Access to records for people who were in out-of-home care: moving beyond ‘third dimension’ archival practice

  • Cate O'Neill
  • Vlad Selakovic
  • Rachel Tropea
Keywords: archives, Forgotten Australians, Stolen Generations, access, Records Continuum

Abstract

The Records Continuum model, particularly its notion of the pluralised, ‘fourth dimension’ where records can have multiple meanings and multiple stakeholders, provides a useful framework for examining ‘care’ records and the roles they can play in the emerging processes of remembering and forgetting, providing services and restoring justice to Forgotten Australians and to all those affected by the history of institutional ‘care’. 1 Despite considerable advances in recent years in understanding the interplay between archives and issues facing ‘care’ leavers, the management of ‘care’ records remains largely stuck in ‘third dimension’ practices and ideologies. Creation, capture, organisation and access to records relating to the provision of ‘care’ involve interactions between ‘care’ leavers, social workers, archivists, historians and counsellors and these exchanges significantly shape and reshape the meaning(s) that can be made from these records. This article calls for a reorientation of perspective to recognise the many stakeholders associated with ‘care’ records, to aid the development and dissemination of new contextual documentation to improve access to records, and to help foster trust, dialogue, and reconciliation.

Published
2012-01-01
How to Cite
O’Neill C., Selakovic V. and Tropea R. (2012) “Access to records for people who were in out-of-home care: moving beyond ‘third dimension’ archival practice”, Archives & Manuscripts, 40(1), pp. 29-41. doi: 10.1080/01576895.2012.668841.