Subject: AIC Code of Ethics revision
My initial reaction to the current draft Code is that it is well expressed and clearly defines the work of the conservator. Those that find themselves undescribed may simply be something other than conservators from an AIC perspective. There is nothing terrible in that. There are specific conflicts between the specialized practice of library collections conservation and the ideal practice presented by the AIC Code. Though frequently mentioned, this is not a conflict as to documentation of treatment. The collections treatments need the fullest documentation and items treated under such standards must be assured the stated treatment. The distinction here is that the collection, not the item, is the "object" and, the documentation requirement is fulfilled at this level. More consequential conflicts between the AIC Code and the practice of specialists in library collections conservation arise in areas of consent, supervision, justification and suitability of treatment. The library collections conservator works in a different environment of curatorial consent. Collections are not so much esthetic objects as they are dynamic resources that fluctuate in value and in the forms of their use and meaning. Treatments must accord with the protection of these dynamic resources, not with simple artifactual preservation alone. A conflict in the need for supervision arises for the specialist in collections conservation in that much of the work is done by technicians, not by conservators. There is also a social and technical context for the work, in a production setting, that contrasts with most of conservation practice. Professional control of treatment extends only through the refinements of specifications, the ingenuity of production devices and the focused skills of technicians. The library collections conservator does not have direct, manual control of treatment. Justification and suitability of treatment within the specialty of library collections conservation follows logic paths uncondoned and unimagined by the AIC Code. For example, library collections treatment must account for the interplay of originals and copies and may well "preserve" originals through the production of surrogates. Such treatment logic is alien to the AIC Code. Again, modification of the original, including change or discard of components, is integral to library collections treatment, but not to the AIC Code. In my view, the coherency of the AIC Code should not be compromised, if that's what it means to integrate the practice of specializations such as library collections conservation. Such specializations should simply fulfill their professional responsibilities and define ethical practice on their own. Perhaps the ALA/ALCTS/PLMS is a professional organization better suited to support specialists in library collections conservation. In my view it is an organization more reflective of the social and technical context of library collections conservation and it offers much wider resource of peer review. Gary Frost *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:5 Distributed: Saturday, June 19, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-5-001 ***Received on Thursday, 17 June, 1993