I have recently moved (8 weeks ago) from being a Director of a Museums and Archives Service in Reading, Berkshire, to join the staff of Resource – the Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries. As Director at Reading I was appointed to the Board of Resource when it began life in April 2000. There were only four Board Members at that stage – there are now 16.
My move from board member to officer gives me an interesting perspective – let alone the new perspective of delivering a public service to being the equivalent of a Civil Servant!
A new strategic organisation for museums, libraries and archives, established by Government in April 2000. It is a non departmental public body „sponsored” by the Department for Culture Media and Sport.
Resource has three main objectives:
Resource has core values however, which underpin all aspects of our work:
Some facts and figures about Resource:
We have four main work programme themes:
(i) | Promotion, advocacy and planning |
(ii) | Learning and access |
(iii) | Standards and training |
(iv) | Capacity building. |
and an aggressive programme of research and statistics to underpin all these areas – back to that point about advocacy and needing the evidence of our impact in society.
To exploit cross-sectoral synergy on shared issues.
The great cry from all three domains when Resource was created was: „we’re not the same”! Resource and its creation does recognise that but there are shared issues and there is, as I have said, lobbying strength in being one sector.
Most importantly the public is a shared one – one which often cannot see the distinction between the institutions that all hold information.
Take the example of the local historian – when here in England photographs are held in the museum, the local studies library and the archive or record office.
We ought to be providing a seamless delivery or at very least a coherent network between the resources that we all hold.
What Resource is NOT about, is trying to make the infinite variety of our museums, libraries and archives fit into one standardised box.
It is about breaking down old and outdated divisions and freeing up the treasury of knowledge we hold -so that people can use it, see it, experience it.
This year it has been widened out to include archives and libraries. The next step is to get libraries on placement in museums and vice versa!
The British Library Cooperation and Partnership programme is another example. It was begun in 1999 to reinforce the British Library’s commitment to cooperation in the library and information services world. Resource adds £50,000 to widen the scheme to benefit museums and archives.
Or the IT Modems scheme – a basic means of getting simple hardware in the smaller museums and archives. (Trying to catch up with libraries and the hardware provided by the People’s Network).
I’d like to take three types of partnership:
(i) To take the first type; within the single domain - an obvious case study is that of the National Maritime Museum, which has undertaken an initiative in mapping and supporting in a variety of ways, maritime collections throughout the country.
The distribution of some collections held in Greenwich – more relevant to the interpretation of a particular locality – and an overview of duplicated items and overlap – can only help future collecting and deaccessioning policies let alone marketing or collaborative exhibition work. This is a real and valuable role for our „national” museums.
On a smaller scale my old museum in Reading runs consultancy days as part of a project funded by the Department for Education and Skills „New loans for the Millennium”.
80 years of experience and evaluation of sending museum objects out to school classrooms as teaching support material has built a wealth of knowledge and expertise.
The consultancy days are a way of sharing that knowledge with other museums. The dialogue of course, continues beyond the day and new networks and partnerships are born.
(ii) Across libraries, museums and archives new partnerships are being developed – such as in the eastern region of England, where all three services are working together to provide a Web portal or „one stop shop” for the region’s collections and services – funded by Resource as part of our „cross domain agenda”.
In the South West there is a „cross domain social impact audit” being carried out which will measure the benefits of Libraries Museums and Archives across local communities.
Many of the projects recently awarded money under the New Opportunities Fund combine collections and material in really imaginative ways – archives working with a local studies library to create a „virtual” 17th century house for example.
And the British Library’s Co-operation and Partnership Programme which I mentioned earlier is an great example of both partnership and work reaching across the sector.
(iii) Beyond our own sector there are partnerships to be built with the Arts Council for England, for example.
Their Creative Partnerships Scheme has been established to encourage school children to experience „cultural activity” from across the sector and beyond. A great opportunity to think laterally and build new bridges.
Resource, in its current work programme, is „setting out what needs to be done to improve the quality of leadership and training in the sector”.
This is bound to involve looking at other training providers – other sectors who have confronted „leadership” or the lack of it in their worlds.
Business and the Arts is an organisation here in England, which provides an obvious link - as do the education and training providers in higher education.
Links with the commercial worlds, I believe are essential to our sector; they can challenge, invigorate and inspire. They can also be alarming, overwhelming and dangerous!
But used wisely librarians, curators and archivists can gain much and have much to offer. The „not for profit sector” has a great deal to offer in terms of different experiences, values and measures of success.
Libraries, of course are in some senses already part of this commercial world as providers of business libraries and ICT networks – streets ahead!
But for the rest of us, to make the point I return to Reading – (apologies) where we needed to raise money to support the loans of objects to schools.
Loans of objects to offices was the „idea” (– not flat art but flat irons!) – and that idea needed a business plan. I found myself in the offices of Ernst & Young being asked -by two young men who had never visited a museum what my „product sensitivity“ was and, what was my „market penetration”.
Markets, products and penetration were not terminology I had used in this context before! At first sight, they were entirely irrelevant to a Director of Museums and Archives.
I was forced to think differently and at the same time take on board – or disregard, the business techniques and analysis that were being shown me.
Reading now has a successful Business Partnership scheme which exchanges objects in purpose built display units for new audiences, new publics – and of course – the hire fee!
Partnerships have to be two way affairs and there is a danger when we are dealing with new worlds that we think we have little to offer -and return to the old concept of „sponsorship” – when in reality we hold information, data, things; we can provide a sense of place, satisfy curiosity and give a context to the past to our confusing present. These are important and valuable offerings.
I come from a museums background and to me some of the synergies are obvious. Museums in this country are struggling with a number of issues where librarians can help us.
What, for example, is the scope for encouraging museums to loan some objects in the same way as libraries?
How can museums benefit from experience with ICT that librarians have gained?
How can librarians benefit from the kind of active interpretation role carried out by museum educators?
What can museums and archives learn from each other about the balance between access and preservation.
Perhaps the greatest benefit of joining the three „domains” (as we call them) together, is in terms of political profile and advocacy I mentioned earlier.
Of course there are differences between domains that need to be respected. But it is our contention that the areas of common interest outweigh the areas of specific professional interest. The bottom line is that the public expect seamless service delivery.
We have had to overcome some resistance -the silo mentality and we have had to develop intellectual underpinning to justify our case.
We ourselves can learn from experience in other countries, e.g.
I am sure you will all have your own examples of „good practise” and innovation.
Which is why today and the papers and discussions you will have formally and informally are so valuable in creating the ideas, connections and partnerships that are at the heart of the Resource agenda.