In July 2016, the Head of State Archives initiated the Finding aids retroconversion programme. The programme involved converting all paper finding aids into digital form and making them available to users online. At the same time, particular archives were to meet specific norms regarding the number of archival descriptions to be rewritten by every archivist per hour. The timeframe for the project was two years. The resulting scope and workload were both immense. The total number of descriptions to be converted in the Wrocław archive was 1,156,000, and nearly all central-level and regional branch archivists were involved in the project. Many errors and inconsistencies in the documents and the still-imperfect registry were discovered during the retroconversion process. However, the breakneck pace, the insufficient time and wrong order of operations, rule changes during the project, as well as the approach to the task at hand and the objectification of individual employees at the Archive level sparked numerous protests. Nevertheless, it is beyond all doubt that a new era has begun for the Polish State Archives.
In this volume of studies and papers, an attempt was made to look at the principle of provenance in the practice of state archives, in a changing reality. Does the principle formulated at the end of the 19thcentury and announced at the beginning of the 20thcentury have a chance to remain a universal principle? Will the 21st century with its digital revolution and electronic documents make it a relic of the past?
PL
W omawianym tomie studiów i opracowań próbowano przyjrzeć się zasadzie proweniencji w praktyce archiwów państwowych, w zmieniającej się rzeczywistości. Czy zasada sformułowana w końcu XIX w., a ogłoszona na początku XX w. ma szansę pozostać zasadą uniwersalną? Czy wiek XXI z rewolucją cyfrową i dokumentem elektronicznym uczyni z niej relikt przeszłości?
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