Right to Know Day 2006
In 2006 the 4rd annual International Right to Know Day was celebrated in 34 countries around the world:
Africa
Sierra Leone Kenya Nigeria Uganda Namibia
Americas
Canada USA Panama Mexico Jamaica Venezuela Colombia Peru Chile Argentina
Asia
Pakistan India Bangladesh Malaysia
Europe
Spain Morocco Montenegro Serbia United Kingdom Slovenia Bosnia and Herzegovina Moldova Macedonia Croatia Bulgaria Turkey Ukraine Georgia Armenia
International Organizations
Global Transparency Initiative Open Society Justice Initiative Unece Aarhus Clearinghouse For Environmental Democracy Privacy International Access Info Europe Transparency International
|
|
|
Organizer: Association for Civil Rights (ADC) Description: The Buenos Aires-based Association for Civil Rights (Asociacion por los Derechos Civiles) carried out a Right to Know day campaign aimed at increasing the exercise of the right to access information. First , ADC staff delivered specially made t-shirts publicizing the Right to Know day to the staff writers at the three major daily newspapers. These t-shirts had been designed by a leading public relations firm and were distributed with a pamphlet explaining how to submit a request to government agencies in Argentina. Staff also went to strategic points in the city of Buenos Aires to hand out the t-shirts and pamphlets ( The ADC sent 1,500 letters to local journalists, encouraging them to use their right to know as a tool in their daily work, and explaining how important their role is to promote this right in democracy. Attached to these letters, we also sent the mentioned pamphlet other ADC publications concerning freedom of information. As a result, we were contacted by different journalists that interviewed us in their programs. We gave 17 radio interviews and one in a cable TV program. We were also mentioned by 10 additional media outlets. At the same time, ADC staff organized and gave lectures in several university level communication programs in Buenos Aires and the province of Santa Fe encouraging students to exercise their right to know. The ADC's visibility in the national and provincial media was significant on the 28th September: Access to Information staff was interviewed several times by the press and we also published seven articles regarding the international Right-to-Know day in the most important newspapers in Argentina (Clarin, La Nacion, etc). We also published an opinion piece article in the most read newspaper Clarin.
|
Your are currently browsing this site with Internet Explorer 6 (IE6).
Your current web browser must be updated to version 7 of Internet Explorer (IE7) to take advantage of all of template's capabilities.
Why should I upgrade to Internet Explorer 7? Microsoft has redesigned Internet Explorer from the ground up, with better security, new capabilities, and a whole new interface. Many changes resulted from the feedback of millions of users who tested prerelease versions of the new browser. The most compelling reason to upgrade is the improved security. The Internet of today is not the Internet of five years ago. There are dangers that simply didn't exist back in 2001, when Internet Explorer 6 was released to the world. Internet Explorer 7 makes surfing the web fundamentally safer by offering greater protection against viruses, spyware, and other online risks.Get free downloads for Internet Explorer 7, including recommended updates as they become available. To download Internet Explorer 7 in the language of your choice, please visit the Internet Explorer 7 worldwide page.
PDF 750 Kb).