Â鶹´«Ã½ Health and Peace Programs appreciate the continued support of our foundation, government, and corporate donors and are pleased to highlight their contributions in these regular Web features.
Information is Power
Featured July 2008
Partners Help Make International Conference on Right to Public Information a Reality
Increasingly, Access to Information (ATI) is recognized as not only the cornerstone to good governance, anti-corruption and transparency efforts, but also as a fundamental human right. Â鶹´«Ã½ began its ATI work in 1999, when it responded to the Jamaican government's invitation to inform their debate regarding draft ATI legislation. Since that time, the Center has expanded its ATI programming to include a number of core countries around the world, as well as supporting regional and international efforts. Our work is comprehensive, addressing both governments' capacity to provide and citizens' ability to request public information.
Recognizing the challenges facing the global advancement of the right of access to information, the Center convened more than 125 participants from 40 countries in February 2008 for the International Conference on the Right to Public Information. These representatives from all key stakeholder groups – governments, international organizations, civil society, media, the private sector, donors and scholars – considered past successes and lessons learned and the most critical emerging issues in the field of ATI.
The product of these discussions was captured in the Atlanta Declaration and Plan of Action for the Advancement of the Right of Access to Information. This document, which sets forth key principles and activities that should be undertaken for continuing development of the right to information, has been distributed to international organizations, regional bodies, and heads of state. It also has been cited by numerous Web sites, newspapers, and government reports. In addition, it has been presented to the Council of Europe's Committee on Human Rights, the Organization of American States' (OAS) Committee on Political and Juridical Affairs, foreign ministers at the OAS General Assembly, and the Civil Society Forum of the recent Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ministerial.
The International Conference on the Right to Public Information would not have been possible without the generous support of our partners:
Canadian International Development Association (CIDA)
John C. and Karyl Kay Hughes Foundation (no site available)
World Bank
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Photo credit: Â鶹´«Ã½/C. Mackey(Click to enlarge)
Participants of the International Conference on the Right to Public Information gathered for a photo with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter before the conference's opening plenary. The conference included 125 participants from 40 countries representing the key stakeholder groups - governments, civil society, international and regional organizations, media, international financial institutions, donor organizations and foundations, academia, and the private sector.