Need for Better Data on Transparency in Practice

[UPDATE 19 September 2014 – This law was signed and adopted by the President of Paraguay on Thursday 18 September 2014, making Paraguay the 100th country to adopt an access to information law]

Madrid, 26 August 2014 – The civil society movement campaigning for government openness is on the point of reaching a significant landmark with the Latin American country of Paraguay awaiting presidential sign off on what will be the world’s 100th access to information law. The law was passed by Paraguay’s parliament on 21 August 2014.
[The picture shows Horacio Cartes, President of Paraguay, who should now sign the law].

Right to information specialist organisation Access Info Europe congratulates the global freedom of information community for achieving this milestone.

Twenty years ago, in 1994, there were just 15 access to information laws globally. The democratic transitions in Central and Eastern Europe after the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 and subsequent democracy movements globally have given impetus to the transparency movement for securing these laws. The Open Data and Open Government movements, plus advocacy and litigation from freedom of information advocates, are helping to drive this forward.

Hitting 100 laws is a very exciting development for the global right to information movement,” commented Helen Darbishire, Executive Director of Access Info Europe.

There are still many challenges ahead,” added Darbishire. “The quality of access to information laws varies enormously. There is insufficient transparency in practice and we urgently need more comparative data on how these laws are working.”

Full analysis of all access to information laws can be found on the website RTI-Rating.org run by Access Info Europe and the Centre for Law and Democracy. Laws are evaluated against 61 indicators and awarded up to 150 points. The best law on paper is that of Serbia (135 points) and the weakest is that of Austria (37 points).

Access Info noted that repeated monitoring surveys show that countries with access to information laws generally have better levels of responsiveness to requests for information, but that in most countries there are still problems with inconsistent implementation, over-use of exceptions, and high levels of administrative silence.

In Europe, the youngest access to information law is that of Spain which was adopted in December 2013 and will come into force in December 2014. Cyprus and Luxembourg are the only European countries without an access to information law. The pro-transparency organisation calls on Cyprus and Luxembourg to bring their legislation into line with international standards.

Since 2006, major international human rights bodies including the UN Human Rights Committee, European Court of Human Rights*, and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights have confirmed that access to information is a fundamental human right linked to the right to freedom of expression.

For more information, please contact:

Helen Darbishire | Executive Director | Access Info Europe
helen@access-info.org +34 667 685 319

* Change made 28 August 2014: The original version of this article referred to the European Court of Justice rather than the European Court of Human Rights. This has been corrected.