Confidentiality, Integrity, and Accountability: Examining Ethical Challenges in Records Management within Academic Libraries
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63741/cijlics.2026.0301.9-jKeywords:
Ethics, Records Management, Academic Libraries, Confidentiality, Accountability, Integrity, Nigeria, Information PrivacyAbstract
Academic libraries in Nigeria play a pivotal role in supporting teaching, learning, and research through the systematic management of records that document institutional and user activities. However, the ethical dimensions of records management remain underexplored, despite their significant influence on transparency, accountability, and information integrity. This paper examines the ethical challenges associated with records management in Nigerian academic libraries, focusing on the core principles of confidentiality, integrity, and accountability. Drawing on conceptual and theoretical insights, supplemented by a small empirical perspective from selected Nigerian university libraries, the paper discusses issues such as privacy breaches, lack of professional competence, and poor compliance with regulatory frameworks, which compromise ethical information stewardship. The study highlights the implications of these ethical lapses for institutional credibility, user trust, and regulatory compliance. Recommendations are provided for the development of ethical guidelines, staff capacity-building, and the integration of data protection mechanisms into library governance. The paper concludes that embedding ethical frameworks within records management systems is vital for sustaining transparency, trust, and responsible service delivery in Nigerian academic libraries.