The International Freedom of Information Index. A Watchdog of Transparency in Practice
Abstract
During the past two decades, the number of countries that have enacted Freedom of Information (FOI) laws has increased dramatically. In many respects, FOI laws have become a
democratic ‘right of passage’. No FOI, no ‘proper’ democracy.
The promises of FOI regimes are far-reaching: extensive independent access to govern
-
ment-held information will lead to increased transparency, prevention of corruption and
maladministration and greater public participation in the political process. But are these
promises borne out by the practice of FOI?
This article describes a study that tracked a number of real-life FOI requests in five
countries. The project puts forward a prototype for the first International Freedom of
Information Index, ranking the five countries of study on how their FOI regimes function
in practice.
In conclusion, the paper suggest that the FOI Index should be expanded to cover all 65
plus countries that have implemented FOI laws. It is argued that such an index could play an
important role in furthering some of the core properties of liberal democracy: transparency,
political accountability and good governance.
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review 30 (2009) 1, pp. 167-182
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2009-05Author
Lidberg, Johan
Editor
Carlsson, Ulla
Keywords
freedom of information
functionality
political accountability
International FOI Index
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-89471-75-7
ISSN
1403-1108
Language
eng