Showing posts with label Freedom of Information Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom of Information Act. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 December 2010

Law Lecture 6 - Freedom of Information

The Freedom of Information Act is one of the greatest tools available to journalists today. It covers 130,000 organisations and government bodies, receiving 100,000 requests a year and at a cost of £34million. It allows anyone, not just journalists, the ability to ask for information kept by these bodies and for it to be published. Curiously, only 12% of FOI requests actually come from journalists.

The act covers pretty much everything except when there's a valid reason to not hand the information over, such as official secrets or confidentiality. These "exemptions" are Absolute and Qualified (like privilege). Absolute exemptions relate to official secrets, the Ministry of Defence etc. Qualified exemptions are for things such as ministerial communications and commercial confidentiality. Whilst these are a hinderance as a journalist, there are still plenty of opportunities to uncover great stories due to the FOI Act like the expenses scandal.

Many journalists see now as the Golden Age of the FOI. There's still a treasure trove of information buried away, waiting to be enquired about. In order to combat this, politicians are no longer writing things down to avoid it being "on the record". Such 'on the sofa' politics has allowed for informal chats as opposed to formal meetings where minutes etc have to be kept.