| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7429051 | International Journal of Information Management | 2018 | 6 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper pursues to show how regulation can facilitate the incorporation of transparency obligations into a record's lifecycle (transparency by design) to prevent the occurrence of any risk of corruption associated with the management of the information created by a public administration (missing or disappearance of information, lack of evidence, modification of documents, etc.). The paper analyses the mechanisms available to Spain's public administrations for managing these irregularities in records management though the raft of regulations and protocols that have been approved in the country. It assesses how the lack of specific regulations providing for transparency by design currently represents a limitation on the role of records management as a tool for preventing and fighting corruption. The paper shows that there is a need to guarantee proper records management, which includes transparency throughout a record's lifecycle. It concludes that legislation assessed does not properly reflect these ideals. Nevertheless, this concern is only partially and insufficiently reflected in legislation. Legislators usually ignore the instrumental and methodological fundamentals of records management. Therefore, there is a need to update legislation on archives and records management with regard to access to information, transparency and accountability.
											Related Topics
												
													Social Sciences and Humanities
													Business, Management and Accounting
													Management Information Systems
												
											Authors
												Anahà Casadesús de Mingo, Agustà Cerrillo-i-MartÃnez, 
											