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28 SEPTEMBER 2008
International Right-to-Know Day 2008

Milestones and Successes for Open Government in Latin America

Global Phenomenon Now Includes More Than 80 Countries

Washington, D.C., September 28, 2008 – Today’s celebration of International Right-to-Know Day marks a new watershed in the global reach of freedom of information laws – now on the books in more than 80 countries – and features celebrations in countries ranging from Mexico to Moldova, according to postings today on the www.freedominfo.org virtual network of international openness advocates.

Some 86 countries and autonomous jurisdictions now have enacted some form of a freedom of information law guaranteeing the right of access to government-held information, according to a new survey compiled by Dutch journalist Roger Vleugels for International Right-to-Know Day.

Open government advocates in Mexico have organized a week-long series of events under the rubric of “Mexico Abierto” beginning today, while the Information Commissioner of Canada and other organizations have organized events at both the federal and provincial level there to celebrate Right to Know Week. On September 28 and during the following week, activists around the world are holding seminars, training sessions, coordinated information request filings, and award ceremonies such as the “Bronze Bell” awards in Moldova for consistency and courage in promotion of free access to information.

Noted transparency scholar Alasdair Roberts (now based at Suffolk University Law School, Boston, Massachusetts) estimated this year that the reach of freedom of information laws has now expanded to cover not just millions of people, as in the traditional FOI countries beginning in Scandinavia (Sweden-Finland in 1766 were the first), but billions of people, with the passage of the Indian Right-to-Information Act and the new information regulations developed by the People’s Republic of China.

Latin American countries in particular are witnessing new energy and milestones in expanding the right to know, in large part as a result of the landmark decision by the InterAmerican Human Rights Court in the case of Reyes v. Chile (2006) that access to government information is a fundamental human right.

The International Right-to-Know Day was first established by a group of primarily Eastern European openness advocates who met in Sofia, Bulgaria in 2002, and first celebrated in 20033. The activist network has now expanded to more than 200 organizations and individuals worldwide linked in through www.foiadvocates.net and the www.freedominfo.org network.

Members of the network coordinated by Access-InfoEurope have led the campaign to prevent the Council of Europe from adopting a lowest-common-denominator convention on information access.

The Open Society Institute Justice Initiative, which has been a long-time supporter of worldwide FOI advocacy, is marking International Right-to-Know Day 2008 by launching an invaluable new online resource of comparative analysis of international right-to-know legal and constitutional provisions, at www.right2info.org.


 

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FEATURES ARCHIVE

13 JANUARY 2010
India’s Right to Information Act: The First Four Years

7 OCTOBER 2009
Saber Mas: New Report on Access to Information in Latin America

19 JUNE 2009
Lessons from Media Coverage for the Right-to-Know in Latin America

19 MAY 2009
Freedom of Information Legislation and the Media in Latin America

14 APRIL 2009
World Bank Releases Extremely Useful Reports on Access to Information Implementation

27 MARCH 2009
Chileans Prepare for New FOI Law: An Interview with Juan Pablo Olmedo

20 MARCH 2009
Documents in Action: FOI Success Stories in Mexico

13 FEBRUARY 2009
Guatemala Looks to Mexican Model for Access Implementation

2 FEBRUARY 2009
JAPAN - Revelations from Prime Minster Aso on Wartime POW Labor Demonstrate Need for National Archive

30 JANUARY 2008
JAPAN - Tokyo Court: Foreign Ministry's Failure to Provide Documents on 1965 Japan-Korea Normalization Pact Illegal

9 MAY 2007
China Adopts First Nationwide Open Government Information Regulations

28 SEPTEMBER 2006
International Right to Know Day 2006 - Celebrating Freedom of Information Around the World

12 JULY 2006
REPORT: UNDP Seminar Spotlights Complexity of Expanding Right to Know

27 JUNE 2006     
CASE STUDY: Two Steps Forward, One Step Backwards: The Access to Information Campaign in Argentina

22 MARCH 2006     
Freedom of Information Laws Added to the Development Agenda

22 MARCH 2006
freedominfo.org Kicks Off Legislative Transparency Project

16 NOVEMBER 2005
ANALYSIS: How to Measure Openness?
Towards an International Index

28 SEPTEMBER 2005
Freedom of Information Makes Headlines Around the World
International Right to Know Day 2005

9 MAY 2005
REPORT: Article 19 on Freedom of Information in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia

15 APRIL 2005
CASE STUDY: Teaching Institute or Dance Bar?

Putting Local Freedom of Information Legislation to Use in Argentina

7 APRIL 2005
CASE STUDY: FOIA Law Discloses British Farm Subsidies

9 FEBRUARY 2005
CASE STUDY: On-line networking solves potential secrecy problem in Slovakia - elapsed time four hours

30 JUNE 2004
CASE STUDY: The Right to Know is the Right to Live

Profile of a Remarkable Peoples' Movement in India that Links Information to Livelihood

16 JUNE 2004 - UPDATE
CASE STUDY: Bulgaria - The Access to Information Program
Fighting for Transparency during the Democratic Transition

13 APRIL 2004
CASE STUDY: The Transparency Labyrinth in Argentina

14 OCTOBER 2003
CASE STUDY: The Freedom of Information Campaign in Argentina

11 OCTOBER 2003
"The right to know is gaining around the world"
by Thomas Blanton
The International Herald Tribune

5 OCTOBER 2003
REPORT: Fiji Debates Freedom of Information Proposal
Citizens' Group Launches Draft Law

22 SEPTEMBER 2003
REPORT: Freedom of Information in Ireland
Five Years On

8 SEPTEMBER 2003
REPORT: The Birth of the Freedom of Information Act in Japan
Kanagawa 1982

17 JANUARY 2003
CASE STUDY: The Philippines
A Liberal Information Regime Even Without an Information Law

30 SEPTEMBER 2002
CASE STUDY: Secrecy and Openness in the European Union
The Ongoing Struggle for Freedom of Information

27 JULY 2002
CASE STUDY: Japan - Breaking Down the Walls of Secrecy
The Story of the Citizen's Movement for an Information Disclosure Law

17 JULY 2002
REPORT: A Landmark Law Opens Up Post-Apartheid South Africa

9 JULY 2002
REPORT: In Mexico, a New Law Guarantees the Right to Know

5 JULY 2002
ANALYSIS: Japanese Government Information:
New Rules for Access

The 2001 Information Disclosure Law, and a Comparison with the U.S. FOIA

JULY/AUGUST 2002
The World's Right to Know
By Thomas Blanton
Published in Foreign Policy


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