dc.description.abstract | The importance of the right to information or the right to know is an increasingly constant refrain in the
mouths of development practitioners, civil society, academics, the media and even governments. What is
this right, is it really a right and how have governments sought to give effect to it? These are some of the
questions this book seeks to address.
There has been a veritable revolution in recent years in terms of the right to information, commonly
understood as the right to access information held by public bodies. Whereas in 1990 only 13 countries
had adopted national right to information laws, upwards of 70 such laws have now been adopted globally,
and they are under active consideration in another 20-30 countries. In 1990, no inter-governmental
organisation had recognised the right to information, now all of the multilateral development banks and a
number of other international fi nancial institutions have adopted information disclosure policies. In 1990,
the right to information was seen predominantly as an administrative governance reform whereas today it
is increasingly being seen as a fundamental human right | en_US |