We could, but it would not be as effective. Besides we already serve
the profession by educating many of its members. ARMA gets members'
fees to develop the profession and its status as a profession (which
in the eyes of the outside world is linked to a peer-reviewed
journal). We at S. Jose' and UBC would definitely be willing to be in
the editorial board and to referee articles within our competence,
and so would many of our academic colleagues.
I hope you noticed that people from the UK, New Zealand, and
Australia jumped into the discussion and invited us to read and write
in their RM refereed, scholarly, international journals. Our
students read them already and most of the good stuff written by
scholars and professionals is going in there already. As I see it,
soon the US profession, which allegedly invented records management,
will have to subscribe to foreign journals as its only opportunity to
read about leading edge research and new ideas in its own field, and
compete with the rest of the world to get an article published in
them. Any professional or national pride out there? I am not even
American, but as an Emmett Leahy Awardee I feel I have some
responsibility to the American profession and I owe something to the great man.
I will stop here. The ball is in your corner now. I appreciate very
much your patience in listening.
Luciana
At 08:58 AM 03/12/2009, you wrote:
>maybe San Jose State and UBritishColumbia could combine forces to jointly
>publish such an online refereed journal
>
>right now ARMA is providing webinars, publishing standards/guidelines etc.
>These are things that I believe the membership is looking for.
>
>Over the last 50+ years ARMA has done quite a lot as profession. Don't
>forget that they led the effort to eliminate legal files when no one else
>saw the need. They have also through local chapters advanced the profession.
>
>
>
>On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Pat Franks <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> > but this may be a very good
> > way to enhance ARMA's image as a 'professional' organization that provides
> > value for members.
> >
> >
>
>
>--
>Peter Kurilecz CRM CA
>[log in to unmask]
>Richmond, Va
>Information not relevant for my reply has been deleted to reduce the
>electronic footprint and to save the sanity of digest subscribers
>
>List archives at http://lists.ufl.edu/archives/recmgmt-l.html
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Dr. Luciana Duranti
Chair and Professor, Archival Studies
Director, The InterPARES Project www.interpares.org
Director, Digital Records Forensics Project www.digitalrecordsforensics.org
School of Library, Archival and Information Studies www.slais.ubc.ca
The University of British Columbia
The Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Suite 470, 1961 East Mall
Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z1 CANADA
Tel: 604.822.2587
Fax: 604.822.6006
www.lucianaduranti.ca
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