The World’s Right to Know During the last decade 26 countries have enacted new legislation giving their citizens access to government information Why Because the concept of freedom of information is evolving from a moral indictment of secrecy to a tool for market regulation more efficient government and economic and technological growth By Thomas Blanton NOVEMBER 11 2009 6 52 PM History may well remember the era that spanned the collapse of the Soviet Union and the collapse of the World Trade Center as the Decade of Openness Social movements around the world seized on the demise of communism and the decay of dictatorships to demand more open democratic responsive governments And those governments did respond Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin partially opened the Soviet archives Former U S President Bill Clinton declassified more government secrets than all his predecessors put together Truth commissions on three continents exposed disappearances and genocide Prosecutors hounded state terrorists courts jailed generals and the Internet subverted censorship and eroded the monopoly of state-run media Most striking of all during that decade 26 countries — from Japan to Bulgaria Ireland to South Africa and Thailand to Great Britain — enacted formal statutes guaranteeing their citizens’ right of access to government information In the first week after the Japanese access law went into effect in 2001 citizens filed more than 4 000 requests More than half a million Thais utilized the Official Information Act in its first three years The U S Freedom of Information Act FOIA ranks as the most heavily invoked access law in the world In 2000 the U S federal government received more than 2 million FOIA requests from citizens corporations and foreigners the law is open to any person and it spent about $1 per U S citizen $253 million to administer the law Multilateral institutions are also trying to meet freedom-of-information challenges from their member states as in the European Union EU where Sweden Denmark and Finland are criticizing the culture of secrecy favored by Germany and France or from civil society the World Bank is now fumbling with a half-hearted disclosure policy In the aftermath of September 11 as control of information emerged as a crucial weapon in the war against terror troubling signs emerged that governments might be shutting the door on the Decade of Openness But worldwide new security measures and censorship laws have been few and far between Canada contemplated but then backed away from giving its justice minister the power to waive its long-standing access law on an emergency terrorism-related basis India passed the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance which threatened jail terms for journalists who didn’t cooperate with law enforcement but no such actions have yet occurred Great Britain delayed implementing its new information access law until 2005 but said the delay had nothing to do with September 11 Ironically secrecy has made the most dramatic comeback in the country that purports to be the most democratic Even before the al Qaeda attacks the Bush administration claimed executive privilege in several high-profile requests for information fighting off congressional calls for the names of private-sector advisors on energy policy and stalling the release of Reagan-era documents under the Presidential Records Act But September 11 turned this tendency into a habit sometimes justifiably as in details of special operations in Afghanistan but more often reflexively In recent months White House officials granted former presidents veto power over release of their administrations’ records ordered agencies to use the most restrictive and legalistic response possible for FOIA requests and denounced leaks even as mayors and local law enforcement complained about the federal government’s failure to share information The Bush administration’s secrecy obsession will likely prove self-defeating because like markets governments don’t work well in secret The most effective opponents of the president’s yen for secret military tribunals were not civil libertarians but career government prosecutors and military lawyers who insisted on more open trials and more due process on legal and constitutional grounds as well as for reasons of efficiency The prosecutors know what President Bush does not — that openness fights terrorism by empowering citizens weeding out the worst policies and holding officials accountable not least the foreign despots who are now temporary U S allies in the war against terrorism More broadly the motivations behind the freedom-of-information movement in countries outside the United States generally remain unchanged by the war on terrorism Openness advocates are successfully challenging entrenched state and bureaucratic power by arguing that the public’s right to know is not just a moral imperative it is also an indispensable tool for thwarting corruption waste and poor governance TRANSPARENCY’S SCANDALOUS PAST Most of the freedom-of-information laws in the world today came about because of competition for political power between parliaments and administrations ruling and opposition parties and present and prior regimes In fact the first freedom-of-information law — Sweden’s 1766 Freedom of the Press Act — was driven by party politics as the new majority in parliament sought to see documents that the previous government had kept secret Likewise the U S FOIA which has emerged as a model for reformers worldwide was not the product of democratic enlightenment but rather Democratic partisanship The legislation emerged from 10 years of congressional hearings 1955–65 as the Democratic majority sought access to deliberations of the Republican executive branch under former President Dwight D Eisenhower The U S FOIA as it exists today — with broad coverage narrow exemptions and powerful court review of government decisions to withhold information — is actually an amended version of the 1966 act revised in 1974 by a Democratic Congress over a veto by then Republican President Gerald Ford The U S FOIA would not be as far-reaching had it not been for Watergate Indeed scandals have remained a catalyst for freedom-of-information movements worldwide Canada passed its freedom-of-information statute in 1982 following scandals over police surveillance and government regulation of industry Public outcry over conditions in the meatpacking industry and the administration of a public blood bank prompted Ireland to pass a similar law in 1997 Japan’s 1999 national access law followed two decades of scandals from the Lockheed bribery case in the 1970s to the bureaucracy’s cover-up of HIV contamination of the blood supply in the early 1990s Japan’s information disclosure movement started 20 years ago as local access ordinances unearthed systematic falsifications of government accounts and exposed widespread corruption within the Japanese public works and construction industries — a political bribery system that bulwarked 40 years of one-party rule in Japan While the eruption of scandals has been a catalyst for reform in countries with a long democratic tradition the collapse of totalitarian regimes helped drive the freedom-of-information movement elsewhere in the world In Europe where administrative reform in most former communist countries bogged down in the early 1990s due to frequent changes in governments and a corrosive debate about banning former Communist Party officials from public office Hungary took the initiative and passed a freedom-of-information act in 1992 The Hungarian law was in part the new regime’s revenge against its communist predecessors opening their files and making them accountable for previous misdeeds Reassured by the successful model in Hungary pressured by open society nongovernmental organizations NGOs such as those funded by billionaire philanthropist George Soros and eager to integrate into the EU and NATO other former communist countries engaged in the freedom-of-information debate in the late 1990s New freedom-of-informatiom legislation was enacted in Estonia Lithuania Latvia the Czech Republic Slovakia and Bulgaria between 1998 and 2000 — and even in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2001 at the behest of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe Thailand’s 1997 Official Information Act was the culmination of a political reform process that began in 1992 with mass demonstrations against a military regime and became even more urgent with Thailand’s economic crisis in 1997 One request filed by a disgruntled mother changed the country’s entire primary- and secondary-education system In post-apartheid South Africa the 1994 constitution under which Nelson Mandela came to power included a specific provision that guarantees citizens’ access to state-held information and South Africa’s implementation law passed in 2000 is probably the strongest in the world SETTING A NEW STANDARD Today as a consequence of globalization the very concept of freedom of information is expanding from the purely moral stance of an indictment of secrecy to include a more value-neutral meaning — as another form of market regulation of more efficient administration of government and as a contributor to economic growth and the development of information industries Hungary’s adoption of a freedom-of-information statute for example signaled a rejection of its communist past But perhaps even more important the law combined new access rights to government records with strong data protection provisions for business in an attempt to attract German corporate investment by conforming to European — and particularly German — standards that guard trade secrets and personal information Financial transparency measures do not necessarily help the cause of political reform but agile advocates have harnessed the language of transparency to push for political liberalization at the local level In fact legal reformers in China as well as the Communist Party’s anticorruption activists are using this argument to help open the decision-making process in local and provincial governments Their argument which acquires greater weight as China enters the World Trade Organization WTO is that regulating governments and corporations especially global ones may be done more efficiently by promoting full disclosure of their activities rather than by relying on multiple bureaucracies in multiple countries that provide multiple opportunities for corruption Such efforts to promote local transparency are more likely to succeed than would any attempt to implement a national freedom-of-information statute — especially one that would apply to law enforcement or national security or Communist Party deliberations Membership in a supranational organization such as the WTO does not always encourage transparency — as when NATO refuses to release files without a consensus among all NATO members or requires Poland to adopt a new law on state secrets But more often than not supranational organizations create a demand for greater access to information both between and within countries These global or regional governance institutions set up multiple information flows among national governments multinational organizations the media and private citizens’ groups who use each party’s information to leverage the others often with significant domestic impact For example the Slovakian press reported eu criticism of misleading economic statistics under the government of former Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar This negative publicity led to the revamping of the state statistical office and contributed to both Meciar’s political decline and Slovakia’s formal adoption of a freedom-of-information law THE ABCs OF OPENNESS Making good use of both moral and efficiency claims the international freedom-of-information movement stands on the verge of changing the definition of democratic governance The movement is creating a new norm a new expectation and a new threshold requirement for any government to be considered a democracy Yet at the same time the disclosure movement does not even know it is a movement its members are constantly reinventing the wheel and searching for relevant models Moreover entrenched state interests continue to launch vigorous counterattacks in the United States and abroad citing national security and the need for privacy in the deliberative process as counterweights to freedom-of-information arguments The ideal openness regime would have governments publishing so much that the formal request for specific information and the resulting administrative and legal process would become almost unnecessary Until that time openness advocates have reached consensus on the five fundamentals of effective freedom-of-information statutes First such statutes should begin with the presumption of openness In other words the state does not own the information it belongs to the citizens Traditionally of course L’etat c’est moi as France’s King Louis XIV declared Reversing this legal claim and its legacy in official secrecy acts which turn a blind eye to the public’s right to know remains the top priority for freedom-of-information movements Second any exceptions to the presumption of openness should be as narrow as possible and written in statute not subject to bureaucratic variation and the change of administrations Reformers in Japan point to overbroad privacy exemptions as a huge obstacle since they allow bureaucrats to withhold any personal identifier whatsoever whether or not releasing it would invade the privacy of the person Consequently released documents look like Swiss cheese with every official’s name deleted even the prime minister’s Third any exceptions to release should be based on identifiable harm to specific state interests although many statutes just recite general categories like national security or foreign relations Most of this is common sense It’s easy to see the harm from releasing data like the design of chemical warheads identities of spies who could be killed if exposed bottom-line positions in upcoming treaty negotiations and the like But most government secrets are far more subjective and merely time-sensitive Former U S Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger has said most of the secrets he saw in his government career could easily be released within 10 years of their creation Fourth even where there is identifiable harm the harm must outweigh the public interests served by releasing the information No public interest is served by releasing the design of a nuclear weapon but the policies that govern the use of nuclear weapons are at the heart of governance and public debate The United States has even released specifics on the recruitment and payment of spies when that information was necessary in a legal prosecution another form of public interest such as in the trial of former Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega Fifth a court an information commissioner an ombudsman or other authority that is independent of the original bureaucracy holding the information should resolve any dispute over access In New Zealand the ombudsman can overrule agency withholdings In Japan a three-judge panel decides appeals And in the United States a federal judge recently ordered release under FOIA of energy policy records that Vice President Dick Cheney had refused to give to Congress In seeking to implement these fundamental principles the freedom-of-information movement may be focusing too much on statutes and legal language Free media and active civil society may be more important than laws In the Philippines for example without a formal access law the media and NGOs have opened government records and even brought down former President Joseph Estrada The habits of dissent and resistance may also hurt the movement since activists have to learn to work with as well as against governments to achieve real openness Bureaucracies will always confound citizens unless reformers find ways to change bureaucratic incentives rewarding and promoting officials who are responsive and to develop some appreciation for administrators’ resource constraints and political pressures Perhaps the ultimate challenge for the freedom-of-information movement will be the need for governments and citizens alike to adapt to a new cultural and psychological climate In colloquial Japanese for example the term okami god is commonly used to refer to government officials You can’t complain against the gods one Japanese activist told a newspaper summarizing the difficulty felt by ordinary people confronting the government Or in the words of the Bulgarian activist Gergana Jouleva Democracy is not an easy task neither for the authorities nor for the citizens Thomas Blanton is director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University