Cims. RIM Doctor. Part 2: Records and disasters (Guideline 5) Perhaps the most realistic interpretation of disasters is to view them as dependent, not on the scale of damage, but on the effect that the incidents create. For example, a water leak affecting one shelf of an agency's records may only be a small-scale emergency, but can be considered a disaster if the material affected is of significant value and will result in financial loss or legal action. Whether damage is considered a disaster will also depend on who values that material. For example, if the material on the shelf was uncopied, vital to the production of a product and cannot be salvaged, it is disastrous for that agency but perhaps not for the general community.[1] 2.1 Disasters affecting records Records are always potentially at risk of disaster. Due to the importance of records, their loss in a disaster can be crippling for the responsible public office. 2.2 Disasters affecting Australian organisations Thousands of records facilities worldwide have suffered damage in disasters.
Territory Records Office. Contemporary Recordkeeping - The Records Management Thesaurus - Response. Article in response to paper delivered at the 1997 Records Management Association of Australia's National Convention Authors Catherine Robinson B.A. (Hons.), Dip.IM. (Archiv.Admin.) Janet Knight B.A., Dip.IM. (Archiv.Admin.), Dip.Loc. & App.Hist. Abstract At the Records Management Association of Australia's National Convention 1997, Dr Maggie Exon, Senior Lecturer, Department of Information Studies at Curtin University, delivered a paper called 'Contemporary Recordkeeping: The Records Management Thesaurus.' This paper is the Archives Authority's public response to that criticism. The authors describe the application of functional analysis to the development of business classification schemes, as advocated in the Australian Standard, how these schemes provide the basis for controlled language and the relationship of thesauri with other tools in a comprehensive and coherent regime for managing government records.
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Continuity Central : Asia Pacific business continuity news and information. Australian contributions to recordkeeping. By the mid 1980s, the qualification most often requested in advertisements for entry level recordkeeping professionals was a tertiary degree with some recordkeeping content. The preferred credential for aspiring managerial professionals was a tertiary credential followed by a specialist postgraduate recordkeeping degree. As a long term result of the professional association-employer-university alliance, recordkeeping education and research have achieved a degree of recognition within academe; postgraduate programs with full-time specialist staff offer a range of recordkeeping qualifications and undertake profession-critical research, though their position is far from secure.
Throughout the 1990s, a small cadre of educators servicing the hybrid profession’s knowledge and research requirements refocussed and expanded their curriculum and research. SITES TO VISIT - Visit some Australian and Canadian websites to find out more about these important learning resources. AGIMO Blog. The Heiner Affair NSW Parliament October 2007 Special Address. NSW Parliament Theatrette SYDNEY 9 October 2007 Mr. Chairman, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen. I am greatly honoured to be invited to deliver this paper in such an historical setting as the NSW Parliament. I would like to thank NSW’s Shadow Attorney-General Mr. Greg Smith SC for being our host today.
I am pleased to share this dais with journalist Piers Akerman. Much of what I have to say today may be found in my 2005 paper to The Samuel Griffith Society which is available on the Society’s webpage, including the Society former President the Hon Sir Harry Gibb’s April 2005 opinion that a prima facie offence under section 129 of the Criminal Code, at the very least, rests against all members of the Queensland Cabinet of 5 March 1990. Mr. My first quote comes from Former United States Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter who is credited with having said: [I quote] “…if one man can be allowed to determine for himself what is law, every man can.
Heiner affair’s epicentre Mr. Mr.