Implementing Right to Information
Over the last two decades, several developing countries have adopted right to information (RTI) laws, bringing the number of countries with such laws to more than 90. But empirical evidence on how effectively RTIs have worked, whether they have bee...
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2018
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okr-10986-296982021-04-23T14:04:54Z Implementing Right to Information Dokeniya, Anupama ACCESS TO INFORMATION FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT RIGHT TO INFORMATION LAWS CIVIL SOCIETY ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC PARTICIPATION STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT Over the last two decades, several developing countries have adopted right to information (RTI) laws, bringing the number of countries with such laws to more than 90. But empirical evidence on how effectively RTIs have worked, whether they have been effectively enforced, and if they have had any impact on improving accountability, is limited. This note examines how RTI laws have worked in different country contexts, drawing from an analysis of their implementation in eight countries spanning different regions, income levels, political forms, and administrative traditions. The experiences of these countries show that implementation has faced challenges across countries, but has been especially difficult in countries where the broader governance environment is weaker on dimensions such as the rule of law, government effectiveness, voice and accountability, civil liberties, and political rights. During the implementation phase, with the erosion of the initial political momentum behind the law, the incentives for officials to comply with the new legislation also tended to erode, resulting in efforts to undermine the law. The evidence suggests that as countries with challenging governance environments and capacity limitations adopt RTI laws, they will need to both devise implementation solutions that can adapt to these limitations and undertake complementary initiatives to strengthen their broader governance environment. 2018-04-19T19:05:20Z 2018-04-19T19:05:20Z 2013-09 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/952391523257659384/Implementing-right-to-information http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29698 English PREM Notes;No. 5 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
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ACCESS TO INFORMATION FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT RIGHT TO INFORMATION LAWS CIVIL SOCIETY ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC PARTICIPATION STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT |
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ACCESS TO INFORMATION FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT RIGHT TO INFORMATION LAWS CIVIL SOCIETY ACCOUNTABILITY PUBLIC PARTICIPATION STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT Dokeniya, Anupama Implementing Right to Information |
relation |
PREM Notes;No. 5 |
description |
Over the last two decades, several
developing countries have adopted right to information (RTI)
laws, bringing the number of countries with such laws to
more than 90. But empirical evidence on how effectively RTIs
have worked, whether they have been effectively enforced,
and if they have had any impact on improving accountability,
is limited. This note examines how RTI laws have worked in
different country contexts, drawing from an analysis of
their implementation in eight countries spanning different
regions, income levels, political forms, and administrative
traditions. The experiences of these countries show that
implementation has faced challenges across countries, but
has been especially difficult in countries where the broader
governance environment is weaker on dimensions such as the
rule of law, government effectiveness, voice and
accountability, civil liberties, and political rights.
During the implementation phase, with the erosion of the
initial political momentum behind the law, the incentives
for officials to comply with the new legislation also tended
to erode, resulting in efforts to undermine the law. The
evidence suggests that as countries with challenging
governance environments and capacity limitations adopt RTI
laws, they will need to both devise implementation solutions
that can adapt to these limitations and undertake
complementary initiatives to strengthen their broader
governance environment. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Dokeniya, Anupama |
author_facet |
Dokeniya, Anupama |
author_sort |
Dokeniya, Anupama |
title |
Implementing Right to Information |
title_short |
Implementing Right to Information |
title_full |
Implementing Right to Information |
title_fullStr |
Implementing Right to Information |
title_full_unstemmed |
Implementing Right to Information |
title_sort |
implementing right to information |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/952391523257659384/Implementing-right-to-information http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29698 |
_version_ |
1764470009167347712 |