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Blacked Out - Government Secrecy in the Information Age (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,130
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Blacked Out - Government Secrecy in the Information Age (Hardcover)
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In 1966 the United States Congress passed the landmark Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) giving the public the right to access
government documents. This "right to know" has been used over the
intervening years to challenge overreaching Presidents and
secretive government agencies. This example of governmental
transparency has served as an inspiring case in point to nations
around the world, spawning similar statutes in fifty-nine
countries. Yet, despite these global efforts to foster openness in
government, secrecy still persists--and in many cases--sometimes
thrives. Alasdair Roberts, a prominent lawyer, public policy
expert, and international authority on transparency in government,
examines the evolution of the trend toward governmental openness
and how technological developments have assisted the disclosure and
dissemination of information. In the process he offers a
comprehensive look at the global efforts to restrict secrecy and
provides readers with a clearly written guide to those areas where
the battle over secrecy is most intense. Drawing on cases from many
different countries, Roberts goes further than the popular view
that secrecy is simply a problem of selfish bureaucrats trying to
hide embarrassing information by showing how such powerful trends
as privatization, globalization, and the "networking" of security
agencies are complicating the fight against secrecy. In our time
when new terror threats provoke potentially counter-productive
measures that impede openness, the need for a thorough and
dispassionate discussion of openness in democratic societies is
especially acute. Written in an engaging style, Blacked Out
powerfully illustrates why transparency matters and whythe struggle
for openness is so difficult. Alasdair Roberts is Associate
Professor in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
and Director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute at Syracuse
University. An internationally-recognized specialist on open
government, he has written over thirty journal articles and book
chapters. He is a 2005 recipient of the Johnson Award for Best
Paper in Ethics and Accountability in the Public Sector. He has
been a fellow of the Open Society Institute and the Woodrow Wilson
Center for Scholars, and is a member of the Initiative for Policy
Dialogue's Transparency Task Force.
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