Website & Social Media Closure

To all followers of ACARM. The Association has now closed operations, as of February 2021. The Association’s social media accounts have been decommissioned and this website is retained in legacy format only. Thank you to everyone for all your support over the years.

With best wishes,

James Lowry,

Chair

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Final Newsletter Publication

Dear Members, please find the Final Newsletter of the ACARM organisation published below.

This last issue includes:

  • A Message from the Chair, James Lowry.
  • Tributes and thanks to ACARM from Anthea Seles, Anne Thurston, Sylivester Sennabulya.
  • A discussion of the National Archives of Australia’s recently published ‘Palace Letters’ from David Fincker.
  • Tributes to ACARM’s Honorary Members: Ivan Murambiwa, Michael Roper, Kelvin Smith and Sarah Tyacke.
  • Images from ACARM’s history.
  • And a farewell from our Communications Coordinator, Laura Miller.

As web editor, I’d also like to wish everyone whose visited and kept up with the website a fond farewell too!

A Message from the Chair

To all ACARM members,

The 2020 annual general meeting of the Association of Commonwealth Archivists and Records Managers is scheduled for 17 November 2020 via Zoom.

As you will know from the newsletters so diligently compiled by Laura Millar and Robert Hillman over the past few years, we have called for new leaders to step forward and revitalise ACARM, but no one has volunteered, and it is now time to shut down the association, in line with the decision taken at the 2019 AGM in Adelaide.

Our final meeting will be held virtually, via Zoom, on 17th November 2020 at 10:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada). Register in advance for this meeting: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEtde6grz0sHNFFuFnaLjdm5yN1DZ_BoYHw  After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Laura and Robert are preparing the final issue of the newsletter, which will contain information about the closing of our accounts, the disposition of our records, and so on. The agenda for our final meeting will be circulated with the newsletter. If you would like to add an item to the agenda, or have your apologies recorded in the minutes, please let ACARM’s Chair, James Lowry, know as soon as possible via email at james.lowry@qc.cuny.edu.

Thank you.

James Lowry, Chair

ACARM at a Crossroads — Message from the Chair

A Message on the Future of ACARM from Chair, James Lowry…


ACARM is at a crossroads. ACARM was established in 1984 as a forum for Commonwealth archivists and records managers to share knowledge and collaborate on projects. Over 35 years, it has carried out a number of activities, but today the effort involved in sustaining the association is done almost entirely by a small handful of volunteers, and the only funding available comes through (declining) membership dues.

Since 2016, we have been working to reform the administration of the association. Margaret Procter has put the accounts in order, and Laura Millar, Robert Hillman and Chris Prince have revived the newsletter and website. Laura has also worked to expand the association’s reach through social media, including Facebook and Twitter.

We find, though, that we must ask important questions about the sustainability of ACARM in its current form. With the last set of meeting papers, you received an options report prepared by Laura suggesting directions ACARM could take if it is to survive.

At the 2018 AGM in Yaoundé, there was widespread support for the continuation of the association, but there were diverse views – and no consensus – on the form the association should take. However, while there were quite a few ACARM members present, the meeting was not quorate because only two members of the executive were in attendance.

At the forthcoming AGM in Adelaide, currently scheduled for 19 or 20 October 2019, we are going to put the options Laura has outlined to a vote. If there is no quorum or, again, no consensus on a future direction, the Executive Board will have to take a decision about how ACARM proceeds.

The question for you, ACARM’s members, is this: Do you want the association to survive? If so, what would be its role, activities, and scope? What role will you, ACARM’s members, play in supporting that work?

Before the 2019 AGM takes place, I am asking ACARM members to signal their interest in ACARM and their willingness to support the association into the future by actively engaging in the work of the association. You can do this in a number of ways:

1. You can write articles for the newsletter – including information about your institution’s activities, research you have conducted or your opinions and ideas about any manner of archival issue. Please send any submissions to our newsletter editor Robert Hillman at ACARMnewsletter@outlook.com. We welcome all types of contributions, short or long.

2. You can share news from your countries, institutions and communities that she can share through our social media accounts. Please send any news to Laura Millar at laura_millar@telus.net, contact her through the ACARM Facebook page or share your news via Twitter at @ACARMhq.

3. You can send project ideas to me at jlowry@liverpool.ac.uk to consider ACARM
endorsement. Send me your ideas for projects that you would like to deliver in your countries or regions, along with information about how you intend to get funding to support them. I will work hard to see if ACARM can play a role in supporting your initiatives, either through active participation or by promoting your event through our social media networks and newsletter.

4. You can volunteer for the executive board or you can help carry out specific
ACARM duties, such as helping with membership management and dues payments,
helping to edit the newsletter, or assisting with other administrative duties. Many current members of the executive plan to step down from their positions in 2019 or 2020, and the association will need new people to take on those important roles by the time of the 2020 meeting if not by the time we meet in Adelaide in 2019.

This is a critical moment for ACARM. If you still believe that ACARM is a useful mechanism for exchanging information, collaborating, and supporting our Commonwealth archival community, 35 years after its establishment, then you, the association’s members, must start to participate in and make use of your association much more actively.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Yours,

James Lowry,

Chair, ACARM

Summary of the ACARM Annual General Meeting 2017 – Mexico City

ACARM’s last annual general meeting was held at the ICA’s ALA-ICA conference in Mexico City, Mexico 25 November 2017.

At the meeting, members reviewed and revised ACARM’s constitution, adopted the Association’s Position Paper on Migrated Archives, and discussed options for new directions for the Association to broaden membership, offer more diverse member services, and share communications as widely as possible, including through social media as well as a reinvigorated website.

Among the attendees at the AGM were ACARM members from the UK, Canada, Sri Lanka, Jamaica and Swaziland.

The 2018 AGM will be held in beautiful Yaoundé, Cameroon, on 24 November 2018. We hope many ACARM members will be able to join us!

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