[Introductory Note: The following piece, written by U.S. lawyer Michele Host, is about India's Right to Information Act of 2005. Michele is currently living and working in India. Michele analyzes the Act, providing both the good news and the bad news one year after its enactment. Please note that links to the Right to Information Act and relevant articles are listed at the end of Michele's article. I hope you find this article interesting. I did.]
By Michele Host
During the summer of 2006, India celebrated the first anniversary of the Right to Information Act 2005 (“RTI”). Much like the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in the United States, the RTI sets out procedures for citizens to “secure access to information under the control of public authorities, in order to promote transparency and accountability in the working of every public authority.”
Many Indians hope that the RTI will cure two of the maladies hampering India’s rapid development: corruption and judicial inefficiency. In Transparency International’s annual corruption survey, which measures a country’s perceived degree of corruption on a scale of 0-10, where 0 is highly corrupt and 10 is highly clean, India scores just 3.3 points – tied with China, Ghana, and Mexico. For comparison’s sake, the United States receives a 7.3. The situation in India’s courts is similarly dire: Not only are the courts infected with the corruption that permeates the rest of India’s institutions, but the backlog is so immense that it appears insurmountable. According to The Economist, there are more than thirty million civil and criminal cases pending in India, and India has only eleven judges for every one million people. Compare that to the United States, where we have 107 judges per million citizens.
So what exactly does the RTI aspire to do, and how well is it doing?
Continue reading "Freedom of Information in India: A View One Year After Enactment" »






