Subject: AIC Code of Ethics revision
I would like to comment not only on the Code but on some of my colleagues remarks in the Distlist. I found these remarks very helpful in formulating my own thoughts on several issues. Beginning with Gary Frost's comments about the nature of library collections conservation viz. a viz. the rest of the conservation profession, I found these remarks to be very interesting. I believe he did a good job of describing some of the key elements that define the practice of collection conservation. However I would use these characterizations to make quite a different argument. Regarding his statements, >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, I would suggest that this does not just apply to the library environment, but to a host of other types of collections, especially historical, archeological, ethnographic, archival (as in archives) and any collection where the aggregate is a primary feature of the collection. I believe this is a very significant proportion of our collections of "cultural property," not a small minority constituting a "special case." Furthermore, I would strongly dispute the notion that to integrate the practice of specializations such as library collections conservation, "the coherency of the AIC Code" would be compromised. Rather I would suggest that not to include these and other similar specializations compromises the very purpose of AIC, namely "to coordinate and advance the knowledge and improved methods of conservation needed to protect, preserve and maintain the condition and integrity of objects or structures which because of their history, significance, rarity or workmanship have a commonly accepted value and importance for the public interest (hereinafter referred to as 'Historic and Artistic Works')." Which brings me to the comments of Richard Cox. He wonders why we have a Code if there is no provision for enforcement or as he says, "no effective means to use it?" This begs the question of what is the "use" of the Code (and Standards), what is the real purpose of these documents. I think the simple answer is our Code and Standards are not (and rarely ever have been) documents for enforcement or for legal action. In this sense, perhaps the words "Code" and "Standards" are misleading. Rather they are primarily documents of definition: they give authority and meaning to what we mean by conservation, what those who practice conservation do, and by extension who we define as conservation professionals. This, I believe, is their most important purpose. (Since I have not seen any explicit statement about the real purpose of these documents, I would acknowledge that this is just one point of view as to their purpose. This may reveal a serious flaw in the whole process: a set of documents whose purpose and use is ambiguous and subject to a variety of interpretations.) The rewriting/revision of the Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice, therefore, offers the opportunity to examine and amplify our vision of conservation. There are various reasons for doing this. It seems obvious that our profession has changed and is changing in a way that demands a new articulation of itself: its purposes, its membership, its goals and objectives. There is also the pressing need to open up the organization and the profession to include a broader definition of "conservation professional." We ignore this at our own peril. The conservation and preservation of cultural property is no longer the exclusive domain of conservators, but includes a growing array of professionals, from preservation administrators, collection managers, conservation scientists, conservation technicians, and others whose job titles don't even fully convey their involvement in the conservation/preservation process. If we don't define ourselves as incorporating (and hopefully influencing) this larger context for conservation, if we don't see the urgent need to enfranchise within our organization this diversity of conservation professionals, we will witness the continued erosion of our own professional influence, not just the atrophy of our professional organization. And we will relegate ourselves to a minor role in process of the preservation of cultural property. A more somber appraisal is that this phenomena, our self-engineered exclusion from important forums for preservation, is already in full swing, and if we continue "to rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic," we can look forward to the logical consequences. Our task is to reverse what is already a serious movement in this direction. How does this affect the current revision of the Code and Standards, specifically the language that is used there? I think many of Elizabeth Welsh's comments are directly or indirectly concerned with these issues. For example, her first suggestion, that we define "preservation of cultural property" in the Preamble, underscores the need for more explicit remarks concerning the purpose and scope of these documents. The thorny issue throughout these documents is often, are we going to be more restrictive or more general. Are we going to make these fundamental documents broader statements of principle that provide the latitude to include a wide array of professional conservation activities, or are we going to be more specific, with the "job description" of a more traditional (perhaps now mythical) bench conservator as the yardstick against which we implicitly define what conservators do? The ambiguous purposes of the Code and Standards, including to whom these documents apply, are illustrated in Welsh's remarks concerning the second paragraph of the Preamble. Without recapitulating every comment made by Welsh, I would just like to affirm her remarks, in general, especially those on the Code, Sections I, III. and V. From these remarks follows the need to reconsider the section on Documentation. We should explicitly acknowledge that the treatment of whole collections may require a different type of documentation, one that may use a general specification to cover a large number of object, and one that may eliminate the use of pictorial documentation. I think the point here is that there has to be more emphasis, not less, on words such as "where appropriate." The latitude to make a judgment as to the appropriateness of the documentation for these types of projects is exactly what is called for, not more rigidity. The level of detail written into the present Documentation section does not, I believe correspond with the breadth required to cover all the conservation specialties these Standards should embrace. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:8 Distributed: Tuesday, June 29, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-8-002 ***Received on Monday, 28 June, 1993