About NCA
What We Do

Aims & Objectives

The National Council on Archives was established in 1988 to bring together the major bodies and organisations, including service providers, users, depositors and policy makers, across the UK concerned with archives and their use. It aims to develop consensus on matters of mutual concern and provide an authoritative common voice for the archival community.

Its specific aims are:

  • To bring to the attention of the public, government or relevant institutions or organisations, matters of current concern in the field of archives.
  • To assist the work of the The National Archives and The Museums, Archives and Libraries Council in such a way as those bodies deem appropriate by mutual agreement.
  • To encourage and to assist in a continuing programme of public education in archive matters; to work to inform the public of existing archive services and of the importance of preserving our archive heritage, by encouraging or supporting conferences, publications and other such educative ventures.
  • To encourage funding, where appropriate and in consultation with other relevant agencies, in support of the preservation and acquisition of archives and to provide advice, when called for, on the allocation of such funds.
  • To pursue the definition of minimum standards for archive repositories, to investigate means of achieving them, and to encourage their attainment where appropriate.
  • To examine current archive acquisition policies and activities and to draw attention to such gaps or shortcomings as may be perceived.
  • To encourage collaborative or regional initiatives to improve or advance the cause of archive services.

Some of the objectives of the NCA are delivered through its research arm, The Public Services Quality Group (PSQG) and The Community Archives Development Group (CADG) both formally affliliated to the NCA .

Status

The NCA is a membership organisation. It became a company limited by guarantee on 13th December 2000 and a registered charity on 16th August 2001.


Festival of Light versus the Festival of Life poster, 1971. Courtesy of the London School of Economics.


Nurses at the Royal Asylum of Montrose practising with a fire hose c. 1910. Courtesy of the University of Dundee.