Executive Summary

A. Definition

The archives serves as the institutional memory of the college or university and plays an integral role in the management of the institution's information resources in all media and formats. To fulfill the responsibilities of that role, the archives identifies, acquires, and maintains records of enduring value that chronicle the development of the institution and ensure its continued existence. The archives documents the process of institutional evolution by retaining both the evidence which shapes decisions and the decisions themselves.

B. Mission

The archives takes its mission from the mission of the institution, to educate:

C. Constituents

1. The archives primarily serves users throughout the institution.

a) Administrative units have ready access to the permanent record, which includes: 

b) Students connect with the institution by learning about its history and placing themselves within that context. Access to archival materials that support curriculum and introduce them to the excitement and rigors of original research enhances their educational experience.

c) Faculty use the archives for research in collections that provide unique materials, which document the wide range of intellectual history; chronicle the contributions of individuals; and record processes as reflected in the records of the institution.

2. The Archives serves an extended community.

a) Alumni/ae maintain old ties and build new ones with their institution from ready access to the materials which document their connections. The archives refreshes their knowledge about the history and mission of the institution which are perceived by many alumni/ae as a significant factor in their development. The archives is, in addition, important as a place, relatively unchanging in the midst of constant change, to which they are able to return physically, to confirm their memories.

b) Researchers—those who are writing their first source paper in graduate school as well as established scholars with extensive publications—benefit from the richness and reliability of archival collections. By supporting an archival component within its educational mission, an institution can reach and serve a more broadly based research community.

D. Organizational Structure

An effective archival program requires a mandate from the president or governing board that authorizes the archivist to identify records of enduring value, document their physical location, preserve them, and establish methods of control that provide ready and consistent access to archival holdings.

To meet these criteria, the institution must provide resources that support the ongoing function of the program: