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A Framework for Person-Centred Recordkeeping Drawn through the Lens of Out-of-Home Child-Care Contexts.

Authors :
LOMAS, ELIZABETH
SHEPHERD, ELIZABETH
HOYLE, VICTORIA
SEXTON, ANNA
FLINN, ANDREW
Source :
Archivaria. Fall/Winter2022, Issue 94, p64-93. 30p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

This article examines the concept of co-created and person-centred recordkeeping and the needs for this in out-of-home child-care contexts, drawing out a recordkeeping framework. The article uses the research of the UK MIRRA (Memory - Identity - Rights in Records - Access) project as its critical evidence base. MIRRA is a participatory research project, hosted at the Department of Information Studies at University College London (UCL) since 20x7, which places Care Leavers as co-researchers at the heart of the work. The study has gathered evidence from care-experienced people, social workers, archivists, records managers, and researchers. The case context of care-experienced people provides a powerful focus for shifting views of records creation and ownership. Care-experienced people across the globe are situated within organizational systems that act as surrogate parents, but where the children or young people are often powerless to co-create and store their own memories, which would enable them to forge positive identities and revisit these through time. Positive and holistic life story narratives are rarely found. In addition, children's care records are often accessible to care-experienced people only through legislative processes and without critical support. This research reframes the recordkeeping model, placing the care-experienced person at the heart of the process in order to ensure the co-creation of records and the maintenance of identity through time. The research acknowledges the complex and sometimes conflicting needs of diverse actors in children's recordkeeping, including social workers, archivists, records managers, and researchers. It rethinks the actors' relationships and responsibilities around the records and systems, drawing out a framework that makes explicit the value of active person-centred recordkeeping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03186954
Issue :
94
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Archivaria
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161151986
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7202/1094876ar