The Freedom of Information Act of 1966 (FOIA) has transformed the process by which Executive agencies release information. Private groups and individuals have secured disclosure of countless materials that might otherwise have remained secret: from the Food and Drug Administration, for example, a list of prescription drugs which the agency had yet to approve but which remained on the market; from the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy, records on fallout and other harmful effects from atom bomb testing in the 1950\u27s and 1960\u27s; from the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, sensitive documents concerning the trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and the assassination of President Kennedy. I...
The Framers’ approbation of a unitary executive rested in important part on the belief that the unit...
A building block of American democracy is the idea that citizens have a right to information about h...
The U.S. government maintains a vast amount of personally-identifiable information on millions of Am...
The eighteenth year of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 1 witnessed a continuation of the trend...
A fundamental maxim of American political philosophy is the right of each citizen to know what his g...
The 1986 Freedom of Information Act amendments were passed as a last-minute rider to Reagan-era War ...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
The eighteenth year of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) witnessed a continuation of the trend t...
In enacting the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in 1966, Congress provided for broad disclosure of...
The initial Freedom of Information Act was created so that the public could have greater access to r...
Congress drafted the Freedom of Information Act to ensure that the public would always be able to ke...
Congress enacted the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) to ensure that “any person” could gain acce...
Enacted in 1966, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) was designed to enable any person -- individu...
Government transparency is imagined as a public good necessary to a robust democracy. Consistent wit...
abstract: The Freedom of Information Act (1966), an amendment altering Section Three of the Administ...
The Framers’ approbation of a unitary executive rested in important part on the belief that the unit...
A building block of American democracy is the idea that citizens have a right to information about h...
The U.S. government maintains a vast amount of personally-identifiable information on millions of Am...
The eighteenth year of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 1 witnessed a continuation of the trend...
A fundamental maxim of American political philosophy is the right of each citizen to know what his g...
The 1986 Freedom of Information Act amendments were passed as a last-minute rider to Reagan-era War ...
Much attention has been paid of late to unauthorized disseminations of classified information. A gra...
The eighteenth year of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) witnessed a continuation of the trend t...
In enacting the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in 1966, Congress provided for broad disclosure of...
The initial Freedom of Information Act was created so that the public could have greater access to r...
Congress drafted the Freedom of Information Act to ensure that the public would always be able to ke...
Congress enacted the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) to ensure that “any person” could gain acce...
Enacted in 1966, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) was designed to enable any person -- individu...
Government transparency is imagined as a public good necessary to a robust democracy. Consistent wit...
abstract: The Freedom of Information Act (1966), an amendment altering Section Three of the Administ...
The Framers’ approbation of a unitary executive rested in important part on the belief that the unit...
A building block of American democracy is the idea that citizens have a right to information about h...
The U.S. government maintains a vast amount of personally-identifiable information on millions of Am...