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open government regulations
9
MAY 2007
China Adopts First Nationwide Open Government Information
Regulations
By Jamie P. Horsley
The
Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Open Government
Information (OGI Regulations) published on April 24, 2007,
and effective one year later on May 1, 2008, mark a turning
point away from the deeply ingrained culture of government
secrecy toward making Chinese government operations and
information more transparent. (Note 1)
While these Regulations, promulgated by China's executive
body the State Council, do not have quite the status of
a law promulgated by the National People's Congress, they
nonetheless provide the legal basis for China's first nationwide
government information disclosure system. Moreover, under
China's unitary legal system, the OGI Regulations will apply
not only to central government agencies but also extend
the disclosure obligation downward through the Chinese government
hierarchy to the provinces, counties and townships, the
lowest level of government in China.
A
mixture of economic and political motives has driven the
authoritarian Chinese Communist Party leadership toward
greater transparency. China's international and bilateral
commitments require greater transparency and provide an
external impetus toward greater openness. However, the main
motivations underlying the OGI Regulations are largely domestic:
broader sharing of government information in the service
of economic development, improving people's lives, enhancing
trust between the public and the government, curbing government
corruption and promoting better governance at all levels
of government.
The
development of the OGI Regulations over some eight years
built on experience derived from "open government affairs"
programs introduced incrementally throughout the country
beginning in the 1990s and from locally-initiated "open
government information" (OGI) legislation adopted since
2002 in over 30 provinces and municipalities throughout
China, as well as within some central government departments
and institutions. (Note 2) China's Constitution
does not grant Chinese citizens a right to information and
existing legislation, including laws on protecting state
secrets, undefined "work secrets" and archived
materials, emphasizes secrecy rather than sharing of official
information. Thus, drafters of the local and national legislation
consulted international examples and drew on foreign expertise
as well as their own experience. While the OGI Regulations
are more conservative than many of the local predecessors
in not establishing a clear presumption of disclosure or
purporting to grant information "rights" per se,
they follow the basic structure of and utilize many of the
mechanisms adapted in China's local information regimes
and found in information access systems around the world.
Overview
The
purposes clause of the OGI Regulations sets forth the objectives
to ensure access to government information in accordance
with the law, enhance the transparency of government work,
promote law-based government administration and have government
information used in service of the people's productivity
and livelihood as well as social and economic activities.
While they do not -- as do many local provisions -- specify
protection of the public's "right to know" or
the public's supervision of government agencies' exercise
of power as explicit goals, Vice Minister Zhang Qiong of
the State Council's Office of Legislative Affairs explained,
in introducing the OGI Regulations at a press conference,
that they are in fact aimed at safeguarding "the public's
right to know, the right to participate and the right to
supervise" and are intended to "help curb corruption
at its source, largely reducing its occurrence." (Note
3)
The
Regulations define "government information" subject
to disclosure more broadly than some local provisions as
"information recorded or preserved that is made or
obtained by administrative agencies in the course of carrying
out their duties." (Note 4) Other
articles also apply the OGI Regulations to information held
by organizations and institutions such as hospitals and
public utilities that undertake regulatory matters or provide
social and public services. The people's congresses, political
consultative conferences, courts and procuracies will not
be covered by the OGI Regulations, although each of those
institutions has taken steps in recent years to make their
own operations more transparent.
The
OGI Regulations generally follow the "gold standard"
of Shanghai's OGI Provisions in their basic structure. They
establish two methods of accessing government information:
dissemination by government agencies on their own initiative
and disclosure in response to requests for information within
15-30 business days. They stipulate that government information
is to be made available basically free of charge except
for certain expenses like retrieval, copying and postage,
which can be reduced or waived in the case of persons with
economic difficulty. They call for instituting a bureaucratic
infrastructure for carrying out and supervising the new
system, including the designation of offices at all levels
of government and in each government agency at the county
level and above to handle OGI disclosure, the compilation
of open information catalogues and guides on how to access
and request information, and the production of annual reports
detailing the amount of information disseminated, the number
of requests handled and their disposition, the number of
administrative reconsideration and litigation cases that
have been filed and problems encountered.
The
OGI Regulations stipulate the types of information to be
disseminated by government agencies on their own initiative
generally and at different levels, as well as various means
of disseminating information. They, for example, call for
publicizing information through official websites (of which
there are already more than 10,000 throughout the country),
government gazettes, news conferences and broadcast media,
community bulletin boards and reading rooms established
in archives offices, public libraries, community centers
and government agencies. They set forth basic procedures
for requesting and providing information, grant individuals
the important new right to request and correct information
about themselves that is contained in government records,
require an explanation when information disclosure is denied,
call for periodic inspections of how government is implementing
OGI work by supervisory agencies and periodic public appraisals,
and specify the basic remedies of complaint, administrative
appeal and filing a lawsuit in court in the event of non-disclosure
or alleged infringement rights and interests by government
officials.
Scope
of Information to be Disclosed
The
OGI Regulations also follow earlier local OGI provisions
in stipulating in some detail the categories of information
that government agencies at different levels should ordinarily
make public on their own initiative, normally within 20
business days of its formulation. This detailed approach
to information dissemination, not frequently encountered
in international practice, makes sense in the Chinese context
given the lack of a tradition of public records and other
forms of government transparency. The Regulations call for
disclosure on the government's own initiative of information
relating to government structure, functions and procedures
as well as information that affects the "vital interests"
of the public and matters that society broadly needs to
know about or participate in.
More
specifically, local governments at different levels are
instructed to make available information on matters within
their purview of particularly great interest to the public,
such as regulations and regulatory documents and information
regarding emergencies and emergency planning, specific fees
for public services and education, results of investigations
into environmental protection, public health, and food and
drug safety, economic and social programs, government budgets
and decisions, urban planning, and land requisitions and
building demolition plans and standards of compensation
to be given therefor. Irregular land takings and urban redevelopment,
for example, have sparked protests and even violence throughout
China in recent years, and Chinese authorities clearly recognize
that enhancing transparency about such plans and the compensation
to be given may contribute to better handling of these sensitive
matters. China's leaders have also learned that the public
- and the global community -- needs better and more timely
information in the event of outbreaks of infections diseases
like SARS in 2003 and bird flu in 2004 and 2005, environmental
pollution incidents such as the Songhua River chemical spill
in northeastern Heilongjiang province in 2005, natural and
other disasters like the series of coal mine disasters in
2004 and defective food and drugs that cause illness and
death in China and abroad.
This
specific mandate of proactive disclosure is subject, however,
to conditions and exemptions. The global ideal in "freedom
of information" legislation is to set forth a clear
presumption of disclosure with narrowly drawn exceptions
to that principle. Many local OGI provisions introduced
throughout China in the past five years do follow this model,
(Note 5) some stating explicitly that "disclosure
shall be the principle, non-disclosure shall be the exception,"
and others framing the presumption along the lines of "all
government information shall be disclosed, unless subject
to one of the exemptions specified herein." In March
2005, the General Offices of the Communist Party of China
and the State Council issued a document establishing as
national policy the presumption that information concerning
"administrative management and public services, except
that involving state or commercial secrets and individual
privacy that is protected by law, shall be disclosed strictly
according to facts and in strict compliance with the provisions
of laws, regulations and relevant policies." (Note
6)
The
OGI Regulations, however, do not provide any such clear
statement favoring disclosure over non-disclosure. They
instead condition government disclosure on meeting an array
of requirements that taken together appear to reflect unease
about, and the continuing impulse to control, the release
of information. Article 5 stipulates that disclosure must
observe the principles of justice, fairness and convenience
to the people, and Article 6 adds that disclosure must be
timely and accurate, especially when false or incomplete
information does or might influence social stability and
social order. Article 7 requires pre-disclosure coordination
with other agencies to ensure that information involving
those agencies to be released is accurate and consistent,
as well as completion of any pre-disclosure approval requirements.
Article 8 then imposes a sweeping requirement that disclosure
may not harm "state security, public security, economic
security or social stability."
These
general principles limiting disclosure are supplemented
by Article 14's specific exemption from disclosure for information
that involves state secrets, commercial secrets and individual
privacy. (Note 7) That article also calls
for government agencies to establish mechanisms to ensure
protection of secrecy in accordance with the 1988 Law on
Safeguarding State Secrets, (Note 8) which
defines "state secrets" broadly as being "matters
that affect the security and interests of the state."
Those matters are illustrated with general categories of
information such as secrets concerning "important policy
decisions on state affairs," "economic and social
development," science and technology, and criminal
investigations, as well as the more internationally conventional
areas of national defense and diplomatic affairs. In practice
the State Secrets Law has been interpreted quite expansively
to maintain a general presumption of secrecy for a wide
range of information, including information that had not
been previously classified as secret. Chinese scholars and
officials have observed that the scope of the State Secrets
Law urgently needs to be narrowed and clarified in order
to avoid undermining the fundamental purposes of the OGI
Regulations to promote greater information flow.
The
internationally standard exemptions from disclosure for
commercial secrets and privacy also raise questions in the
Chinese context. While Chinese law does define "commercial
secrets," (Note 9) the application
of that concept, and the narrowness of the exemption in
the context of information access regimes that frequently
protect a broader scope of commercial information of competitive
value to the owner and supplier thereof, will need to be
further developed. Moreover, the concept of individual privacy
and the protection of personal information are not yet addressed
comprehensively in Chinese law. Although privacy rights
have been asserted in a number of court cases, there is
no law clearly establishing and defining the parameters
of such rights. Subjecting such unclear concepts as "commercial
secrets" and "individual privacy" to an undefined
"public interest" test, as provided in Article
14, (Note 10) further muddies the waters.
When
viewed together with potential administrative penalties
for not establishing mechanisms to protect secrecy (Article
34) and possible criminal sanctions for "disclosing
information that should not be disclosed" (Article
35(5)), the broadly drawn and undefined limitations on and
exemptions from disclosure could well have a chilling effect
on compliance with the new disclosure mandate by government
officials. Indeed, the overall impression is that the OGI
Regulations favor non-disclosure as the default principle.
The
Request Function
Another
respect in which the OGI Regulations appear to depart from
prior Chinese as well as international practice is in the
narrowly described scope of information that can be requested
from government agencies. Article 13 provides that citizens,
legal persons and other organizations may request government
information that has not already been disclosed on the government's
own initiative "in accordance with the special requirements
of their own production, livelihood, scientific research,
etc." This language suggests that the right to request
government information may be subjected to a needs test
of some sort, although Article 20, which stipulates the
contents of information requests, does not require a showing
of need for the requested information.
Experience
under existing freedom of information systems around the
world has demonstrated the importance of not subjecting
information requests for non-published records to any needs
test or limitations. Government agencies do not always disclose
all the information that could be disclosed and that is
of interest to the public. The request function is not just
a supplement to but an integral part, even the heart, of
an open government information regime. As has already been
the case under China's local GOI regimes, business associations
and companies request economic statistics and data, lawyers
representing clients obtain information in connection with
real estate transactions and filing of various business-related
application or lawsuits, scholars use information requests
for historical and investigatory purposes and individuals
seek information about their pensions, education, health
care and relatives.
Given
that one of the goals of the Chinese OGI system is to curb
corruption and ensure good governance, it is important that
citizens and the media be able to utilize the information
request function to understand and better supervise government,
as well as to more effectively engage in economic activities
and protect personal interests. Narrowing the request scope
might mean that critical information about government operations
is not disclosed or is not released in a timely manner,
or that requesters are forced to sue the government agency
to get the information, which means more cost and trouble
for everyone. Hopefully, the language of Article 13 will
be interpreted flexibly so as not to restrict the information
request mechanism.
The
Need For Independent Review
Critical
to establishing a credible open information system will
be the availability of a relatively independent decision-making
body that can decide disputes between requesters and government
agencies. The OGI Regulations designate the General Office
of the State Council, a sort of secretariat for the State
Council, to promote, guide, coordinate and supervise implementation
of the OGI system throughout the whole country, with its
counterparts or other offices specially designated to handle
these responsibilities performing a comparable function
at local government levels. The choice of the General Office,
which enjoys a superior status to that of the various ministries
under the State Council, makes sense bureaucratically for
purposes of providing interpretations and coordinating practice
among different central government entities and local governments
throughout China. Nonetheless, as overseer of China's vast
government bureaucracy, the General Office will be unlikely
to have the appearance of impartiality and independence
that experience elsewhere has shown is necessary to creating
public confidence in the resolution of disputes over what
should be disclosed that will inevitably arise between government
and the public.
In
the United States and other countries, the availability
of independent judicial review of government disclosure
decisions serves to help constrain arbitrary or abusive
government action and build public confidence in the information
access institution. The OGI Regulations do specify that
citizens, legal persons or other organizations can file
lawsuits (as well as administrative appeals) if they believe
specific acts of government in its OGI work infringe their
lawful rights and interests. (Note 11)
China's court system, however, is ultimately subordinate
to the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee
and the Party, and does not enjoy the power to interpret
law, only to apply it. When issues brought before it are
unclear, novel or politically sensitive, the courts typically
seek or defer to political guidance. Therefore, it can be
anticipated that enforcement of emerging information rights
in China, even with the adoption of the State Council OGI
Regulations, will continue to face high hurdles within the
existing court system.
Nonetheless,
it is possible to imagine devising a system to deal with
questions of disclosure that arise in the ordinary course
that do not involve alleged state secrets and other politically
sensitive issues. Alternatives might include training judges
to handle these new issues of information access, establishing
a specialized tribunal within the courts as was developed
in the field of intellectual property rights protection,
or introducing an administrative appeals body to handle
OGI disputes, such as an open government information commission
or combined public-government advisory body, possibly to
serve under the authority of the State Council General Office
and local counterparts. The Shanghai OGI Provisions, for
example, establish an Open Government Information Joint
Conference with representatives from the municipal general
office, supervision commission, legislative affairs office
and other relevant agencies and offices, with daily work
assumed by the municipal informatization commission, to
undertake research and coordination of OGI work, although
it is not specifically authorized to handle or give advice
on disputes. The different possible models all involve questions
of cost, expertise, procedure and perceived independence
from government or Party control. China's challenge is to
develop a system that will resolve, or be perceived to resolve,
conflicts over information access in a fair and impartial
manner.
Implementation
Will be Key
As
always, no matter how good a law or regulation may sound,
or how flawed it may appear, the key to its success will
be how it is carried out. In the case of the OGI Regulations,
the responsibility will fall not only on government agencies
to embrace as fully as possible the new culture of openness,
but also on the central government to revise conflicting
legislation such as the State Secrets Law, the 1988 Archives
Law that establishes a presumption that archived government
information, which is under state copyright, may not be
disclosed to the public for at least 30 years without special
approval, and laws such as the 2005 Civil Servants Law that
require protection of undefined "work secrets."
The public will also need to assume responsibility to make
the new system work, utilizing the new request mechanism
to obtain information and gradually press for relaxation
of the apparent presumption of non-disclosure implied in
the OGI Regulations.
One
indication of potential for successful, flexible implementation
will be the degree to which the State Council General Office
permits and even encourages local governments to continue
implementing their more liberal, existing OGI regimes. For
example, the Shanghai OGI Provisions contain fewer restrictions
on disclosure than the central mandate. Shanghai's three
published annual reports since the effective date of its
OGI Provisions on May 1, 2004 show that the vast majority
of the roughly 30,000 information requests filed up to December
31, 2006 that were clear and filed with the appropriate
agency were complied with in full or in part - roughly 80%
in 2006. Requesters obtained corrections of administrative
error in 18 % of administrative appeals settled in 2006,
a modest step forward. Although it is believed that no plaintiff
has yet prevailed in the 73 lawsuits filed in Shanghai courts
to date, the growing number of lawsuits accepted and heard
by the local courts indicates that the public is actively
using the OGI Provisions and attempting to assert their
rights. (Note 12) Hopefully the OGI Regulations
will be taken as a minimum common denominator and local
regimes will be permitted to continue with their divergent
but not necessarily inconsistent provisions.
Another
indicator of successful implementation will be how different
governments and agencies respond to the new system. The
State Environmental Protection Administration, for example,
quickly moved to release -- in advance of publication of
the OGI Regulations themselves -- their own implementing
measures on "environmental information" that will
apply not only to disclosure by environmental government
agencies but to the disclosure of certain corporate environmental
information as well. (Note 13) In Shanghai,
the mayor's personal commitment to publicizing and supporting
the OGI system initially, and continued "political
will" to promote greater transparency through ongoing
training, publicity, analysis of problems and publishing
of annual reports and "open government affairs"
work plans, has been an important factor contributing to
gradual improvement and widespread public utilization of
the system. Political support of individual government leaders
will help set the tone within different governments and
agencies and be an important factor in whether "open
government" and "open information" become
a reality.
To
be sure, the challenges to effective implementation are
enormous and will require persistence and a transformation
of bureaucratic culture. The financial magazine Caijing
reports of a man in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, who has
had no luck in obtaining requested information despite the
existence of provincial-level regulations calling for open
government information and more than 100 administrative
complaints reported since his first request in 2006. (Note
14) In the progressive city of Guangzhou, also located
in Guangdong province, officials dissatisfied with the low
utilization of the request channel under Guangzhou's pioneering
OGI Provisions drafted implementing measures to clarify
how that system should work with the intent of encouraging
more requests. During the drafting process, government agencies
weighed in with many concerns about the difficulties and
burden of fielding information requests. The resulting measures,
while generally balanced and clarifying the request process,
introduce a broad exemption from disclosure for "internal
government information and internal government documents"
that was not in the pioneering Guangzhou OGI Provisions
themselves. (Note 15)
Mitchell
Pearlman, who has more than 30 years' experience in freedom
of information work at the state level in the United States
and is frequently consulted by foreign governments seeking
to develop information access regimes, observes that it
is not surprising to see a bureaucratic backlash against
initial, expansive OGI principles. Disclosure systems are
time-consuming and require trained personnel, additional
expense and other resources. Officials also fear that the
potential for disclosure interferes with candid decision-making.
Taken
in this light, the OGI Regulations perhaps do requesters
a favor in making explicit the underlying bureaucratic and
political (Party) concerns surrounding this "revolutionary"
new disclosure system. For example, the stipulations concerning
the review that disclosure requests must undergo for secrecy
concerns, criticized by some Chinese scholars, clarifies
how the conflicts between opposing mandates of disclosure
and secrecy are going to be handled under China's State
Secrets Law, if not how they will ultimately be resolved.
The restrictive provisions in the OGI Regulations and experience
in applying them will hopefully prompt a more public debate
about how better to balance the contradictions between government
transparency and the protection of national security. With
the benefit of such dialogue and experience, China's leaders
may come to realize that increased information disclosure
and transparency of government operations generally leads
to greater, not less, social stability in the long run.
The
U.S. Department of Justice observes, in advice it prepared
for other nations seeking to develop information access
regimes, that the introduction of government openness requires
a "major culture change" for government agencies
and their personnel, at both the institutional and personal
levels. (Note 16) Concerns about loss
of control and resistance to change need to be addressed
openly, through ongoing training of government officials,
public dialogue and experience. In the United States, an
association of government "access professionals"
conducts regular training programs to share experiences
and best practices and educate each other on new developments
in implementing the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. China
has a year to prepare for implementation nationwide of the
new OGI system, and training about the new requirements
and publicity, as well as issuing of additional guidance,
will be important components of such preparation. Drawing
on the experience gained by local governments such as Shanghai,
as well as international experience with implementation
issues, could also be helpful.
Concluding
Observations
The
Chinese leadership's decision to adopt the OGI Regulations
despite clear reservations in some quarters is a remarkable
development. After Premier Wen Jiabao announced that the
Regulations had been adopted "in principle" on
January 17, 2007, the amended text was not finally approved
until April 5 and not officially released until April 24,
an unusually long gap between approval and promulgation
that reportedly was necessary to re-work the draft to take
account of concerns raised at the approval stage. No draft
of the OGI Regulations was ever made public for comment,
despite earlier plans to do so, and even though a draft
was widely circulated among government offices, scholars
and some foreign experts.
Presumably
as a result of continued apprehensions on the part of various
government officials and the Party, the final OGI Regulations
give conflicting signals. The broadly-drawn provisions restricting
information disclosure contrast with the listing of specific
kinds of information that government officials are charged
with disclosing on their own initiative. However, despite
the relative weak disclosure mandate, the OGI Regulations
establish a sophisticated infrastructure reaching all the
way down to the township level to carry out this conflicted
new task of information disclosure and call for mechanisms
such as annual reports, supervision and public appraisal,
as well as administrative and civil remedies, designed to
help ensure that the system is actually implemented. This
carefully designed institutional structure seems to reflect
a serious commitment to greater openness on the part of
the Chinese government.
It
predictably will take Chinese agencies and officials a long
time to get used to, let alone comfortable with, the new
concept of government being obliged to share information
with its citizens. Changes in related legal regimes such
as that governing state secrets, work secrets and archives,
and the development of law relating to the protection of
privacy and certain commercial information, will all be
necessary, as many Chinese legal scholars have pointed out.
The public will have to learn how to use the new system
and work with government to enhance transparency responsibly.
Promoting independent institutions to help resolve disputes
over information disclosure will also be critical to ensuring
that the new system begins to take root in the Chinese political
culture. In short, instituting truly open government information
in China will be a massive challenge for both government
and society.
The
drafting of a national law on open government information
was placed on the NPC legislative agenda for the current
session running through 2008. However, China will likely
need more time to gain experience and confidence under the
new system to be instituted under the OGI Regulations before
taking the next step to enshrine information rights and
obligations in a law. In the United States, for example,
it took a decade to draft the original Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), passed in 1966, and that was in a country with
long traditions of government accountability and public
records. Moreover, FOIA has been amended three times since
then.
In
adopting the OGI Regulations, China has officially started
its own process of developing an effective, enforceable
nationwide information access regime. While the development
of the OGI Regulations and their local counterparts was
primarily a top-down government initiative, the Chinese
people now have, by virtue of the OGI Regulations, an unprecedented
channel to interact with and monitor their government and
an extraordinary opportunity to help foster a new culture
of government openness in China.
4.
Shanghai's OGI Provisions, for example, more narrowly describe
government information as that held by government agencies
and related to economic and social management and public
services." Art. 2, Shanghai Municipal Provisions on
Open Government Information, issued January 20, 2004 and
effective May 1, 2004, available in an unofficial
English translation.
5.
See the articles on Guangzhou and Shanghai OGI
Provisions, supra, note 2.
6.
<<Zhonggong zhongyang bangongting, Guowuyuan bangongting
guanyu jinyibu tuixing zhengwu gongkai de yijian,>>
[Opinions of the General Office of the Central Committee
of the Chinese Communist Party and of the State Council
on Further Promoting Open Government Affairs], March 24,
2005, available online
in Chinese.
7.
Other local OGI provisions, such as Shanghai's, enumerate
additional categories of exemption, including commonly an
exemption for information about matters still under deliberation
and, in some cases, information relating to enforcement
actions, as well as a catchall for other information exempted
by law or regulation. The OGI Regulations do not address
these issues.
10.
See, also, Article 23 on requiring third party
consent for disclosure involving such party's commercial
secrets or privacy, but subject again to a "public
interest" exception. Vice Minister Zhang Qiong cited
information regarding major economic crimes, business fraud
and sex offences as examples of cases where the public interest
outweighs the protection of individual privacy. "Landmark
Decree," supra note 1.
13.
See a description of the SEPA Measures (For Trial Implementation)
on Open Environmental Information, adopted February 8, 2007
and promulgated April 11, 2007 for implementation, at the
same time as the OGI Regulations, on May 1, 2008, in "Wen
to Head Top Energy Saving Team," China Daily, April
26, 2007, at: http://www.china.org.cn/english/BAT/209006.htm.
15.
The implementing measures also reflected some progressive
additions, such as that fees could be waived in the case
of not only low-income persons but for non-governmental
organizations and public interest groups as well.