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In the face of doubt, openness prevails

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In the face of doubt, openness prevails: Final assessment of a social question related to the Obama administration’s policy of transparency.

Posted by isaacviel on March 14, 2009

In the face of doubt, openness prevails: Final assessment of a social question related to the Obama administration’s policy of transparency.
By Isaac Viel
13/March/2009

Project Background: Assigned to me Winter term of 2009 in an experimental class at the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication named ‘Gateway’ was a research project to be generated from one simple social question. The question could be of my own choosing; however, it had to relate to the newly-elected Barack Obama and just one of his many campaign and/or inauguration promises. I chose to research transparency in the federal government to subsequently answer the question of whether or not President Obama’s promises for a more open and transparent government were well-founded and beneficial to the American public and world at large. The research throughout this project reflects my drive to answer my own should question. From various angles and media sources I set out to find a definite answer, and I did.

Official Social Question: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?

Explanation: During his many campaign stops, speeches and debates, Barack H. Obama promised to usher in a new era of the Executive Branch—one that would be more open, more transparent and held more accountable by the public to which they serve.

In his Jan. 20, 2009 inauguration speech, Obama said, “And those of us who manage the public’s dollars will be held to account—to spend wisely, reform bad habits, and do our business in the light of day—because only then can we restore the vital trust between a people and their government.” It was this quote that thrust my research forward.

Obama’s promise came at time when the very roots of democracy were threatened and the structural walls of American society were crumbling due to the outgoing Bush Administration’s tight-fisted approach toward freedom of information and expediency of public documents.

Argument for transparency in government: Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Kansas Erik Herron defines transparency as the ability of citizens to obtain freely information about their elected and unelected officials allowing for democracy.

At the very root of democracy is the Freedom of Information Act, which was enacted in 1966 by Lyndon Johnson and [“Generally”] states that any person has the right, by law and enforceable in court, to whole or partial federal documents and records with the exception of those records protected by one of now nine exceptions. The act was put in place to protect the public with the notion that a properly functioning democracy requires openness and transparency.

To further the idea that freedom of information and its importance to American society is Larry Coonrod, Editor in Chief of the South Lincoln County News, who said in an interview, “Public documents are the foundation for democracy.” But simply being open does nothing unless everyone understands what openness achieves.

The ability of anyone to gain access to decisions, meetings, spending records, and budgets creates trust between the public and public officials. When trust is lost, cloaked in secrecy or betrayed outright it’s not easily regained. In order for Obama to gain back the trust that has been lost during the last decade or so, he must implement a policy of openness to act as a disinfectant according to Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis who once argued, “sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.”

I am not alone in wanting to “disinfect” the federal government. In fact, on Nov. 12, 2008, 60 public advocacy groups, working together, released a memorandum to Barack Obama (post election and pre-inauguration) urging him to reopen access to government documents in order to restore the much-derogated trust in public officials. I have also discovered that letting sunshine bathe our government officials can accomplish more than simply gaining the public’s trust.

The result of transparency is far-reaching. Besides the obvious benefits, there are some not so obvious benefits. On a macroeconomic scale, the World Trade Organization found, through empirical data, that governmental non-transparency has an adverse effect on foreign investments to that country. On a smaller microeconomic scale, author and business coach John-Paul Micek insists that transparency through the use of new media can help further the success of individual businesses.

Ensuing public access to documents and government openness is crucial for a healthy democracy, and thus keeping it congruent with emerging new media and technologies is equally as important. In a video released by the New America Foundation, technology and political pundits discuss the necessity of updating the government guarantying the public has a more efficient way of becoming well informed.

Becoming well informed, however, only goes so far to establishing a true democracy. To fulfill the promise of democracy, both Mick Masnick from Tech Dirt and Associate Professor at the American University Washington College of Law Amanda Frost agree that the ability to participate and gain access to lawmaking process, once informed, is the keystone of transparency. Shockingly, some disagree with open government.

To the average citizen, the prospect of transparency and access to public records is vital for keeping governments honest, efficient and free from corruption. An article in the Oklahoman newspaper covers a business advocacy group that argued against the public’s right to know, citing that the public’s knowledge of tax credits to local businesses is detrimental. Yale Professor and guest author for the popular blog Freakonomics Ian Ayers argues for less transparency in order to sometimes serve the public by offing to take away the right of candidates to know where monetary contributions come from thus reducing politician’s desires to pander only to specific people or groups. To a lesser extent, National President of the Public Relations Student Society of America Brandi Boatner, in an interview, offered that Obama does not need an official policy as long as he remains honest.

In conclusion, I feel strongly that the Obama Administration must implement and maintain a policy of openness and transparency for the sake of restoring public trust and reducing government inefficiency, bureaucracy and corruption. All policies and policymaking encompassing economic, heath care, national security, budgetary et al must be created and executed as visibly as technologically possible. We, as citizens of the United States have a guaranteed right to know how those who represent us, including private, non-elected, contractors, are accounting for everyone’s interests. We have the right know how tax money is being spent. This right to know has a root that has grown very deeply into the foundation our society and plays the most vital role in a healthy democracy.

Comprehensive source note list:

(SA1) Obama Inaugural Speech: Journalistic 1, Multimedia 1

(SA2) The Freedom of Information Act: Institutional 1

(SA3) Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies: Institutional 2

(SA4) BBC News: Obama pledges new ‘era of openness’: Journalistic 2, Multimedia 2

(SA5) Never before seen angle of the presidential inauguration: Journalistic 3, Image 1

(SA6) What is Government Transparency?: Academic 1

(SA7) Without access to policy making, transparency serves only as an “empty right”: Academic 2

(SA8) RE: The Freedom of Information Act: Institutional 3

(SA9) More People See Federal Government as Secretive; Nearly All Want to Know Where Candidates Stand on Transparency: Institutional 4, Image 2

(SA10) The Impact of Transparency on Foreign Direct Investment: Institutional 5

(SA11) The President Orders Transparency: Journalistic 4

(SA12) Taxpayer Transparency Act opposed by State Chamber: Journalistic 5

(SA13) Government Transparency via Open Data and Open Source: Citizen 1, Image 3

(SA14) Transparency via GAO, Academia: Citizen 2

(SA15) Who’s Against Transparency in Government? A Guest Post: Citizen 3

(SA16) New executive order means more secrecy: Institutional 6

(SA17) (SA17) Secrecy Report Card 2008: Institutional 7, Image 4

(SA18) Shouldn’t Government Transparency Be Included In The Legislative Process… Not Just The Aftermath?: Citizen 4

(SA19) Clinton WH vets doubt Obama openness vow: Journalistic 6

(SA20) Wiki White House Can Obama Use Technology to Transform Government?: Institutional 8, Multimedia 3

(SA21) “Public documents are the foundation for democracy.” Interview with Larry Coonrod: Citizen 5, Interview 1

(SA22) No policy needed. Interview with PRSSA National President Brandi Boatner: Citizen 6, Interview 2

(SA23) Mike Luckovich cartoon: Journalistic 7, Image 5

(SA24) Let there be light: Academic 3

(SA25) Due Process: The Freedom of Information Act: Journalistic 8, Multimedia 4

(SA26) Sunshine Laws should be updated for an e-world: Academic 4

(SA27) Bush Backtracks on Transparency: Academic 5

(SA28) Headzup: Freedom Of Information No More: Citizen 7, Multimedia 5

(SA29) When Transparency Kills: A Lesson From Barack Obama: Citizen 8, Multimedia 6

(SA30) “Government transparency and freedom of information … is absolutely essential in a democracy”: Citizen 9, Interview 3

Posted in Academic Research, Citizen, Gateway 2, Institutional, Journalistic, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

(SA30) “Government transparency and freedom of information … is absolutely essential in a democracy”

Posted by isaacviel on March 12, 2009

Title: “Government transparency and freedom of information … is absolutely essential in a democracy” An interview with Jeremy Blachard.
Publication Information: Interview 11/March/2009
Summary: Interview with Jeremy Blanchard who is an Environmental Studies major at the University of Oregon. Blanchard is also an organizer and campus recruiter for Power Shift 09.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 9 / Interview 3
What is it? Interview
Author: Isaac Viel, interviewer. Jeremy Blanchard, Environmental Studies major at the University of Oregon, interviewee.
Date of interview: 24/Feb/2009

Q/A

Q: What is your name and what do you do? School (where/major), Work, Student Organization?
A: Jeremy Blanchard
University of Oregon, Environmental Studies
Work in the computer science department
Campus recruiter for Power Shift ’09

Q: Why do you think government transparency, openness, free of information, and oversight is a good thing?
A: Government transparency and freedom of information is not only a good thing, but it is absolutely essential in a democracy. To ensure that our elected officials are acting in the manner that we expect them to, citizens and news organizations need to be able to check up on their activities. Also, politicians will act differently if they know that their records of their actions will be visible to public eventually. This is especially true if that information will be public before they are up for re-election.

Q: How is it helpful and important to you? Any examples?
A: As an environmentalists, it has been painful to know that the Bush administration has handcuffed organizations like the EPA. Most of this was done to spare businesses from a single cent in lost profits, and it was all done in underhanded ways. If Bush’s administration had been more transparent about it’s actions and been more open to feedback, they would have felt the pressure from environmental groups and had a stronger incentive to act on that pressure.

Q: Do you think Obama should implement a policy of transparency and openness for his administration and why?
A: Yes. The stimulus package that was just passed is a great example. If we know how our money is being spent, we have the ability to A) use grassroots movements to rally against them and B) fight to make sure they don’t show up in any future stimulus bills. There are many ways we can encourage different kinds of spending if we know where the money is going, but those options are removed if the details of the stimulus bill are only given to the political elite.

Support:
Environmentalists
Bush administration
EPA
The stimulus package

Blanchard uses examples from the past and preset to help illustrate his reasons why he believes that a more transparent government is essential. As an Environment Studies major, he references his field of study by mentioning the confrontations between the Bush Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency. He also talks about more current concerns such as the latest economic stimulus package and why we Americans being able to follow money trails leads to more transparency and the ability of the public to direct decision making.

Usefulness:
This interview lends real life answers to the question of why transparency is important to the health of democracy. It also helps explain why access to records helps people make informed decisions when they vote and keep tabs on their elected officials.

Works referenced / Links:
http://uopowershift09.org/
http://envs.uoregon.edu/

Special thanks to Jeremy Blanchard for his time.

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA29) When Transparency Kills: A Lesson From Barack Obama

Posted by isaacviel on March 10, 2009

Title: When Transparency Kills: A Lesson From Barack Obama
Publication Information: Published to the Tribal Seduction blog via Viddler. Uploaded 25/April/2008 (Blog post 26/April/2008)
Summary: John-Paul Micek, co-founder of Tribal Seduction who specializes in new media and marketing talks about what entrepreneurs can learn about marketing from politics, namely Obama’s campaign. The nine-minute video talks about transparency and how new media can either do harm a business, or boost it much like politics.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 8 / Multimedia 6
What is it? Video blog post (vlog)
Date: Uploaded 25/April/2008 (Blog post 26/April/2008)
Author: John-Paul Micek
Location: http://tribalseduction.com/blog/transparency-marketing-lesson-from-barrack-obama/
Accessed: 09/March/2009

Support:
Barack Obama, U.S. president
New Media
Oprah Winfrey, American talk show host
Gary Vaynerchuk, Director of Operations for Wine Library
Hillary Clinton, 2008 U.S. democratic presidential contender

John-Paul. uses the support to help build his case of why Obama was able to gain such trust and popularity and even garner the support of Oprah who called him “The one.” He also points to people who use public and private-life congruency in order to promote trust and charisma such as Gary Vaynerchuck from Wine Library.

Audience and Agenda:
Tribal Seduction is blog written to provide information about new media marketing to businesses, bloggers or anyone else looking build their online presence. John-Paul and Deborah Micek, who are the founders of the entrepreneurial development company RPM Success Group Inc, create the content for Tribal Seduction. The pair also authored the book Secrets of Online Persuasion: Captivating the Hearts, Minds and Pocketbooks of Thousands Using Blogs, Podcasts and Other New Media Marketing Tools.

Usefulness:
The video is directed toward those looking to grow their business’ client base; however, J.P. talks a lot about what businesses can learn from the Obama pledge to be more transparent. He offers reasons why being more transparent is import but also why it’s imperative that Obama be congruent in his public and private life in order to create a sense of trust. The video will be a good part of my research because it argues for more transparency in order to produce the same results but with a different outcome: more trust means more business much like the finding of the World Trade Organization which I wrote about on Feb. 11, 2009.

Works referenced / Links:
http://www.viddler.com/explore/TribalSeduction/videos/3/http://www.viddler.com/explore/TribalSeduction/videos/3/
http://tribalseduction.com/
http://www.blogcatalog.com/search.frame.php?term=tribal+seduction&id=78a3f39335ffceffddfbf4086dc4364f
http://tribalseduction.com/blog/transparency-marketing-lesson-from-barrack-obama/
http://tv.winelibrary.com/about/
http://www.internetmarketingexpertsreview.com/category/deb-jp-micek/
http://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Online-Persuasion-Captivating-Pocketbooks/dp/1600372139/ref=tag_dp_tp/102-7436030-1470515?ie=UTF8&s=books
http://www.amazon.com/gp/pdp/profile/AUGOVU6XBP5HL
http://www.MasterofBusinessOwnership.com/businessownerslifestyle.html

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA28) Headzup: Freedom Of Information No More

Posted by isaacviel on March 10, 2009

Title: Headzup: Freedom Of Information No More
Publication Information: Post to YouTube by Headzup on 5/Feb./2008
Summary: This is a caricature/video asking White House Press Secretary under George W. Bush Dana Perino why the Bush Administration decided to move the proposed Office of Government Information Services into the Justice Department, there is no funding for it effectively creating no oversight for unfulfilled FOIA requests.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 7, Multimedia 5
What is it? Caricature/video
Date: 5/March/2008
Author: Matthew Filipowicz
Location: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbRDlziOG9Q
Accessed: 9/March/2009

Support:
Dana Perino, White Hose Press Secretary under George W. Bush

Audience and Agenda:
Headzup Entertainment L.L.C. is the maker of daily political cartoons marketed and delivered to cell phones. Headzup publishes short, politically-driven, comedy clips seven days a week which can be viewed on the Internet or on mobile devices. John and Joan Shay created Headzup in 2004 in order to share political satire via mobile peer-to-peer file sharing. Headzup was recently garnered the position of premier editorial cartoon for GoLeft.tv. Headzup YouTube chanel has 17,927 watched videos, 4,091 subscribers and 161,848 channel views. Their clips have been seen and/or heard on HBO, CNN, NPR, New York Times and Wall Street Journal.

The caricatures that made Headzup famous are written and produced daily by Chicago-area comedian and cartoonist, Matthew Filipowicz.

Usefulness:
This is a great piece because it uses comedy to reflect real, ongoing issues presented by the Bush Administration such as proposing the Office of Government Information yet, later pulling the funding by transferring the department to the Department of Justice. The real irony of the cartoon is the punch line of Dana Perino blowing off the question by suggesting the inquisitor file a FOIA request — a definite jab at the Bush Administration and their unwillingness to be cooperative with the press.

Works referenced:
http://www.headzup.tv/aboutzup.php
http://thinkprogress.org/2008/01/26/leahy-foia/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbRDlziOG9Q
http://www.headzup.tv/wuhzup/
http://rncnyc2004.blogspot.com/2007/03/dana-m-perino-biography.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dana_Perino
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_5455331,00.html
http://www.matthewf.net/
http://www.youtube.com/headzup

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA22) No policy needed. Interview with PRSSA National President Brandi Boatner

Posted by isaacviel on March 1, 2009

Title: No policy needed, Interview with PRSSA National President Brandi Boatner
Publication Information: Phone interview 25/Feb/2009
Summary: Telephone interview with Brandi Boatner, national president of Public Relations Student Society of America and first year graduate student at Hawaii Pacific University.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 6, Interview 2
What is it? Interview
Date of interview: 25/Feb/2009
Author: Isaac Viel, interviewer. Brandi Boatner, interviewee and National president for the Public Relations Student Society of America.

Q/A* **

Q: What are transparency and openness and why is it important in your line of work?
A: “Transparency is the free flow of accurate and truthful information … that contributes to making informed decisions in a democratic society. When serving the public “It’s import that your information is accurate and truthful and transparency is the opposite of privacy,” she said.

Q: Should the Obama administration implement a policy of openness and transparency and why do you think so?
A: No. “I do not think that there needs to be a policy that tells people that they need to tell the truth or that they need accurate information. I don’t think that needs to happen and I don’t think the Obama administration needs to implement anything of that nature.”

Boatner then went on to talk about Obama’s willingness to admit mistakes. “After any mistake at all, the president is the first to say ‘I made a mistake.’”

“So I don’t think a policy is needed, when the president, and I suspect his administration, are already demonstrating such professional values when it comes to the free flow of information.”

Q: Why would you think Obama openness and honesty is important to the American public?
A: “Well, he’s the leader of the free world, and if the leader of the free world is not honest and open then what does that say for the rest of us? We elected him and he represents us … he’s serving our interests.”

Usefulness:
Boatner’s interview will be helpful since it strays from the norm, that Obama should implement a policy of openness and transparency. Although Boatner talks about the importance transparency has on a democracy, she feels that Obama does not need an actual policy as long as he remains open and honest to those who he serves.

Works referenced / Links:
http://www.prssa.org/history/BrandiBoatner.asp
http://www.prssa.org/about/default.asp

*Some questions and answers have been paraphrased but represent accurately the views and opinions expressed by both the interviewer and interviewee. Quoted material is direct quotation.

** The personal views expressed by Brandi Boater are not intended to represent the views of PRSSA or its members and affiliates.

Special thanks to Brandi Boatner for her time.

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | 1 Comment »

(SA21) “Public documents are the foundation for democracy.” Interview with Larry Coonrod

Posted by isaacviel on February 26, 2009

Title: Interview
Publication Information: Phone interview 24/Feb/2009
Summary: Telephone interview with the Editor in Chief of the South Lincoln County News Larry Coonrod. Coonrod has used the Freedom of Information Act to pull numerous Public Records Requests. He described the significance of transparency in government and free access to public records and their importance to democracy.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 5, Interview 1
What is it? Interview
Date of interview: 24/Feb/2009
Author: Isaac Viel, interviewer. Larry Coonrod, interviewee from the South Lincoln County News. Before that, Coonrod was the education reporter for the Lebanon Express.

Q/A*

Q: How do government transparency and the Freedom of Information Act affect your job?
A: “The general public doesn’t have the time or usually the expertise to go find that stuff. They rely on the press to tell them what their elected officials are doing and when that information is hard to get, they’re uninformed. When they’re uninformed, they can’t make decisions such as voting.”

Q: Should the Obama administration implement a policy of transparency for journalists and the public?
A: Yes. “There shouldn’t be an be a difference between transparency for journalists and the public; it’s just transparency.”

“In this day in age with the technology available, there’s no reason you shouldn’t be able to get on website and see where did that money go,” he said, referring to the latest stimulus bill.

Q: Why do you think that is important?
A: “People have a right to know. We can’t judge how efficiently our money is being used without that information.”

“As the great Izzy Stone said, ‘All governments lie …’”

Q: What’s the true importance of transparency and open documents and does it create a more efficient federal government?
A: “Certainly. Look at that first $350 billion that went out,” Coonrod said, referring to the first federal bailout. “You know, we were told this is going to help these banks … and then we find out that they’re having corporate retreats on Maui. Without access to how that money was being spent, the press could not have reported it … there wouldn’t have been a public outcry … access to public documents provided that.”

“Public documents are the foundation for democracy,” he said.

Q: In what way?
A: If we don’t have transparency then we can’t direct our elected officials how we want things done. If we’re just taking their word for what they’re doing and we don’t have a way to verify it, then it’s not really a democracy.

Support:
I.F. Stone, Journalist

Usefulness:
This interview lends real life answers to the question of why transparency is important to the health of democracy. It also helps explain why access to records helps people make informed decisions when they vote and keep tabs on their elected officials.

Works referenced / Links:
http://www.southlincolncountynews.com/V2_news_articles.php?heading=0&story_id=745&page=72
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I._F._Stone

*Some questions and answers have been paraphrased but represent accurately the views and opinions expressed by both the interviewer and interviewee. Quoted material is direct quotation.

Special thanks to Larry Coonrod for his time.

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA18) Shouldn’t Government Transparency Be Included In The Legislative Process… Not Just The Aftermath?

Posted by isaacviel on February 20, 2009

Title: Shouldn’t Government Transparency Be Included In The Legislative Process… Not Just The Aftermath?
Publication Information: TechDirt, Feb. 18, 2009
Summary: Blog post from TechDirt founder Mike Masnick about the Obama administration’s opening of recovery.gov and how it is not the kind of transparency that America needs. He warrants that it’s more an afterthought because it does not include Americans in the decision-making process.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 4
What is it? Blog Post / Editorial
Date: Feb. 18, 2009
Author: Mike Masnick
Location: http://techdirt.com/articles/20090217/1817513806.shtml
Accessed: 19/Feb/2009

Support:
President Obama
http://www.recovery.gov/
http://techliberation.com/2009/02/17/recoverygov-is-up-but-questions-remain/
Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090209/0148263694.shtml
“we the people”

The author uses these links and people as the basis of his statement that Obama should be providing transparency before decisions are made and not just after the fact with a website such as recovery.org.

Audience and Agenda:
Mike Masnick founded TechDirt in 1997 as part of his company Floor 64. The blog’s goal is “to analyze and offer insight into news stories about changes in government policy, technology and legal issues that affect companies ability to innovate and grow.” It’s funded by Floor64 and advertising and touts “850,000+ RSS subscribers, 35,000+ posts, 250,000+ comments and a consistent Technorati 100 rating.

Before founding Floor 64 and TechDirt, Masnick worked at Release Software and before that, Intel. He holds a bachelor degree in industrial and labor relations and an MBA from Cornell University.

Usefulness:
This blog post in useful in that it’s a stakeholder citizen speaking out for transparency. Although he is noted for his blog, he is not a political expert. However, he is impacted by the decisions of the Obama administration and offers his suggestions to the blogosphere.

Works referenced / Links:
http://techdirt.com/about.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Masnick
http://www.netcaucus.org/biography/mike-masnick.shtml
http://techliberation.com/2009/02/17/recoverygov-is-up-but-questions-remain/
http://www.recovery.gov/
http://www.floor64.com/

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA15) Who’s Against Transparency in Government? A Guest Post

Posted by isaacviel on February 17, 2009

Title: Who’s Against Transparency in Government? A Guest Post
Publication Information: New York Times Opinion section blog Freakonomics Feb. 7, 2009
Summary: In a guest post on the New York Times Freakonimics blog, Yale Professor Ian Ayers talks about non-transparency and how it could benefit the public if used at the right times. Ayers argues that campaign contributions should be a non-transparent act so those voted into public office will not know who contributed to their campaign and give preference to them.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 3
What is it? Guest Op-Ed piece published in the New York Times Opinion section blog Freakonomics.
Author: Ian Ayers
Location: http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/02/07/whos-against-transparency-in-government-a-guest-post/
Accessed: 16/Feb/2009

Support:
Article: Brown rejects Tory claims of dithering over Hain
Article: Where money is no object
Louis Brandeis, US Supreme Court Justice
Article: Looking Anew at Campaign Cash and Elected Judges
Jeremy Bulow and article: The Donation Booth: Mandating Donor Anonymity To Disrupt the Market for Political Influence

The author uses articles and people as support for his opinion. He cites studies and researchers who illustrate why a less transparent judicial election campaign contribution process should be preferred to an open records rule.

Audience and Agenda:
The New York Times is an American daily newspaper that began in 1851 and has one 98 Pulitzer Prizes. It is a publically-traded company; although, the majority of the shares are owned by the Ochs-Sulzberger family who owned the paper from 1898 – 1960.

In 2007 it issued a report stating their online publication seizes nearly 10 percent of Internet users 18 and older totaling over 14 million users. Paid print editions Monday through Friday circulate to almost 1 million people; this article ran on a Thursday. The largest percentage of readers are over 35 years old, have some college education, are employed full time and have an income of $75,000 or more.

Readers of the times can expect the daily news from New York City, The United States and the world. Political editorials are typically left-leaning. In 2008 the Ed board backed Hillary Clinton in the primaries and finally Obama for president.

The Freakonomics blog came into fruition after a popular book with the same name by Steven Levitt and Steven J. Dubner went number two on the New York Times’ best seller list. The pair of authors then began to blog their ideas about “The Hidden Side of Everything.” The blog was then absorbed by the New York Times and has since resided there.

Usefulness:
This article will be useful for answering my question because it shows that some people believe that, in some cases, non-transparency can actually end corruption and promote a healthy democracy.

Works referenced:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/jan/25/partyfunding.uk

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jan/26/wheremoneyisnoobject

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/29/us/29bar.html?ex=1202274000&en=fb2dd1c2220248cf&ei=5070&emc=eta1

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?cfid=668342&cftoken=79182944&abstract_id=60331

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Brandeis

http://www.law.yale.edu/faculty/ayresbiography.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Ayres

http://www.citsov.org/

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA14) Transparency via GAO, Academia

Posted by isaacviel on February 16, 2009

Title: Transparency via GAO, Academia
Publication Information: The Open House Project blog, Dec. 5, 2007
Summary: John Wonderlich, policy director for the Sunlight Foundation, expresses his views and adds insight to recently released documents on the effectiveness of transparency and open government.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 2
What is it? Blog post on the Open House Project blog.
Author: John Wonderlich
Location: http://www.theopenhouseproject.com/2007/12/05/transparency-via-gao-academia/
Accessed: 14/Feb/2009

Support:
Paul Blumenthal
GAO-07-1068CG: Transparent Government and Access to Information: A Role for
Supreme Audit Institutions
David Walker, Comptroller General of the United States and head of the GAO
“academics at Harvard”

The author cites this people, studies and papers as a way of pointing out what’s out there in support of transparency. He uses two of the studies and selected quoted to further his own ideas of the importance of open government and how it affects the publc and private sectors.

Audience and Agenda:
The Open House Project is a subsidy of the Sunlight Foundation and collaborates with governmental and legislative experts, congressional staff, non-profits, and bloggers to study the how the U.S. House of Representatives uses the Internet and other technologies. They use this information to inform the public as to the activities of the HR and to make policy suggestions that might create a more transparent political landscape. The Sunlight Foundation is funded by individual donations from private citizens and other foundations and was started with a $3.5m grant from Michael Klein. According to Statbrain, the website receives 429 visits per day and Alexa gives it a traffic rank of 2,377,705. John Wonderlich is the Sunlight Foundation’s Policy Director and has a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Penn State University.

Usefulness:
The usefulness of this blog post will be to show that the experts are not afraid to step out from behind the façade of their foundations and institutions to hang their own personal opinions on the line. The author uses well-selected quotes to illustrate his point and I believe his thoughtful opinion should be noted, as he is the policy director for one of the largest government watchdog groups vying for open government.

Works referenced / Links:

http://www.theopenhouseproject.com/2007/12/05/transparency-via-gao-academia/

http://www.theopenhouseproject.com/about/

http://www.transparencypolicy.net/pdfs/effectiveness.pdf

http://www.transparencypolicy.net/pages/pubs.html

http://www.gao.gov/21stcentury.html

http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/people/jwonderlich/

http://www.gao.gov/htext/d071068cg.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_M._Walker_(U.S._Comptroller_General)

http://blog.sunlightfoundation.com/taxonomy/term/The-Open-House-Project/

http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/about/

http://www.statbrain.com/www.theopenhouseproject.com/

http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details/theopenhouseproject.com

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

(SA13) Government Transparency via Open Data and Open Source

Posted by isaacviel on February 13, 2009

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Title: Government Transparency via Open Data and Open Source

Publication Information: Open Source Business Resource, February 2009
Summary: Executive Director for visiblegovernment.ca Jennifer Bell’s 2009 article focuses on some of the technical advantages and roadblocks of having an open source-based government and how it can further government efficacy. She calls a wide list of pundits and sources to foster the idea that government openness and transparency will, in the long run, be cheaper, more efficient and create few mistakes.

Topic: Should the Obama administration implement a strong policy of openness and transparency?
Category: Citizen 1,  Image 3
What is it? Research article featured on the website Open Source Business Resource.
Author: Jennifer Bell
Location: http://www.osbr.ca/ojs/index.php/osbr/article/view/829/802
Accessed: Feb. 13, 2009

Support:
gartner.com
Barack Obama
visiblegovernment.ca
The Washington Post
techpresident.com
fedspending.org
OMB Watch
Dan Tapscott, author
Maplight.org
Fixmystreet.com
Clay Shirky, author
Cisco
UK’s Power of Information Task Force
Richard Allan, Task Force Chair of The Power of Information Taskforce
David Robinson, Princeton’s Center for Information Technology Policy

The source list consists of public servants, researchers, authors and groups whose work has been accessed for support of this article by noting advantages of open source governments. The sources also reflect groups or government agencies that are leading the way in the in transparency. The sources are used to reflect forward thinking and lend ideas of how transparency can be used to further the efficacy of government through technology and open source policies.

Audience and Agenda:
The Open Source Business Resource is a online, monthly publication of the Talent First Network, which was originally funded by the Ontario Ministry of Research & Innovation, and is directed toward Canadian business owners, company executives and employees, directors of open source foundations, leaders of open source projects, open source groups, individuals and organizations that contribute to open source projects, academics and students interested in open source, technology transfer professionals, and government employees who promote wealth creation through innovation. Its sponsors include the Government of Ontario and Carleton University. The website pulls in a mere 0.000031% of global web users. Jennifer Bell wrote the article. Bell is the executive director for visiblegovernment.ca and has degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from the University of Saskatchewan, and an MBA in Entrepreneurship from McGill University.

Usefulness:
This article is a great tool for getting to know some of the ideas out there that focus on more of the technical sides of open governments. It also shows the movement in Canada for transparency as nearly the same as the one in the United States. The article also helps promote more reading to knowledge-seekers by providing a myriad of links and sources.

Works referenced:
Discussion of the article by the author.

Posted in Citizen, Gateway 2, Source Analyses | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

 
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