives goal: "responsible records use and administration leading to either authorized destruction or archival preservation and administration".The professions of records management and archives, while distinct, surely are working towards the same objective: the effective management of recorded information through all stages of the continuum, from creation to disposal. Effective management of recorded information requires ongoing cooperative interaction between the records manager and the archivist in order to:
- ensure the creation of the right records, containing the right information, in the right format;
- organize the records and analyze their content and significance to facilitate their availability;
- make them available promptly to those who have a right and a requirement to see them;
- systematically dispose of records that are no longer required; and
- protect and preserve the information for as long as it may be needed.