Title
The personal curation of digital objects: A lifecycle approach
Abstract
Purpose - This paper aims to set out a coherent intellectual framework to help to better understand how people create, organise, manage, use and dispose of their personal digital archives. The context for this is the increasing volume and diversity of digital information objects being captured and stored by individuals in their personal capacities and the need to find ways to preserve this material for posterity. Design/methodology/approach - The research presented here is based on literature analysis, the questions having been informed by an earlier series of in-depth interviews. The approach taken is to synthesise key concepts from the computer science, information management, and archives and records management literatures. Key concepts from the existing literature in computer science, information management, and archives and records management were elicited and synthesised to create a coherent document lifecycle narrative. Findings - Individuals exhibit great diversity in terms of personal information management and digital archiving practice at just about every point in the digital information cycle: much more so than is the case in formal repositories. Practices exhibited are not always conducive to efficient document management. This represents a very keen challenge for professional curatorial practice. Practical implications - Little is known about how individuals manage digital information resources in their personal capacity, outside of their corporate or institutional employment. Yet both individuals on their own and professional curators on behalf of repositories are increasingly being faced with the challenge of how to deal with digital media. It is hoped that this paper will contribute to a growing debate in this area. Originality/value - Personal information management from the perspective of personal digital archives is a surprisingly under-researched area and the proposed model adopts an archival information lifecycle approach. It seeks to apply and promote an archivally-oriented personal information management.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.1108/00012530910973767
ASLIB PROCEEDINGS
Keywords
Field
DocType
Information facilities,Digital storage,Information exchange,Collections management,Individual psychology
Data science,Information system,Information management,World Wide Web,Information seeking behavior,Personal information management,Computer science,Document management system,Information exchange,Personally identifiable information,Collections management
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
61
4
0001-253X
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
15
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Peter Williams168981.07
Jeremy Leighton John221.31
ian rowlands300.34