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Your Right to Know

Your Right to Know

Heather Brooke

(2006)

Additional Information

Abstract

Have you ever wanted to know:
- Which doctor has the best operation success rate in your health trust?
- If MI5 has a file on you?
- The actual number and type of crimes that happen in your street?
- Which streets are targeted by parking attendants in your area?
- Which buildings have failed their fire safety inspections?

The public had no right to most of this information - until now. In 2005 the Freedom of Information Act came into force giving the British public a legal right, for the first time, to access information from more than 100,000 public authorities. But in order to take advantage of this new right you first have to know who holds the information and how to get it. This guide gives you the tools you need to get the information you want.

This edition comes with a new foreword by Ian Hislop.
'Information is born free, but everywhere is in chains. Heather Brooke has written the Information Liberation Front guide to end the politicians' enslavement of the facts which belong to the public'
Greg Palast, author The Best Democracy Money Can Buy
'Labour had been promising freedom of information for decades. Now we are getting it we need to keep the pressure on, and this is just the book to do that. All journalists should pick up these tricks'
Jeremy Dear, General Secretary of the National Union of Journalists
'Both revealing and practical - a necessary antidote to the British culture of secrecy'
David Banisar, Deputy Director of Privacy International
'Heather Brooke pulls no punches when it comes to exposing how the government, public institutions and private companies all keep the British public in the dark. Even better, she tells readers how they can successfully challenge the system using the latest public access laws'
Michael Crick, BBC journalist

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover Cover
Contents iii
Foreword iv
Acknowledgements vi
Introduction 1
1. FOI in Practice 9
2. Scotland 22
3. Laws of Access 30
4. Central Government 55
5. Intelligence, Security and Defence 98
6. Transport 112
7. The Justice System 123
8. Law Enforcement and Civil Defence 154
9. Health 183
10. The Environment 206
11. Local Government 226
12. Education 251
13. Private Companies 263
14. Information about Individuals 277
Conclusion 283
Appendix - Letters for Requesting Information 287
Index 296