Subject: AIC Code of Ethics revision
As most of you know, the Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice ("Guidelines for Practice" in the new draft) is in the process of being revised. After several years of hard work, the Ethics and Standards Committee is about to prepare a final draft, to be submitted to the membership at next year's meeting and they have asked that comments and suggestions be sent to them in the next few weeks, before work on the new draft begins. The text of the current draft is presented below. ** Please post your suggestions/comments to the DistList asap and, ** in 10 days, I will forward all the contributions to the committee. I think it would be a good idea if those who are not AIC members would indicate that (I'm certain the committee will be most interested in the response of allied professionals to the draft). At this year's meeting there was a discussion session to consider the current draft and Paul Banks raised a crucial issue. The current draft does not address the fact that many of us work with materials whose value as individual items may not be significant, but in the aggregate (i.e. as collection(s)) take on significance. Collections-oriented conservation is obviously at the root of contemporary library and archives practice, but is also of concern to other specialties (ethnographic collections and natural history collections come to mind immediately). Although the committee has done a superb job at reducing the code's historical bias towards certain conservation specialties, it has not gone far enough in this regard. Now the draft code does not say anything that explicitly restricts the scope of conservation activities to single (autonomous) objects, and when I read it, my first impulse was to accept this and assume that Specialty Group commentaries (see below) would provide appropriate text in support of conservation of collections, but the remarks of a number of conservators during the discussion in Denver have caused me to reconsider that. A simple example typifies the problem. For example, a conservator asked that the language concerning photographic documentation be strengthened (i.e. that photodocumentation be required outright). While perfectly sensible for, say, a paintings practice, this makes little sense for a collection-oriented practice, nor indeed for single-item practice involving an object whose primary significance does not reside in its image. A simple statement in the Code in support of the concept of collections conservation (and please note that, despite the current fashion, I am *not* using this term as a euphemism for library circulating collection repair) would provide a foundation from which the Specialty commentaries could work to resolve such issues; without such a statement, collections-oriented conservators are effectively disfranchised and the code's historical biases will continue in a subtler but no less damning form. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:4 Distributed: Thursday, June 17, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-4-001 ***Received on Wednesday, 16 June, 1993