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Records in social media: a new (old) understanding of records management

Babatunde Kazeem Oladejo (Department of Computer Science and Information Systems, Sarajevo School of Science and Technology, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Darra Hofman (School of Information, San Jose State University, San Jose, California, USA)

Records Management Journal

ISSN: 0956-5698

Article publication date: 23 October 2023

Issue publication date: 2 November 2023

676

Abstract

Purpose

Social media posts have been an integral part of our society’s communication and serve purposes from the personal to the national, from the mundane to the silly to the momentous. This study aims to examine social media posts as records, discussing how social media technology serves, perhaps unexpectedly, to reinforce traditional archival understandings of issues such as provenance, custody, access, disposition and preservation.

Design/methodology/approach

This study follows a four-step methodology. First, this study analyzes literature for a matching definition of the social media record. In the second step, we appraise three social media postings previously curated and cited in news articles by journalists to determine their characteristics – Are these social media posts “records?” Third, this study evaluates the sample records against two dominant theoretical record models, the life cycle and the continuum and attempt to apply the model specifications to the data samples. Finally, this study proposes appropriate records management solutions to address governance issues from the study findings in the conclusion section.

Findings

This study shows that, even by the most traditional of definitions, social media posts are records. The paper also demonstrates that platform mediation transforms simple narrative documents into records whose provenance, custody and control are dictated by platform logics and governance, outside of the control of their creators. Through appraisal of a small sample of “important” social media posts, this study illustrates that, rather than obsolete, traditional records management concepts and approaches are necessary to ensuring the ongoing accessibility, usability and evidentiary character of social media posts in the broader “platformized” context.

Research limitations/implications

This is exploratory, theoretical work. In future works, this study plans to expand and validate aspects of this study.

Originality/value

This paper tests existing theoretical frameworks, namely, the Records Life cycle and the Records Continuum for applicability to the social media record. The paper also offers a view of the potential for traditional archival and records management concepts in service of a just and inclusive recordkeeping, because such concepts allow us to demonstrate the centralized, elite-serving, bureaucratic structures which underpin social media records are obscured by the seemingly decentralized, participatory nature of social media.

Keywords

Citation

Oladejo, B.K. and Hofman, D. (2023), "Records in social media: a new (old) understanding of records management", Records Management Journal, Vol. 33 No. 2/3, pp. 148-164. https://doi.org/10.1108/RMJ-03-2023-0019

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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