Irish Roots: Professional genealogy lives on despite internet

Association of Professional Genealogists of Ireland has name change in light of globalisation

Finding your roots: Vast jungles of genealogical half-truths and supposition have spread online, and the need for experienced guides has grown, not diminished
Finding your roots: Vast jungles of genealogical half-truths and supposition have spread online, and the need for experienced guides has grown, not diminished

Is it still possible to be an independent, professional genealogist? It was always a precarious livelihood, dependent on finding intelligent, trusting clients in an unregulated market not short of sharks.

The internet has been good for the shark population, and has also put the raw materials of research at the everyone’s fingertips.

Why pay someone you’re not sure you can trust to do something you can do yourself?

Because it will take you a month to find something that a competent professional can find in half an hour.

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Vast jungles of genealogical half-truths and supposition have spread online, and the need for experienced guides has grown, not diminished.

To some extent, this is a self-evident truth about expertise in general: it is perfectly possible to extract your own tooth, but the job is better left to an expert.

The difference with genealogy is that some of what we used to do was gate-keeping, allowing access to offline records because we happened to be where those records were.

That part of the job is now mostly dead. These days, we have to be more like research escorts to a client, clearing a lucid chain of evidence with our trusty machetes of scepticism. More like Indiana Jones, I like to think.

Which brings me to the name-change of the Association of Professional Genealogists in Ireland (apgi.ie), of which I am a member . We are now Accredited Genealogists Ireland. The reason is internet-driven globalisation. A larger US-based group called the Association of Professional Genealogists (apgen.org), an excellent organisation that acts as a support group for anyone in the family history business, is much more prominent world-wide. It doesn't offer accreditation, with its implicit guarantee of competence to potential clients, and we do. So we are getting out of their way.

Like many other things the internet was going to sweep into the dustbin of history, professional genealogy lives on.

irishroots@irishtimes.comirishtimes.com/ancestor