Saturday, January 22, 2011

Was Nick Ashford Gay?

records management, archives and jasmine revolution

The events in Tunisia are political, social and also economic. Archivists tunisia react. At the initiative of Ghariani Chaker, professor at the Higher Institute of Documentation and relayed by Bannouri Rabii, citizen, academic and former president of the Association of Public Archives of Tunisia (AGAT) an appeal titled "Let's save our memory, Save our archives! " was launched.

Chaker Ghariani calls all archivists Tunisian "to protect critical and sensitive documents (documents of major tenders, policy decisions, minutes and proceedings of the decision-making bodies, AG, CA, records offices, senior departmental committees and meetings of directors, ... deliberations of municipal councils and regional councils ....). The appeal states that it is simply and fully implement the law on archives. It is therefore, under this law to "immediately clear and require that records of the offices of ministers, cabinets, secretaries general, CEOs of public companies are identified and especially those proscribed or maturing as retention schedules, and are immediately transferred to the archives intermediaries ".

we know, the upheavals of all time threaten the integrity of holdings for many reasons: the holdings are metaphors of entities that have produced these documents and information, are also evidence that it is useful to see too often disappear timely. Sometimes there is a lack of chance: the documentation has been accidentally destroyed altogether. That is why the community Archivists Tunisian mobilizes to preserve the heritage and current funds for history and for the continued functioning of the state and country.

thank them!

PS: The site Facebook has been opened in this regard: MANAGERS OF DOCUMENTS TO GUARANTEE THE MEMORY OF THE REVOLUTION

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