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Archive for the ‘RTI Column’

Using the right to information to improve the country

July 18, 2020 By: information Category: RTI Column

Daily Star, February 15, 2020
Using the right to information to improve the countryx/> Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz
THow has the global use of Right to Information (RTI) laws brought about important new developments and catalysed change? The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) regi\me in the US is the perfect example to illustrate this story. Read More.

Engaging citizens to use the RTI law

July 18, 2020 By: information Category: RTI Column

Daily Star, December 15, 2019
Engaging citizens to use the RTI law
Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz
Those who read this column regularly are aware of its two recurring themes. First, that the Right to Information (RTI) Act is important not simply because it enables citizens to obtain information from public authorities which they may “need to know” for personal reasons, but, more importantly, because it empowers them with a “right to access” information that sheds light on the way public offices perform their duties and spend public money. By resorting to RTI, citizens convey to public servants that they are keeping an eye on them. Read More.

Law needs RTI defenders

December 29, 2019 By: information Category: RTI Column

Daily Star, December 15, 2019
Law needs RTI defenders
Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz
The global excitement about Right to Information (RTI) appears to be on the wane. Instead of facilitating citizens’ role to monitor public work by accessing official documents, governments are resorting to procedural and other hurdles to curtail the reach of the law. RTI enthusiasts and scholars who saw the law as an “impressive display of policy innovation at a global level”, now see it more as “democratic window dressing.” Secretive governance is striving to return. Read More.

RTI law: Bridging the gap between promise and practice

November 29, 2019 By: information Category: RTI Column

Daily Star, November 15, 2019
RTI law: Bridging the gap between promise and practice
Shamsul Bari and Ruhi Naz
The euphoria accompanying the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War era late last century was followed by an upsurge of democracy in the new republics and a resurgence in nominal democracies. One manifestation of this was the global rush to adopt the Right to Information (RTI) or Freedom of Information (FOI) Act. Out of around 130 countries which have enacted the law so far, a large majority did so in the last three decades. Bangladesh adopted it in 2009. Read More.