3. Data, information and records: exploring definitions and relationships
Geoffrey Yeo interviewed by James Lowry1
The achievement and measurement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) depend on the availability of trustworthy data from a variety of sources. Records, especially records created by government agencies, are often identified as one of the most important sources from which such data can be derived. Over centuries, the records and archives management profession has developed approaches to maintaining, controlling and contextualising records, which can help users assess the trustworthiness of the records and perhaps also the quality of the information that can be gained from them. With so much vested in the SDGs, it has become increasingly important to interrogate these terms – records, information and data – to achieve a better understanding of how they are interrelated. In this interview, James Lowry asks Geoffrey Yeo, author of Records, Information and Data,2 to analyse the distinctions and relationships among these concepts.
the language that now carries weight … in the corridors of power is the language of data and information, and many records professionals … feel a political imperative to adopt this language when they seek to convince resource allocators or government policy-makers that they can contribute to the 21st-century digital landscape.10
no one seems to be making statements; no one is affirming that they can vouch for the data; the apparent absence of signs of authorship gives the impression that the data are uncontroversial and objective.11
In countries where the SDGs are objectives for strategic action, individuals and communities will undoubtedly have varied assumptions, ideas and beliefs about the scope of data and records, their interrelationships and their roles in sustainable development. Individual contributors to this volume come from many different disciplines and will also have different conceptual understandings of records and data. Yet I’m sure you’ll agree that collaborative working will be essential if we are to move forward on the issues and concerns expressed in their contributions. If the chapters of this book help different stakeholders to recognise and understand the diverse viewpoints of others with whom they seek to collaborate, they will play a very valuable part in cross-disciplinary communication and cooperation.
1For biographies of Geoffrey Yeo and James Lowry, see the list of contributors at the beginning of this volume. See also Chapter 8 in this volume.
2G. Yeo, Records, Information and Data: Exploring the Role of Record-Keeping in an Information Culture (London: Facet Publishing, 2018).
3J. R. Searle, Making the Social World: The Structure of Human Civilization (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), p. 71.
4Yeo, Records, Information and Data, pp. 111–12.
5P. Cain, ‘Automating personnel records for improved management of human resources: the experience of three African governments’, in R. Heeks (ed.), Reinventing Government in the Information Age (London: Routledge, 1999), pp. 135–55, at p. 146.
6V. Mayer-Schönberger and K. Cukier, Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work and Think (London: John Murray, 2013).
7K.N. Cukier and V. Mayer-Schönberger, ‘The rise of big data: how it’s changing the way we think about the world’, Foreign Affairs, 92 (2013), http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/2013-04-03/rise-big-data.
8T. Blanke and A. Prescott, ‘Dealing with big data’, in G. Griffin and M. Hayler (eds), Research Methods for Reading Digital Data in the Digital Humanities (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016), p. 190; R. Kitchin, ‘Big data, new epistemologies and paradigm shifts’, Big Data & Society, 1 (2014): 1–12, at p. 1.
9S. Ranade, ‘Traces through time: A probabilistic approach to connected archival data’ (IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data), Washington DC, 2016), https://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/BigData.2016.7840983, pp. 3260–3265.
10Yeo, Records, Information and Data, p. 198.
11Yeo, Records, Information and Data, p. 142.
12A.R. Bell, ‘Participation vs principle: does technological change marginalize recordkeeping theory?’, in C. Brown (ed.), Archives and Recordkeeping: Theory into Practice (London: Facet Publishing, 2014).
13D. Bearman, Electronic Evidence: Strategies for Managing Records in Contemporary Organizations (Pittsburgh: Archives and Museum Informatics, 1994), p. 133.
14K.C. Laudon and J.P. Laudon, Management Information Systems: Managing the Digital Firm, 15th edn (Harlow: Pearson, 2018), p. 242.
15Yeo, Records, Information and Data, p. 129.
16Yeo, Records, Information and Data, p. 152.
17See, e.g., K. Anderson, ‘The footprint and the stepping foot: archival records, evidence, and time’, Archival Science, 13 (2013): 349–71, at p. 363; D. Hofman, L. Duranti and E. How, ‘Trust in the balance: data protection laws as tools for privacy and security in the cloud’, Algorithms, 10 (2017): 1–11, at p. 3.
18L. Duranti, Diplomatics: New Uses for an Old Science (Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 1998), p. 6.
19For the concept of ‘affordance’, see O. Volkoff and D.M. Strong, ‘Affordance theory and how to use it in IS research’, in R.D. Galliers and M.-K. Stein (eds), The Routledge Companion to Management Information Systems (Abingdon: Routledge, 2018), pp. 232–45.
20ISO 15489-1: 2016, Records Management. Part 1: Concepts and Principles, clause 3.14.