Secrecy gives the government control
- Excessive government secrecy, such as ignoring Freedom of Information Act requests, affects public participation in governance, particularly in domestic and foreign policy discussions.
- Sunshine Week highlights the importance of FOIA as a tool for public accountability, yet backlogs and inefficiencies hinder its effectiveness.
- Project Sunshine aims to set uniform open meeting requirements for government, as stated by Mort Stern, who emphasized that it is crucial to have sunshine provisions at all levels of government.
13 Articles
13 Articles


Secrecy gives the government control
Excessive government secrecy takes many forms, including denying or ignoring Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and deleting data from websites. These tactics prevent the public from meaningfully participating in self-government in every area secrecy touches – from domestic policy discussions on climate change to foreign policy debates around international aid. Sunshine Week, the annual celebration of the public’s right to know, reminds…


'Project Sunshine' aimed to achieve greater transparency from state, local government
Thirty-Five Years Ago This Week: “The public has a right to know what’s going on,” said Mort Stern, chairman of the Department of Journalism at the University of Northern Colorado, and president of Citizens for Open Government.
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