Information governance

Information governance, or IG, is the overall strategy for information at an organization. Information governance balances the risk that information presents with the value that information provides. Information governance helps with legal compliance, operational transparency, and reducing expenditures associated with legal discovery. An organization can establish a consistent and logical framework for employees to handle data through their information governance policies and procedures. These policies guide proper behavior regarding how organizations and their employees handle information whether it is physically or electronically created (ESI).[1][2][3]

Information governance encompasses more than traditional records management. It incorporates information security and protection, compliance, data quality, data governance, electronic discovery, risk management, privacy, data storage and archiving, knowledge management, business operations and management, audit, analytics, IT management, master data management, enterprise architecture, business intelligence, big data, data science, and finance.[4]

  1. ^ "What is Information Governance? And Why is it So Hard? - Debra Logan". 11 January 2010.
  2. ^ [ Elizabeth Lomas, (2010) "Information governance: information security and access within a UK context", Records Management Journal, Vol. 20 Issue: 2, pp.182-198, https://doi.org/10.1108/09565691011064322 . Available to download at http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1543932/]
  3. ^ [Kooper, M., Maes, R., and Roos Lindgreen, E. (2011). On the governance of information: Introducing a new concept of governance to support the management of information. International Journal of Information Management, 31(3), 195-200]
  4. ^ "IGI PUBLISHES 2014 ANNUAL REPORT - Information Governance Initiative". 11 August 2014. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 27 October 2015.

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