Jump to content

Open government: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
SchuminWeb (talk | contribs)
Removing backlinks to OpenPSI that has been speedily deleted per (CSD G11); using TW
Akitora (talk | contribs)
m →‎External links: Added W3C e-Gov IG link
Line 57: Line 57:
* [http://www.transparent-gov.com transparent-gov.com]
* [http://www.transparent-gov.com transparent-gov.com]
* OpenPSI the ( [http://www.openpsi.org OpenPSI project])is a community effort to create UK government linked data service that supports research. It is a collaboration between the University of Southampton and the UK government, lead by [[Office of Public Sector Information]] at the National Archive and is supported by JISC funding.
* OpenPSI the ( [http://www.openpsi.org OpenPSI project])is a community effort to create UK government linked data service that supports research. It is a collaboration between the University of Southampton and the UK government, lead by [[Office of Public Sector Information]] at the National Archive and is supported by JISC funding.
* [http://www.w3.org/2007/eGov/IG/wiki/Main_Page The World Wide Web Consortium e-Government Interest Group]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:32, 9 December 2009

Open government is the political doctrine which holds that the business of government and state administration should be opened at all levels to effective public scrutiny and oversight. In its broadest construction it opposes reason of state and national security considerations, which have tended to legitimize extensive state secrecy. The origins of open government arguments can be dated to the time of the European Enlightenment: to debates about the proper construction of a then nascent civil society.

Among recent developments is the theory of open source governance which advocates the application of the philosophies of the free software movement to democratic principles to enable interested citizens to get more directly involved in the legislative process.

History

Open government is widely seen to be a key hallmark of contemporary democratic practice and is often linked to the passing of freedom of information legislation. After the USA passed its Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in 1966, FOIAs or Access to Information Acts (AIAs) have proliferated rapidly with Denmark and Norway passing equivalent laws in 1970, France and The Netherlands in 1978, Australia, Canada and New Zealand in 1982, Hungary in 1992, Ireland and Thailand in 1997, South Korea in 1998, the United Kingdom in 2000, Japan and Mexico in 2002 and Germany in 2005.[1]

Scandinavian countries, however, have a claim to have adopted this agenda even before the USA passed its 1966 FOIA: Sweden dating the origins of its modern provisions to the eighteenth century and Finland continuing the presumption of openness after gaining independence in 1917, passing its Act on Publicity of Official Documents in 1951 (superseded by new legislation in 1999).[2]

In the West, the idea that government should be open to public scrutiny and susceptible to public opinion dates at least to the time of the Enlightenment when many philosophes made an attack on absolutist doctrine of state secrecy a core part of their intellectual project.[3][4] The passage of formal legislative instruments to this end can also be traced to this time with Sweden, for example, (which then included Finland as a Swedish-governed territory) enacting free press legislation as part of its constitution (Freedom of the Press Act, 1766).][5] This approach, and that of the philosophes more broadly, is strongly related to recent historiography on the eighteenth-century public sphere.

Accordingly, influenced by Enlightenment thought, the revolutions in America (1776) and France (1789), freedom of the press enshrined provisions and requirements for public budgetary accounting and freedom of the press in constitutional articles. In the nineteenth century, attempts by Metternichean statesmen to row back on these measures were vigorously opposed by a number of eminent liberal politicians and writers, Bentham, Mill and Acton prominent among the last.

Content

The contemporary doctrine of open government finds its strongest advocates in those non-governmental organisations keen to counter what they see as the inherent tendency of government to lapse, whenever possible, into secrecy. Prominent among these NGOs are bodies like Transparency International or the Open Society Institute. They advocate the implementation of norms of openness and transparency across the globe and argue that such standards are vital to the ongoing prosperity and development of democratic societies.

Advocates of open government often argue that civil society, rather than government legislation, offers the best route to more transparent administration. They point to the role of whistleblowers reporting from inside the government bureaucracy (individuals like Daniel Ellsberg or Paul van Buitenen). They argue that an independent and inquiring press (be it printed or electronic) is often a stronger guarantor of transparency than legislative checks and balances.[6][7]

A relatively new vision for the implementation of open government is coming from the municipal sector. In a similar fashion to grassroots movement, open government technology expert Tobias SK Cichon postulates[3] that the swarming pressure of small local governments implementing technological open government solutions will lead to similar adoptions by larger municipalities and eventually state, provincial and federal level changes.

Public and private sector platforms provide an avenue for citizens to engage while offering access to transparent information that citizens have come to expect. Numerous organizations have worked to consolidate resources for citizens to access government (local, state and federal) budget spending, stimulus spending, lobbyist spending, legislative tracking, and more.

See also

Groups Advocating Public Engagement and Transparency

References

  1. ^ Alasdair Roberts, Blacked Out: Government Secrecy in the Information Age (Cambridge, 2006)
  2. ^ freedominfo.org: country pages - finland
  3. ^ Jurgen Habermas, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1962, trans., Cambridge Massachusetts, 1989)
  4. ^ Reinhart Koselleck, Critique and Crisis (1965, trans., Cambridge Massachusetts, 1988)
  5. ^ [1][2]
  6. ^ J. Michael, The Politics of Secrecy: Confidential Government and the Public's Right to Know (London, 1990)
  7. ^ A.G. Theoharis, ed., A Culture of Secrecy: the Government Versus the People's Right to Know (Kansas, 1998)