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Transparency and Silence: A Survey of Access to Information Laws and Practices in 14 Countries

Date:
September 2006
Source:
OSI

This comparative study on access to information in 14 countries finds that transitional democracies outperformed established ones in providing information about government activities. Bulgaria, Romania, Armenia, Mexico, and Peru did better in answering citizens’ requests for information than France and Spain.

Published by the Open Society Justice Initiative, Transparency and Silence documents how various countries did—or did not—honor the right of access to information. In analyzing over 1,900 requests for information filed in 14 countries, the report finds that countries with access to information laws performed better than those with no law or with administrative provisions instead of a law.

The complete study and an overview are available for download below or on the Open Society Justice Initiative website at www.justiceinitiative.org.

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New Study on Access to Information Finds Young Democracies Outperform Established Ones
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