[open-government] World's First Rating of Right to Information
Helen Darbishire
helen at access-info.org
Thu Sep 29 05:29:39 UTC 2011
access info logo <http://www.access-info.org/documents/images/access_info_logo_mail.jpg> centrelawdemocracylogo <http://www.access-info.org/documents/images/CLD_Logo_s.jpg>
Press Release
For immediate release
World’s First Rating of Right to Information: 89 Countries Ranked
www.rti-rating.org
28 September 2011, Madrid/Halifax - On International Right to Know Day, two leading human rights organisations, Access Info Europe (Spain) and the Centre for Law and Democracy (Canada), are launching the first detailed analysis of the legal framework for the right to information (RTI) in 89 countries around the world.
<http://www.rti-rating.org> The RTI Rating is based on 61 Indicators drawn from a wide range of international standards on the right to information, feedback from an international Advisory Council of renowned experts on the right to information and comparative study of numerous right to information and related laws from around the world.
The findings of the RTI Rating show that there is a significant variety in the quality of the legal framework, with scores out of a maximum possible 150 ranging from 37 (Germany) to 135 (Serbia). Some of the key results:
» More recent laws protect the right to know more strongly; of the 20 countries with scores above 100, 11 adopted their RTI laws since 2005, and 7 since 2000 – these laws tend to have much stronger oversight, enforcement and promotion.
» Of the 20 countries with scores above 100, 7 are in East and Central Europe, 5 in Asia, 4 in the Americas, 3 in Africa and only one is in Western Europe;
» Europe overall accounts for 15 of the bottom 20, primarily the older European laws which are more limited in scope and have weaker appeals mechanisms;
“Effective protection of human rights like the right to information requires a sound legal basis,” said Toby Mendel, Executive Director of the Centre for Law and Democracy. “This rating tool enables us to pinpoint areas of weakness in the legal framework for RTI, and to direct future advocacy at resolving these.”
The RTI Rating shows not only a country’s overall score, but also but also its strengths and weaknesses in relation to seven main categories: Right of Access, Scope; Requesting Procedures; Exceptions and Refusals; Appeals; Sanctions and Protections; and Promotional Measures.
The score for the legal framework did not always accord with overall levels of transparency in a country in practice. Some national experts who reviewed the AIE and CLD country assessments noted that is sometimes a gap between the quality of the law and the practice. In some northern European countries, the older legal frameworks do not fully reflect the culture of transparency in practice, whereas in countries like Azerbaijan, Nepal and Ethiopia, strong laws on paper do not necessarily reflect a fully open society; the strong laws in El Salvador and Liberia were adopted too recently to assess the practice.
“Testing of levels of transparency in practice is essential to have a full picture,” commented Helen Darbishire, Executive Director of Access Info Europe. “Adopting a law is only a first step to transparency; without accurate measures of access to information in practice, governments can participate in ‘transparency washing’ and claim greater respect for this fundamental human right than is in fact the case.”
Note for editors
· More information about the tools used in preparing the RTI Rating, the Advisory Committee and the detailed ratings for each country can be found at: <http://www.rti-rating.org> www.rti-rating.org.
· Access Info Europe and the Centre for Law and Democracy remain open to comments and corrections to the RTI Rating. We know that only through expert feedback will we perfect this analysis. The following countries have not yet had national reviewers and comments from experts knowing about those countries would be particularly welcome: Antigua and Barbuda, Austria, Bangladesh, Cook Islands, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Estonia, Greece, Guatemala, Guinea-Conakry, Iceland, Korea (South), Kosovo, Liechtenstein, Montenegro, Nicaragua, Panama, Poland, Portugal, Slovak Republic, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia and Turkey.
For further information please contact:
Helen Darbishire, Access Info Europe
<http://www.access-info.org> www.access-info.org
Email: <mailto:helen at access-info.org> helen at access-info.org | +34 667 685 319
Michael Karanicolas, Centre for Law and Democracy
<http://www.law-democracy.org> www.law-democracy.org
Email: <mailto:michael at law-democracy.org> michael at law-democracy.org | +1 902 448 5290
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.okfn.org/pipermail/open-government/attachments/20110929/5cad3384/attachment.html>
More information about the open-government
mailing list