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FOIA laws in United States, Canada, Australia
served as worldwide mode
Sunshine Week
For release March
14, 2005
By The Associated Press
More than 50 countries
have adopted laws facilitating access to government records
and information, according to a comprehensive survey released
last May.
Laws vary from
country to country in their breadth, adequacy and effectiveness,
since exemptions and poor implementation can badly harm their
usefulness. While most freedom of information laws have resulted
in increased openness, some nations impose tight access restrictions.
Guarantees to freedom
of information have existed for hundreds of years. The world's
first information access law was Sweden's Freedom of the Press
Act in 1766, and France's 1789 Declaration of the Rights of
Man said individuals had the right to obtain information about
the budget.
More than half
of the current laws have been approved in the last decade,
as a result of increased international, economic and societal
pressures to increase transparency in government. According
to the Freedominfo.org Global Survey, many countries have
modeled their freedom of information laws after those of the
United States, Australia, and Canada.
Some highlights
of the FOI laws in those countries and a list of other nations
with such legislation:
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United States:
-- Freedom of Information Act enacted in 1966 and implemented
in 1967; amended in 1996 by the Electronic Freedom of Information
Act.
-- Any person or organization, regardless of citizenship or
country of origin, may request records held by agencies of
the federal government. Requests to Congress, the courts,
the president's immediate White House staff and the National
Security Council are excluded. Agencies are required to respond
in 20 working days.
-- More than 3.2
million FOIA/Privacy Act requests were received by all federal
entities in fiscal year 2003, an increase of nearly 36 percent
from the previous year, and the greatest one-year increase
ever.
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Australia:
-- Freedom of Information Act 1982 established rights of access
to materials held by Commonwealth agencies. Agencies must
respond within 30 days.
-- 42,627 FOI access
requests were received between July 2003 and last June, a
2.8 percent increase over the prior year. Through June, more
than 685,000 access requests had been submitted since the
act's implementation.
-- The Privacy Amendment
(Private Sector) Act 2000 affords individuals the right to
request personal records held by private entities.
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Canada:
-- 1983 Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act, a companion
law. Amended by the Terrorism Act in November 2001.
-- Canadian citizens,
permanent residents and corporations can request and obtain
materials held by government entities. Individuals can access
and correct personal records held by federal agencies. Institution
must reply in 15 days.
-- Almost 23,000
ATIA and nearly 38,000 Privacy Act requests were received
in 2002-03.
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Other nations with
freedom of information laws: Albania (enacted 1999); Armenia
(2003); Austria (1987); Belgium (1994); Belize (1994); Bosnia
and Herzegovina (2000; Republika Srpska, 2001); Bulgaria (2000);
Colombia (1888, 1985); Croatia (2003); Czech Republic (1999);
Denmark (1865, 1964); Estonia (2000); Finland (1951); France
(1978); Georgia (1999); Greece (1999); Hungary (1992); Iceland
(1996); India (2003); Ireland (1997); Israel (1998); Italy
(1990); Jamaica (2002); Japan (1999); Kosovo (2003); Latvia
(1998); Liechtenstein (1999); Lithuania (2000); Mexico (2002);
Moldova (2000); Netherlands (1978); New Zealand (1982); Norway
(1970); Pakistan (2002); Panama (2002); Peru(2002); Poland
(2001); Portugal (1993); Romania (2001); Slovakia (2000);
Slovenia (2003); South Africa (2000); South Korea (1996);
Spain (1992); Sweden (1766,1949); Tajikistan (2002); Thailand
(1997); Turkey (2003); Trinidad and Tobago (1999); Ukraine
(1992); United Kingdom (2000; Scotland 2002); Uzbekistan (2002);
Zimbabwe (2002).
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Sources: David Banisar, The Freedominfo.org Global Survey,
May 2004. U.S. Department of Justice, Summary of Annual FOIA
Reports for Fiscal Year 2003. Treasury Board of Canada, InfoSource
Bulletin No. 26, Statistical Tables 2002-2003 Access to Information
Act and Privacy Act, December 2003. Commonwealth of Australia,
Attorney-General's Department, Freedom of Information Act
1982 Annual Report 2003-2004.
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