Project MIRRA: Memory - Identity - Rights in Records - Access

Q3 Arts and Humanities Comma Pub Date : 2021-08-01 DOI:10.3828/comma.2020.6
E. Shepherd, V. Hoyle, Elizabeth Lomas
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Abstract

Many people who grew up in care have gaps in their childhood memories and unanswered questions about their early lives. In the absence of family photos and stories they turn to records held by the local authorities and charities that looked after them. Accessing these records is a practically and emotionally challenging process. Response times are often long and the records received are redacted because they include confidential information about “third parties’” who are often family and carers. The language and ideas contained reflect the prejudices and assumptions of previous times. Some files are extremely long and confusing, whereas others only have a few pages to cover a whole childhood. Records may have been lost or destroyed altogether. Very few services are available to support people through the experience. MIRRA: Memory-Identity-Rights in Records-Access is a participatory action research project carried out at the Department of Information Studies at University College London since 2017 that explores these issues. It considered how child social care records have been created, kept and used in public and voluntary organizations in England from 1970 to the present. The research is co-produced with care leavers in partnership with The Care Leavers’ Association and reflects on how what it is recorded about a childhood can affect the individual concerned throughout their life. This article republishes edited blog posts produced during the research project. The original blogs in full are available at https://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/mirra/.
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项目MIRRA:记忆-身份-记录中的权利-访问
许多在护理中长大的人在童年记忆中存在空白,对早期生活的问题也没有得到解答。在没有家庭照片和故事的情况下,他们求助于地方当局和照顾他们的慈善机构保存的记录。访问这些记录在实际和情感上都是一个具有挑战性的过程。回复时间通常很长,收到的记录也会被编辑,因为其中包括“第三方”的机密信息,这些人通常是家人和看护人。所包含的语言和思想反映了以前时代的偏见和假设。有些文件非常长,令人困惑,而另一些文件只有几页,可以涵盖整个童年。记录可能已经丢失或完全销毁。很少有服务可以通过体验来支持人们。MIRRA:记录访问中的记忆身份权是伦敦大学学院信息研究系自2017年以来开展的一个参与性行动研究项目,旨在探讨这些问题。它考虑了从1970年到现在,英国的公共和志愿组织是如何创建、保存和使用儿童社会护理记录的。这项研究是与护理离职者协会合作,与护理离职人员共同进行的,它反思了关于童年的记录如何影响相关个人的一生。本文重新发布了研究项目期间编辑的博客文章。完整的原始博客可在https://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/mirra/.
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Comma
Comma Arts and Humanities-Conservation
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