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(Source: Office of the President,
Almanac, January 23, 1990)
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Mission
The University of Pennsylvania, acting through
its University Archives and Records Center, recognizes its responsibility
to the academic community and to the public for the orderly retention and
disposition of all University records, both active and inactive, and for
the timeless preservation of historically significant documents and other
materials which reflect the University's origins and development and the
activities and achievements of its officers, faculty, students, alumni,
and benefactors.
In order to meet this obligation the University
Archives and Records Center has been designated the official repository
of all inactive and historical records of the University's administrative
offices, academic departments, committees, and student groups. Documentation
is sought for all aspects of University life. The Director of the Archives
and Records Center organizes and supervises the deposit and servicing of
inactive records in the Records Center and the eventual permanent conveyance
of historical materials to the Archives. The purpose of the records management
program is to provide records retention and retrieval services which assist
the faculty and administrative staff in the ongoing operation of the University.
The purpose of the archives program is to collect, preserve and make accessible
materials of historical value. Thus it serves scholars interested in the
history of the University, institutions of higher learning in the United
States, American intellectual life, and the Philadelphia community in which
the University lives. In addition to the University's administrative records,
the Archives and Records Center shall also collect the personal and professional
papers of University officers, faculty, students, alumni, and benefactors
and the papers of individuals and organizations where the subject matter
of the collection is particularly relevant to University history.
The Archives and Records Center shall provide
appropriate facilities for the retention, preservation and servicing of
its holdings. Inactive records remain the property of the office of their
origin and are made accessible only to authorized representatives of that
office. Historical materials are the property of the Archives and Records
Center and are made accessible to scholars and the community at large in
accordance with University access policy. By making its historical collections
accessible, by encouraging their use for historical research and scholarship
and by entering into cooperative relationships with other archival and
records management agencies and institutions, the Archives and Records
Center shall serve as an educational resource center within the University
of Pennsylvania, a place to stimulate and nourish creative teaching and
learning.
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Administrative Mandate
The Trustees of the University of
Pennsylvania, recognizing the need for formal archival and records management
policy, hereby adopt the following policy and procedures for the collection,
retention, preservation, and servicing of University records:
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Responsibility for assuring that historically significant materials shall
be preserved and permanently retained at the University of Pennsylvania
lies with a single administrative unit, the University Archives and Records
Center. The successful collection of all such records requires that one
office, with University-wide purview, manage their progression through
the several stages -- active, inactive and archival -- of their life cycle.
In general, active records are those in use in the office in which they
were created; inactive records are those placed under finite-term retention
at a records center facility, and archival records are those of historical
significance retained permanently in a repository open to research.
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Any papers or other records generated or received by the administrative
and academic offices of the University in the conduct of their business
-- including all official printed material, reports, record books, minutes,
committee files, financial records, correspondence, and associated papers
-- are the property of the University and may become archival material.
The definition of University records shall also extend to forms other than
paper, such as prints, photographs, microfilm, motion picture film, audio
and video tape, and machine-readable records.
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All administrative officers of the University, including those members
of the Faculty who, by virtue of administrative responsibilities either
of a continuing or occasional nature, possess University records relating
to their official duties, are to observe the following policy and procedures:
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Provision shall be made for efficient and economic records control by all
University administrative offices and the University Archives and Records
Center. Records shall be regularly surveyed, inventoried and appraised
to determine retention value. Active records shall be retained by the office
of origin; inactive records will be transferred to the Records Center and
placed on finite-term retention schedules. The officer in charge of each
administrative or academic office, in consultation with the Director of
the University Archives and Records Center, shall be responsible for deciding
how long both active and inactive papers shall be retained in and under
the direct control of the office of origin. Inactive records transferred
to the Records Center shall remain the property of the office of origin
and shall be accessible only to authorized representatives of that office.
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University records may not be destroyed or placed in inactive storage at
a site other than the Records Center without the joint approval of the
senior officer in the office of origin and the Director of the University
Archives and Records Center. Should these individuals be unable to agree
on retention value, disposition shall be stayed pending review and final
determination by the Advisory Committee on the University Archives and
Records Center, as defined in paragraph seven below.
The Director of the University Archives and Records
Center, in accordance with prevailing collections and access policies,
shall be responsible for the appraisal of inactive University records for
their historical significance. The Director shall determine which such
materials shall be permanently retained by the Archives, shall grant and
limit access to the collections and shall establish and administer other
public service policies and procedures as necessary. Historically significant
records transferred to the University Archives for permanent retention
shall become the property of the University Archives and Records Center.
In order to facilitate archives and records management service to the
entire University community and allow for effective coordination with other
University offices, the University Archives and Records Center shall be
an administrative department within the Office of the President and the
Director shall be an administrator reporting directly to the President.
Acting upon the advice of an appropriately representative search committee,
the President shall appoint the Director. The President shall delegate
to the Director sufficient authority to enable the department to fulfill
its responsibilities. The Director is responsible for long-range planning,
the preparation and administration of departmental budgets, and hiring,
training and supervising of departmental staff. The Director is accountable
for the successful performance of all departmental services: records management,
development of archival collections, cataloguing and other technical services,
access, and other public services. He or she shall review and have decision
making power over University records which may be offered to or found in
any of the multiple archival repositories at the University. He or she
shall establish intellectual access to all such repositories through the
maintenance of shared collection catalogues and finding aids.
The University Archives and Records Center, as the official repository
for all University records, including confidential records, shall provide
appropriate facilities for their retention and preservation. The University
Archives and Records Center shall be provided financial and personnel resources
sufficient to maintain services at the level of comparable university archives
and records management operations.
In order to facilitate these protocols an independent Advisory Committee
on the University Archives and Records Center shall be established and
shall have the following responsibilities:
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to advise the President on institutional support and initiatives required
to fulfill archival and records management policy;
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to advise the Director on the implementation of this policy; and
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in particular, to resolve substantive issues which may arise regarding
access and collections policy and when necessary, to advise the President
on the modification of these policies.
The Committee shall be composed of
ten members: one representative each from the offices of the President,
the Secretary of the University, the Provost, and the General Counsel;
three members of the standing faculty appointed by the Senate Executive
Committee to serve overlapping three-year terms; and three members of the
standing faculty appointed by the President, also to serve overlapping
three-year terms. The President shall appoint the Committee Chair.
The Committee shall meet at the call of the
President, the Director or the Chair. It shall meet a minimum of once per
semester.
Collections Policy
The Director and staff of the University
Archives and Records Center shall actively seek, identify and acquire historically
significant materials in the following categories:
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University administrative records, including, but not limited to: correspondence,
memoranda, minutes, summary financial records, academic research, curriculum,
contracts, reports, subject files, published materials, photographs, and
any other material generated or received by the administrative and academic
offices of the University in the conduct of their business. These records
shall be collected in accordance with the University-wide archives and
records management program, in which all records pass through active and
inactive phases prior to appraisal for historical significance.
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Materials which document the life of the University community, including
student activities, alumni organizations, organizations of faculty and
administrators, and other University related groups. Such materials are
essential complements to official University records. They may take a variety
of forms, including books, news clippings, manuscripts, maps and posters,
motion picture films, audio and video tape, and artifacts and objects.
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The personal and professional papers of prominent people associated with
the University, including University officers, faculty, students, alumni,
and benefactors. These manuscript collections may include materials relating
to issues of historical significance outside higher education as well as
professional academic activities, research and teaching, and educational
theories and practices during the lifetime of the University. This collecting
mandate shall also extend to the papers of individuals and organizations
where the subject matter of the collection is particularly relevant to
the history of the University, institutions of higher learning in the United
States, American intellectual life, and the Philadelphia community in which
the University lives.
The deposit, transfer or donation
of records and other materials to the Archives and Records Center shall
follow specific procedures established by the Director. In the case of
deposit of University records at the Records Center, the office or individual
of origin does not relinquish control of the materials. In the case of
transfer of University records for permanent retention at the Archives,
the office or individual of origin relinquishes all rights to the materials.
In cases where the materials are donated to the University, the donor usually
relinquishes all rights, including copyright and literary rights. Donor
restrictions are acceptable in special cases.
Access Policy
The historical collections of the University Archives and Records
Center are open for research to all members of the University community,
to visiting scholars and to the scholarly public. The University encourages
the use of these collections through the dissemination of descriptive catalogues
and the provision of public services at the Archives.
Access to certain classes of records, however,
is restricted. Access to restricted records may be requested by written
appeal to the Director of the University Archives and Records Center.
The following types of records generally will be closed:
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all administrative records of the University for twenty-five years from
the date of their creation, with certain exceptions, such as those which
must be open in conformance with law;
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records of a sitting administration;
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records the disclosure of which might expose the University to legal liability.
The following types of records will be absolutely closed:
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individual education records of living students or living former students,
as defined by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1973, as
amended, unless the student or former student grants access in writing
(in accordance with the University "Guidelines on the Confidentiality of
Student Records" as published in the undergraduate and graduate Academic
Bulletin);
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individual employment records of living current or former faculty members,
administrators or other staff members, including records which concern
hiring, appointment, promotion, tenure, salary, performance, termination
or other circumstances of employment, unless the faculty member, administrator,
or staff member grants access in writing (in accordance with University
Personnel Policy Manual Policy No. 101);
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other records where usage might constitute an invasion of privacy;
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records the use of which has been restricted by Deed of Gift.
Requests to photocopy or otherwise reproduce restricted records
generally will be denied.
Appeals to gain access to restricted records shall be conducted in the
following manner:
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a researcher seeking access to restricted records shall complete a "Restricted
Records Access Request" form;
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the Director shall review each request with the Advisory Committee on the
University Archives and Records Center; the Advisory Committee is composed
of ten members: one representative each from the offices of the President,
the Secretary of the University, the Provost and the General Counsel; and
six members of the standing faculty;
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the Advisory Committee shall base its decisions on the merits of each case,
weighing the needs of scholarship against the privacy rights of individuals
and the legal interests of the University; the Committee must be satisfied
that a researcher seeking access to restricted records has demonstrated
that the records are required to carry out a legitimate scholarly research
project or for other appropriate use; in all cases, the decision of the
Committee shall be fair and reasonable, permitting the greatest possible
access, given the limitations imposed by legal and ethical considerations;
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in order to come to such a decision, the Advisory Committee shall meet,
review the research proposal of the scholar petitioning for access, examine
the materials to which he or she is requesting access and discuss the case;
in cases where the materials are voluminous, the Director shall review
them and summarize their nature and content for the Committee, presenting
individual documents of particular concern; in cases of requests for innocuous
materials, a less formal review process may be invoked, consisting of a
telephone poll by the Director;
the Advisory Committee may act as a whole in its review and decision
making or may delegate to a subcommittee of its own members the power to
implement this policy; the decisions of the Advisory Committee shall be
final.
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