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Teaching, Preaching, and Practicing Ethics

Or, My Life of Crime. Teaching, Preaching, and Practicing Ethics. What follows. . . Basic Definitions Nature of Records & Ethical Issues Ethics Within the Academy Challenging Students. Defining the basics. . . . What Do We Mean by Ethics?.

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Teaching, Preaching, and Practicing Ethics

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  1. Or, My Life of Crime Teaching, Preaching, and Practicing Ethics Richard J. Cox, AERI

  2. What follows. . . • Basic Definitions • Nature of Records & Ethical Issues • Ethics Within the Academy • Challenging Students Richard J. Cox, AERI

  3. Defining the basics. . . Richard J. Cox, AERI

  4. What Do We Mean by Ethics? • “Workplace ethics require diligence, excellence, pride of accomplishment, and integrity. The kind of integrity required begins with honesty, respect for the person and property of others, and self-control.”Anita Allen • Ethical thinking, understanding that “human behavior has consequences for the welfare of others,” and that there is a “common core of general ethical principles” whereby they acknowledge that it is “morally wrong to cheat, deceive, exploit, abuse, harm, or steal from others, that everyone has an ethical responsibility to respect the rights of others, including their freedom and well-being, to help those most in need of help, to seek the common good and not merely their own self-interest and egocentric pleasures, to strive in some way to make the world more just and humane.”Richard Paul and Linda Elder Richard J. Cox, AERI

  5. More About Ethics • What we should or should not do • Standard approaches • Descriptive • Normative • Applied • Metaethics • Information ethics • Archival ethics – is this a distinct area from information ethics? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  6. Ethics May Be the Greatest Archival Challenge Today • “If we accept the importance of information, the power of information, then, we, as information professionals, are dealing with enormous power on a daily basis. We should know the value of what we’ve dealing wuth and be able to defend our actions and positions within these positions of power.” Elizabeth Buchanan and Kathrine Henderson • IT and digital recordkeeping has long been seen to be the greatest challenge, but IT is creating ethical issues on an unprecedented scale. Richard J. Cox, AERI

  7. Potential Ethical Issues in the Digital Age • Intellectual Freedom • Privacy, Secrecy, Confidentiality • Intellectual Property • Professional Ethics • Intercultural Information Ethics • Information Economics • Information Access Richard J. Cox, AERI

  8. Real Cases – Too Many, In Fact, Just in Archives • Historians in Trouble (Ambrose, Bellisiles, Ellis, Goodwin) • NARA Issues – Sandy Berger, reclassification, Anthony Clark • SAA & Weak Ethics Codes – “aspirational”? • Native American Archives Protocols • Film “Restoration” Cases • Freud Papers • Enola Gay Richard J. Cox, AERI

  9. My Life of Crime • NARA, Philip Morris, & Bill of Rights, 1989 • NARA, Don Wilson, & SAA, 1992 • David Wallace, Archives & the Public Good, 2002 • SAA, American Archivist, & RaisinGate, 2005 • Ethics, Accountability and Recordkeeping in a Dangerous World(2006) • Addition of “ethics” to “Archival Access & Advocacy course (2007) • “Archival Insecurities,” Library & Archival Security special issue (2009) • NARA OPL, SAA, Code of Ethics, & Anthony Clark, 2009 • “Teaching Unpleasant Things,” Interactions, 2009 • “Archival Ethics: New Voices,” Journal of Information Ethics, forthcoming Spring 2010 Richard J. Cox, AERI

  10. The Knowledge We Convey • “Commodity knowledge” is • “knowledge that has a use for the world of work, professional and preprofessional training, policy development, inventions, and patents” • “Symbolic knowledge” is • “knowledge that deals with value judgments, ethical, cultural, aesthetic, and philosophical argument, and speculative science.” Eric Gould • Can we assume that archivists contend we both sorts of knowledge? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  11. Records . . . Breeding ethical issues Richard J. Cox, AERI

  12. Records and Power • “Was my documentary instinct my craft, or was it my way of avoiding being present? Was it my way of defending myself? I knew what it was like to have people deny my experience. Was I documenting events, or was I buttressing my experience of them in order to control the narrative? . . . Looking for records in the Harrison County Courthouse had shown me how white people made the rules, kept the records, and wrote the history. There was power in being someone who knew how to use that system. I could see that. Now I was beginning to see the lens of whiteness that I was wearing, beginning to feel the glasses on my own nose, becoming aware of this distortion.” China Galland • Inherent in the nature of records are complex notions of control, power, and the use of evidence. How can we avoid facing ethical issues? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  13. Records as a Two-Edged Sword • “I firmly believe that knowing about your ancestors is a grounding experience. It can bring tremendous peace, especially to African Americans, as we have had so much of our past systemically stolen from us. But, of course, the process can also open old wounds.” Henry Louis Gates, Jr. • “Archival paradigms of the past have dictated that archivists assume records were created as impartial products of a business or organization’s work. The contemporary appraisal paradigm questions the infallibility of not only records, but also the records’ creators.” John Ridener • In such ideas we can ascertain the many potential conflicts posed by records in general and the records that become archives. Archives are not just about positive personal, community, and societal memory, but they reveal the warts and all of our pasts. Richard J. Cox, AERI

  14. Archival Ethics & . . . • Accountability • Evidence • Public Memory • Law • Intellectual Property • Access • Advocacy • Ethical issues permeate nearly every aspect of archival work – how can we not teach about or speak out about them? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  15. An example . . . • “Internet databases should be held accountable for the information they provide. If they rely on public records, then they should be required to keep up with the changes in these records. They should also provide mechanisms for filing complaints in the online data are erroneous, and they should make proper corrections in a timely fashion, the way those who keep tabs on credit records are expected to do.” AmitaiEtzioni with RadhikaBhat • Archival educators should be held accountable for teaching their students about such matters (whether or not their students want to hear about issues!). Richard J. Cox, AERI

  16. Ethics Within the Academy Richard J. Cox, AERI

  17. Teaching Teaching • “In the eyes of most faculty members in research universities, teaching is an art that is either too simple to require formal preparation, too personal to be taught to others, or too innate to be conveyed to anyone lacking the necessary gift. Lacking formal preparation, graduate students have learned to teach by modeling themselves after they admire who have taught them. This tradition introduces a profoundly conservative bias into faculty behavior that acts as an anchor to deter major changes in established forms of instruction and educational practice.” Derek Bok • In other words, we need to discuss more openly how we prepare others and ourselves for teaching, encompassing both approaches to how we teach and reviewing what we teach. Richard J. Cox, AERI

  18. Freedom • “The only way to keep ourselves free is to speak, not to let ourselves be silenced, either by pernicious laws, or by mob screaming.” Sara Paretsky • Have archival educators been outspoken about anything? How is this possible given the nature of records and archival misdeeds we read about daily in our newspapers? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  19. The Corporate University Threat • The “corporate model fails to recognize that the public mission of higher education implies that knowledge has a critical function; that intellectual inquiry that is unpopular or debunking should be safeguarded and treated as an important social asset; and that faculty in higher education are more than merely functionaries of the corporate order.” Henry A. Giroux and Susan Searls Giroux • "Temptations for ethical lapses are abetted by institutional factors that are untamed. The academic arms race giddily accelerates. In Ponzi-scheme fashion, it inflames the pursuit of money for constructing research facilities needed to attract high-salaried scientific superstars who can win government grants to perform research that will bring glory and more money to the university. Academe's pernicious enthrallment by the rating system of U.S. News & World Report is a disgrace of modern higher education."Daniel Greenberg • How are archival educators dealing with such threats? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  20. Abandoning Values? • “Abandonment by higher education of the moral, character-related aspects of education, the widespread but, we believe, erroneous assumption on the part of administrators that it is possible to have a college or a university without having an opinion of what sort of people ought to be produced by that institution.” William H. Willimon and Thomas H. Naylor • “As some of the most insightful members of the tech world recognize, we are in a transitional phase in which computer literacy seems of paramount importance; that phase will soon pass.” “Content” is becoming “supreme.” “By content I don’t mean just ‘information’; rather, I mean knowledge, understanding, and wisdom.” DineshD’Souza • Are archival educators abandoning or ignoring values? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  21. Challenging Students? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  22. The Purpose of Education • “The complexity of our present trouble suggests as never before that we need to change our present concept of education. Education is not properly an industry, and its proper use is not to serve industries, either by job-training or by industry-subsidized research. Its proper use is to enable citizens to live lives that are economically, politically, socially, and culturally responsible. This cannot be done by gathering or ‘accessing’ what we now call ‘information’ – which is to say facts without context and therefore without priority. A proper education enables young people to put their lives in order, which means knowing what things are more important than other things; it means putting first things first.”Wendell Berry • Do archival educators agree that they should help their graduate students “put their lives in order,” at least so they understand the ethical implications of the archival mission? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  23. Creeping Vocationalism • The idea that a “traditional liberal arts education is, by definition, not intended to prepare students for a specific vocation. Rather, the critical thinking, civic and historical knowledge and ethical reasoning that the humanities develop have a different purpose: They are prerequisites for personal growth and participation in a free democracy, regardless of career choice.” • But, we must “justify their existence to administrators, policy makers, students and parents. Technology executives, researchers and business leaders argue that producing enough trained engineers and scientists is essential to America’s economic vitality, national defense and health care. Some of the staunchest humanities advocates, however, admit that they have failed to make their case effectively.” Patricia Cohen • Can we teach about ethical issues when most students seem to be just interested in getting credentials? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  24. Dealing with the World • “If there is to be lasting hope for the future of higher education, that hope can only be generated by confronting our desolate world and its urgent, threatening realities. The only way out is through.” Richard Miller • Are archival educators confronting the real issues within the professional community or the ones threatening the archival mission? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  25. Make It Matter. . . . • "If there's one thing we must keep in mind about our current economic situation it is this: We are not failures and we are not alone. We have it within us -- every single one of us -- to fight back if we so choose. Don't just tentatively poke at the boundaries of how life might be. Bust through them with all the power you can muster." • Then this: "Be active. Be vocal. Be creative. Be radical. This is your life. Make it matter.” Nan Mooney • Good advice – is it relevant to archival educators? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  26. In the Classroom • “The best classroom is one in which the student begins to think, speak, write, and act in new ways made possible by that classroom.” James J. O’Donnell • “There’s too much emphasis on matters related exclusively to the head and not enough attention given to nurturing the attitudes and faculties that make of knowledge something useful and good.” Jane Tompkins • What is going on in our classrooms? Are we willing to risk upsetting students? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  27. Difference between students & ideas • “It is important . . . to distinguish between respect for person and respect for ideas. Faculty must respect students as persons, but they needn’t respect ideas, even ideas held by students. In higher education no idea is immune from potentially scathing criticism.” Matthew W. Finkin and Robert C. Post • And it is often difficult for students to understand this Richard J. Cox, AERI

  28. Nearly Anything Can Be Taught • “The art of writing cannot be taught, but the craft of writing can. No one can teach you how to tap inspiration, how to gain vision and sensibility, but you can be taught to write lucidity, to present what you say in the most articulate and forceful way. Vision itself is useless without the technical means to record it.” Noah Lukeman • Ok, so maybe we can not teach someone to be ethical, but we can teach them what being ethical entails. Does this make sense? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  29. The Road Ahead . . . Richard J. Cox, AERI

  30. Putting Everything In Perspective • The “problem is that the charges against the university are so hyperbolic, so angry, so conspiracy-minded, and so one-sided they can find almost nothing positive to say.” • “There is fragmentation in the United States; there is distrust; there is deep anger – and much of this is reflected in and acted out in universities, but none of it is caused by universities or by professors or by young people.” Lawrence Levine • So, what are we afraid of when it comes to embracing archival ethics as part of our curriculum? Richard J. Cox, AERI

  31. Decisions We Face • Building Ethics Into the Curriculum (or not) • Researching Ethical Issues (or not) • Speaking Out About Ethical Issues (or not) • Expanding Teaching Beyond Nuts & Bolts (or not) Richard J. Cox, AERI

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